- Title
- Electrophysiological characterization of spontaneous recovery in deep dorsal horn interneurons after incomplete spinal cord injury
- Creator
- Rank, M. M.; Flynn, J. R.; Galea, M. P.; Callister, R.; Callister, R. J.
- Relation
- NHMRC.628765
- Relation
- Experimental Neurology Vol. 271, Issue September 2015, p. 468-478
- Publisher Link
- http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.expneurol.2015.07.002
- Publisher
- Academic Press
- Resource Type
- journal article
- Date
- 2015
- Description
- In the weeks and months following an incomplete spinal cord injury (SCI) significant spontaneous recovery of function occurs in the absence of any applied therapeutic intervention. The anatomical correlates of this spontaneous plasticity are well characterized, however, the functional changes that occur in spinal cord interneurons after injury are poorly understood. Here we use a T10 hemisection model of SCI in adult mice (9-10 wks old) combined with whole-cell patch clamp electrophysiology and a horizontal spinal cord slice preparation to examine changes in intrinsic membrane and synaptic properties of deep dorsal horn (DDH) interneurons. We made these measurements during short-term (4 wks) and long-term (10 wks) spontaneous recovery after SCI. Several important intrinsic membrane properties are altered in the short-term, but recover to values resembling those of uninjured controls in the longer term. AP discharge patterns are reorganized at both short-term and long-term recovery time points. This is matched by reorganization in the expression of voltage-activated potassium and calcium subthreshold-currents that shape AP discharge. Excitatory synaptic inputs onto DDH interneurons are significantly restructured in long-term SCI mice. Plots of sEPSC peak amplitude vs. rise times suggest considerable dendritic expansion or synaptic reorganization occurs especially during long-term recovery from SCI. Connectivity between descending dorsal column pathways and DDH interneurons is reduced in the short-term, but amplified in long-term recovery. Our results suggest considerable plasticity in both intrinsic and synaptic mechanisms occurs spontaneously in DDH interneurons following SCI and takes a minimum of 10 wks after the initial injury to stabilize.
- Subject
- spinal cord injury; synaptic input; patch clamp; potassium current; spontaneous recovery; dendritic expansion
- Identifier
- http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/1331390
- Identifier
- uon:26619
- Identifier
- ISSN:0014-4886
- Language
- eng
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