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The Journal of Neuroscience, January 15, 1998, 18(2):779-793
Fetal Spinal Cord Transplants Support Growth of Supraspinal and
Segmental Projections after Cervical Spinal Cord Hemisection in the
Neonatal Rat
Pamela S.
Diener and
Barbara S.
Bregman
Department of Cell Biology, Division of Neurobiology, Georgetown
University Medical Center, Washington, D.C. 20007
Cervical spinal cord injury at birth permanently disrupts forelimb
function in goal-directed reaching. Transplants of fetal spinal cord
tissue permit the development of skilled forelimb use and associated
postural adjustments (, companion article). The
aim of this study was to determine whether transplants of fetal spinal
cord tissue support the remodeling of supraspinal and segmental
pathways that may underlie recovery of postural reflexes and forelimb
movements. Although brainstem-spinal and segmental projections to the
cervical spinal cord are present at birth, skilled forelimb reaching
has not yet developed. Three-day-old rats received a cervical spinal
cord overhemisection with or without transplantation of fetal spinal
cord tissue (embryonic day 14); unoperated pups served as normal
controls. Neuroanatomical tracing techniques were used to examine the
organization of CNS pathways that may influence target-directed
reaching. In animals with hemisections only, corticospinal,
brainstem-spinal, and dorsal root projections within the spinal cord
were decreased in number and extent. In contrast, animals receiving
hemisections plus transplants exhibited growth of these projections
throughout the transplant and over long distances within the host
spinal cord caudal to the transplant. Raphespinal axons were apposed to
numerous propriospinal neurons in control and transplant animals; these
associations were greatly reduced in the lesion-only animals. These
observations suggest that after neonatal cervical spinal cord injury,
embryonic transplants support axonal growth of CNS pathways and
specifically supraspinal input to propriospinal neurons. We suggest
that after neonatal spinal injury in the rat, the transplant-mediated
reestablishment of supraspinal input to spinal circuitry is the
mechanism underlying the development of target-directed reaching and
associated postural adjustments.
Key words:
raphespinal axons; rubrospinal axons; corticospinal
axons; dorsal root axons; red nucleus; cortex; neuroanatomical
tracing
Copyright © 1998 Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474/98/182779-15$05.00/0
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