Improved motor function of denervated rat hindlimb muscles induced by embryonic spinal cord grafts

被引:24
|
作者
Nogradi, A
Vrbova, G
机构
[1] UNIV LONDON UNIV COLL, DEPT ANAT & DEV BIOL, LONDON WC1E 6BT, ENGLAND
[2] UNIV LONDON UNIV COLL, CTR NEUROSCI, LONDON WC1E 6BT, ENGLAND
基金
英国惠康基金;
关键词
rat; transplantation; motoneuron; reinnervation; regeneration;
D O I
10.1111/j.1460-9568.1996.tb00741.x
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Loss of motoneurons results in a decrease in force production by skeletal muscles and paralysis. Although it has been shown that missing motoneurons of rats can be replaced by embryonic homotopic neurons, attempts to guide their axons to their target muscles that have lost their innervation have been unsuccessful. In this study attempts were made to guide axons from grafted embryonic motoneurons to their target via a reimplanted ventral root. Adult hosts that received an embryonic graft prelabelled with 5-bromo-2'-deoxyuridine had their L4 ventral root avulsed and reimplanted into the spinal cord. Three to six months later, neurons that had their axons in the L4 ventral ramus were retrogradely labelled with fast blue and diamidino yellow. in five animals that had received an embryonic graft 116 +/- 16 cells were retrogradely labelled, and of these at least 15% were of graft origin, since they were positive for 5-bromo-2'-deoxyuridine. In five animals that had their L4 ventral root reimplanted but did not receive a graft, only 12 +/- 1.3 cells were retrogradely labelled. However, meaningful functional recovery could be achieved only if the regenerating axons of embryonic motoneurons found in the L4 ventral ramus were able to reverse the loss of force of muscles that had lost their innervation. This study shows that axons of embryonic motoneurons grafted into an adult rat spinal cord, as well as some axons of host origin, can be guided to denervated hindlimb muscles via reimplanted lumbar ventral roots. In normal rats similar to 30 motor axons innervated the extensor digitorum longus and 60 innervated the tibialis anterior via the L4 ventral root. In rats that did not receive a graft only 3.7 +/- 1.2 axons reached the extensor digitorum longus and 3.5 +/- 0.4 reached the tibialis anterior muscle via the implanted L4 ventral root. In animals that had an embryonic graft, 7.6 +/- 0.5 axons innervated the extensor digitorum longus and 8.5 +/- 0.5 reached the tibialis anterior muscle via the implanted root. In rats without a transplant the maximum tetanic tension elicited by stimulating the implanted L4 root was 16 +/- 7 g for the extensor digitorum longus and 53 +/- 36 g for the tibialis anterior muscle, whereas the corresponding muscles in animals that had an embryonic graft developed 82 +/- 16 and 281 +/- 95 g respectively. Thus it appears that the grafted motoneurons contributed to the innervation and functional recovery of the denervated muscles.
引用
收藏
页码:2198 / 2203
页数:6
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Transplantation of porous tubes following spinal cord transection improves hindlimb function in the rat
    Reynolds, L. F.
    Bren, M. C.
    Wilson, B. C.
    Gibson, G. D.
    Shoichet, M. S.
    Murphy, R. J. L.
    SPINAL CORD, 2008, 46 (01) : 58 - 64
  • [22] FORMATION OF MOTOR END PLATES IN DENERVATED VOLUNTARY MUSCLES OF RAT
    SHUKLA, PL
    AITKEN, JT
    JOURNAL OF ANATOMY, 1963, 97 (01) : 152 - &
  • [23] LOCALIZATION OF MOTONEURON POOLS OF HINDLIMB MUSCLES IN THE CHELONIAN SPINAL-CORD
    CROWE, A
    RUIGROK, TJH
    JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-LONDON, 1981, 319 (OCT): : P25 - P26
  • [24] MYOSIN ISOENZYME CHANGES IN NORMAL AND DENERVATED DEVELOPING FAST AND SLOW MUSCLES OF THE RAT HINDLIMB
    LYONS, GE
    KELLY, AM
    RUBINSTEIN, NA
    JOURNAL OF CELL BIOLOGY, 1982, 95 (02): : A366 - A366
  • [25] LONG-TERM PERSISTENCE OF ENLARGED MOTOR UNITS IN PARTIALLY DENERVATED HINDLIMB MUSCLES OF CATS
    LUFF, AR
    TORKKO, K
    JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY, 1990, 64 (04) : 1261 - 1269
  • [26] SR Function and Glycogen in Aging Rat Hindlimb Muscles
    Russ, David W.
    Krause, Jodi
    Wills, Allison
    MEDICINE AND SCIENCE IN SPORTS AND EXERCISE, 2013, 45 (05): : 519 - 519
  • [27] Mild hypothermia amelioration of damage during rat spinal cord injury: Inhibition of pathological microglial proliferation and improvement of hindlimb motor function
    Ogata, T
    Morino, T
    Takeba, J
    Matsuda, Y
    Okumura, H
    Shibata, T
    Schubert, P
    Kataoka, K
    BRAIN HYPOTHERMIA: PATHOLOGY, PHARMACOLOGY, AND TREATMENT OF SEVERE BRAIN INJURY, 2000, : 47 - 54
  • [28] An In Vitro Spinal Cord-Hindlimb Preparation for Studying Behaviorally Relevant Rat Locomotor Function
    Hayes, Heather Brant
    Chang, Young-Hui
    Hochman, Shawn
    JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY, 2009, 101 (02) : 1114 - 1122
  • [29] The role of embryonic motoneuron transplants to restore the lost motor function of the injured spinal cord
    Nogradi, Antal
    Pajer, Krisztian
    Marton, Gabor
    ANNALS OF ANATOMY-ANATOMISCHER ANZEIGER, 2011, 193 (04) : 362 - 370
  • [30] FDG uptake predicts recovery of hindlimb function in a rat model of contusion spinal cord injury
    Ng, Chin
    Zheng, Huaiyu
    Zhu, Mingming
    Shum-Siu, Alice
    Mahlbacher, Grace
    Magnuson, David
    JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE, 2017, 58