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The Journal of Neuroscience, April 1, 2000, 20(7):2742-2748
Axotomized and Intact Muscle Afferents But No Skin Afferents
Develop Ongoing Discharges of Dorsal Root Ganglion Origin after
Peripheral Nerve Lesion
Martin
Michaelis,
Xianguo
Liu, and
Wilfrid
Jänig
Physiologisches Institut, Christian-Albrechts-Universität,
24098 Kiel, Germany
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ABSTRACT |
After peripheral nerve lesions, some axotomized afferent
neurons develop ongoing discharges that originate in the dorsal root ganglion (DRG). We investigated in vivo which functional
types of afferent neurons contributed to this ectopic activity. Six to
twelve days after the gastrocnemius soleus (GS) nerve supplying skeletal muscle and the sural (SU) nerve supplying skin had been transected (experimental group E1), 20.4% of afferent neurons with
myelinated axons projecting into the GS nerve produced ongoing discharges of irregular or bursting pattern. In contrast, all SU
neurons were silent. Additional transection of peroneal and tibial
nerves (group E2) induced ongoing activity in a similar percentage of
GS neurons (22.1%), but their mean discharge frequency was higher (6.0 vs 2.7 Hz), and more of them exhibited bursting discharges (63 vs
17%). When the GS nerve had been left intact while tibial, peroneal,
and SU nerve
had been transected (group E3), 18.8% of unlesioned GS
neurons developed ongoing discharges at a mean frequency of 6.1 Hz; most of them exhibited a bursting pattern. Without a preceding
nerve lesion, almost no GS neuron (1.1%) fired spontaneously. Most
afferent neurons with ongoing activity had an axonal conduction
velocity of 5-30 m/sec indicating that some of these neurons may have
had nociceptive function. These findings provide the first evidence
that after peripheral nerve injury both axotomized as well as intact
afferent neurons supplying skeletal muscle but not skin afferents
generate ongoing activity within the DRG, probably because of a yet
unknown signal in the DRG triggered by axotomy.
Key words:
dorsal root ganglion; ectopic firing; paresthesia; neuropathic pain; muscle pain; referred pain; rat
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INTRODUCTION |
After peripheral nerve injuries,
many axotomized primary afferent neurons start to generate ongoing
discharges of ectopic origin. Possible consequences of these discharges
are twofold: first, they may directly evoke ongoing paresthesias and
pain; second, it is believed that ectopic activity triggers and
maintains so-called central sensitization. This state of increased
excitability of dorsal horn neurons in the spinal cord may
pathologically augment peripheral sensory input resulting in
hyperalgesia and allodynia (for review, see Bennett, 1994 ; Devor and
Seltzer, 1999 ).
Ectopic activity after nerve lesion may originate at the lesion site
(neuroma), in the dorsal root ganglion (DRG) or even elsewhere along
the lesioned nerve. While the neuroma is well known as a source of
ectopic discharges (for review, see Jänig et al., 1996 ; Devor and
Seltzer, 1999 ), the DRG came first into focus as a prominent site of
ectopic impulse generation by work done by Wall and Devor (1983) . It
has been demonstrated that ectopic discharges of DRG origin are present
in two important animal models of neuropathic pain the chronic
constriction injury model (Kajander et al., 1992 ; Xie et al., 1995 ;
Petersen et al., 1996 ; Study and Kral, 1996 ; Zhang et al., 1997 ) and
the spinal nerve lesion model (Lee et al., 1999 ; Liu et al.,
2000a ,b ). Because in these models onset of ectopic discharges
originating in the DRG occurred during the same time when hyperalgesia-
and allodynia-like behavior appeared, it has been assumed that these
ectopic discharges are an important causative factor for onset and
maintenance of the neuropathic symptoms (Kajander et al., 1992 ; Liu et
al., 2000b ).
It is to date unknown which functional types of afferent neuron
preferentially develop ectopic activity of DRG origin after peripheral
nerve lesion. In the aforementioned animal models, mixed nerves
(sciatic nerve, spinal nerve) are lesioned, which makes functional
identification of afferents with ongoing activity impossible. Here, we
report about experiments in which we determined the ectopic activity
generated in the DRG by recording from afferent fibers in distally cut
microfilaments isolated from muscle and skin nerves of the rat
hindlimb. Recordings were made in rats with a small nerve lesion, in
rats with a large nerve lesion, and in control rats without a preceding
nerve lesion. We found that ectopic activity of DRG origin occurred
only in muscle afferents but not in cutaneous afferents. Muscle
afferents that had been axotomized by the nerve lesion as well as
unlesioned muscle afferents generated this ectopic ongoing activity.
Discharging afferents had medium-sized myelinated axons, whereas
ectopic activity was almost absent in large diameter myelinated and
unmyelinated afferents. Rate and pattern of ectopic activity
significantly depended on the size of the nerve lesion.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Male adult Wistar rats (n = 18; body weight
250-370 gm) were used. All experimental procedures had been approved
by the local animal care committee of the state administration and were
conducted in accordance with the German Federal Law.
Experimental groups. Most animals (n = 16) were subjected to a nerve lesion before the electrophysiological
experiments (Fig. 1B).
Under pentobarbital anesthesia (Nembutal; 60 mg/kg), the sural nerve
supplying skin as well as the medial and lateral gastrocnemius soleus
(GS) nerves supplying skeletal muscle of the hindlimb were exposed on
the left side and cut across near the ankle followed by excision of
~3 mm of the distal stump (group E1; n = 7). In animals of group E2 (n = 6), additionally to the sural
and GS nerves the left common peroneal and tibial nerve were
transected. In rats of group E3 (n = 3), the left
common peroneal, tibial, and sural nerves were transected, but the GS
nerves were left intact. The incision was closed, and recovery was
uneventful in all animals. Terminal electrophysiological experiments
were performed 6-12 d later. Two animals (group E4) received no nerve
lesion before the terminal experiment.

