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Spinally projecting noradrenergic neurons of the locus coeruleus display resistance to AAV2retro-mediated transduction

Robert P. Ganley, Kira Werder, Hendrik Wildner, Hanns Ulrich Zeilhofer

2021Molecular Pain18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Background The locus coeruleus (LC) is the principal source of noradrenaline (NA) in the central nervous system. Projection neurons in the ventral portion of the LC project to the spinal cord and are considered the main source of spinal NA. To understand the precise physiology of this pathway, it is important to have tools that allow specific genetic access to these descending projections. AAV2retro serotype vectors are a potential tool to transduce these neurons via their axon terminals in the spinal cord, and thereby limit the expression of genetic material to the spinal projections from the LC. Here, we assess the suitability of AAV2retro to target these neurons and investigate strategies to increase their labelling efficiency. Results We show that the neurons in the LC that project to the spinal dorsal horn are largely resistant to transduction with AAV2retro serotype vectors. Compared to Cholera toxin B (CTb) tracing, AAV2retro.eGFP labelled far fewer neurons within the LC and surrounding regions, particularly within neurons that express tyrosine hydroxylase (TH), the rate-limiting enzyme for NA synthesis. We also show that the sensitivity for transduction of this projection can be increased using AAV2retro.eGFP.cre in ROSA26 tdTom reporter mice (23% increase), with a higher proportion of the newly revealed neurons expressing TH compared to those directly labelled with AAV2retro containing an eGFP expression sequence. Conclusion These tracing studies identify limitations in AAV2retro-mediated retrograde transduction of a subset of projection neurons, specifically those that express NA and project to the spinal cord. This is likely to have implications for the study of NA-containing projections as well as other types of projection neuron in the central nervous system.

Topics & Concepts

Locus coeruleusSpinal cordTransduction (biophysics)NeuroscienceRetrograde tracingTyrosine hydroxylaseBiologyAxonNeuronGreen fluorescent proteinCell biologyCentral nervous systemDopamineGeneGeneticsBiophysicsNerve injury and regenerationNeurogenesis and neuroplasticity mechanismsDevelopmental Biology and Gene Regulation
Spinally projecting noradrenergic neurons of the locus coeruleus display resistance to AAV2retro-mediated transduction | Litcius