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Neurotransmitter phenotype switching by spinal excitatory interneurons regulates locomotor recovery after spinal cord injury

Hannah Bertels, Guillem Vicente-Ortiz, Khadija El Kanbi, Aya Takeoka

2022Nature Neuroscience81 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Severe spinal cord injury in adults leads to irreversible paralysis below the lesion. However, adult rodents that received a complete thoracic lesion just after birth demonstrate proficient hindlimb locomotion without input from the brain. How the spinal cord achieves such striking plasticity remains unknown. In this study, we found that adult spinal cord injury prompts neurotransmitter switching of spatially defined excitatory interneurons to an inhibitory phenotype, promoting inhibition at synapses contacting motor neurons. In contrast, neonatal spinal cord injury maintains the excitatory phenotype of glutamatergic interneurons and causes synaptic sprouting to facilitate excitation. Furthermore, genetic manipulation to mimic the inhibitory phenotype observed in excitatory interneurons after adult spinal cord injury abrogates autonomous locomotor functionality in neonatally injured mice. In comparison, attenuating this inhibitory phenotype improves locomotor capacity after adult injury. Together, these data demonstrate that neurotransmitter phenotype of defined excitatory interneurons steers locomotor recovery after spinal cord injury.

Topics & Concepts

NeuroscienceExcitatory postsynaptic potentialInhibitory postsynaptic potentialGlutamatergicSpinal cord injurySpinal cordNeurotransmitterGlutamate receptorLesionBiologyCentral nervous systemMedicinePathologyReceptorBiochemistrySpinal Cord Injury ResearchZebrafish Biomedical Research ApplicationsNeuroscience of respiration and sleep
Neurotransmitter phenotype switching by spinal excitatory interneurons regulates locomotor recovery after spinal cord injury | Litcius