Litcius/Paper detail

Crossing nerve transfer drives sensory input–dependent plasticity for motor recovery after brain injury

Zhengrun Gao, Zhen Pang, Gaowei Lei, Yi‐Ming Chen, Zeyu Cai, Shuai Zhu, Weishan Lin, Zilong Qiu, Yizheng Wang, Yundong Shen, Wendong Xu

2022Science Advances24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Restoring limb movements after central nervous system injury remains a substantial challenge. Recent studies proved that crossing nerve transfer surgery could rebuild physiological connectivity between the contralesional cortex and the paralyzed arm to compensate for the lost function after brain injury. However, the neural mechanism by which this surgery mediates motor recovery remains still unclear. Here, using a clinical mouse model, we showed that this surgery can restore skilled forelimb function in adult mice with unilateral cortical lesion by inducing cortical remapping and promoting corticospinal tract sprouting. After reestablishing the ipsilateral descending pathway, resecting of the artificially rebuilt peripheral nerve did not affect motor improvements. Furthermore, retaining the sensory afferent, but not the motor efferent, of the transferred nerve was sufficient for inducing brain remapping and facilitating motor restoration. Thus, our results demonstrate that surgically rebuilt sensory input triggers neural plasticity for accelerating motor recovery, which provides an approach for treating central nervous system injuries.

Topics & Concepts

NeuroscienceForelimbSensory systemNeuroplasticityCorticospinal tractMotor cortexEfferentMedicineMotor systemLesionCentral nervous systemBiologyAfferentSurgeryStimulationMagnetic resonance imagingDiffusion MRIRadiologyNerve injury and regenerationTranscranial Magnetic Stimulation StudiesSpinal Cord Injury Research