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Figure 1.
A, Sketch of the experimental
set-up used to determine that the origin of spontaneous firing was
within the DRG. Single fiber activity was recorded from centrally
connected microfilaments teased from the gastrocnemius soleus
(GS) nerve (rec 1). At first, electrical
stimuli were delivered through the dorsal root (DR)
electrode (stim 2), and the evoked single fiber activity
was recorded at rec 1, so that the response latency
(t = 3.0 msec) could be measured. After
determination of propagation distances
a1 = 11 mm and
a2 = 47 mm, conduction velocity
(v) was calculated as v = (2a1 + a2)/t = 23 m/sec.
Next, the DR electrode was used as recording electrode (rec
2). Amplitude window discrimination of spontaneous action
potentials, recorded at rec 1, triggered averaging of dorsal root
activity recorded at rec 2, from 4 to 4 msec with the trigger point
at 0 msec. Onset of the averaged potential was measured 2.5 msec before
the trigger. The time between onset of action potentials recorded by
electrode 1 and the point at the falling phase of these action
potentials that served as trigger (marked with dot) was 0.7 msec. Thus,
onset of single action potentials at rec 1 followed 2.5-0.7 = 1.8 msec after onset of the averaged potential at rec 2. This time
difference between onset of the potentials recorded at rec 1 and 2 is
termed t2 (so
t2 = 1.8 msec). The propagation time
t1 of action potentials from their site of
origin to rec 2 could now be calculated: because t = 2t1 + t2, we get
t1 = 0.6 msec. Therefore, the
estimated site of ectopic spike generation was
t1 × v = 13.8 mm distal
to rec 2. B, Schematic drawings illustrate the lesions
used in the different experimental groups. TIB,
Tibial nerve; SU, sural nerve; PC, common
peroneal nerve. Experimental groups: E1, GS and SU nerve
cut; E2, TIB, PC, SU, and GS nerve cut;
E3, GS nerve intact, TIB, PC, and SU nerve cut.
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Animal maintenance. Anesthesia was induced by
intraperitoneal injection of pentobarbital sodium (Nembutal; 60 mg/kg).
Tail artery and jugular vein catheters were inserted for continuous blood pressure recording and for application of drugs and fluid, respectively. The animals were paralyzed with Pancuronium (Organon; 1 mg/kg, i.v.) and artificially ventilated through a cannula that was
inserted into the trachea, with a gas mixture of 40%
O2 and 60% N2. Additional
doses of pentobarbital (10-20
mg · kg 1 · hr 1,
i.v., as needed) kept the anesthesia at a sufficient level as judged
from the absence of corneal reflexes, withdrawal reflexes, and
spontaneous gross blood pressure fluctuations. Throughout the
experiments, mean arterial blood pressure exceeded 80 mmHg. Blood gases
were regularly measured (ABL30; Radiometer, Copenhagen, Denmark). Rectal temperature was kept close to 37.0°C using a servo-controlled heating blanket. At the end of the experiments, the
animals were killed by intravenous injection of a saturated potassium
chloride solution under deep anesthesia.
Electrophysiological recordings. The sural and GS nerves
were exposed, and their distal ends together with the neuromata were isolated from connective tissue and placed on a rigidly fixed small
black Perspex platform (groups E1, E2). In other experiments, the GS
nerve (group E3) or sural and GS nerves (group E4) were exposed and
acutely transected at comparable location. By a lumbar laminectomy, the
dorsal roots L4 and L5, to which >95% of all afferents in the GS
nerve and >90% of all afferents in the sural nerve project (Baron et
al., 1988 ), were exposed. The nerves and roots together with
surrounding tissues were covered with warm (37°C) paraffin oil in two
pools made from the skin flaps. After resection of the neuromata, the
distal ends of the sural nerve and the GS nerve were split with the aid
of fine jewelers' forceps for single fiber recording. Nerve filaments
were placed on a platinum wire electrode referred to an indifferent
electrode connected to nearby tissue. The roots were cut near the
dorsal root entry zone and mounted on a bipolar electrode either for
electrical stimulation or for recording (Fig.
1A).
Experimental procedure. In each filament the number of
afferent fibers was counted while the dorsal roots were electrically stimulated with square wave pulses of 0.1-0.5 msec duration at 0.3 Hz
at variable intensities up to 30 V. All fibers were identified as
myelinated (A) or unmyelinated (C) afferent fibers according to their
conduction velocity, which was estimated from the propagation time of
their action potentials evoked by electrical stimulation and the
distance between stimulation and recording electrode (A fibers > 2 m/sec; C fibers < 2 m/sec). Once a nerve fiber fired spontaneously, the ongoing action potential activity was recorded for a
period of at least 5 min.
Spike-triggered averaging. In seven experiments the site of
ectopic impulse generation was localized using a spike-triggered averaging procedure. The falling phase of spontaneously occurring action potentials served as a trigger. Activity in that dorsal root
through which the discharging afferent neuron projected was averaged by
superimposing 750-2700 time periods 4 to +4 msec with respect to the
trigger (Fig. 1A). At the end of the
experiments, the distances between the dorsal root activity recording
site and the DRG (a1; Fig. 1A)
as well as the distance between the DRG and the peripheral recording
electrode (a1 + a2; Fig.
1A) were measured. The site of origin of the
spontaneous activity was estimated as described in legend of Figure
1A.
Data processing. Neural activity and arterial blood pressure
were stored on a digital tape recorder (DTR-2602; Biological, Claix,
France) for construction of interspike intervals and further analysis
[custom data acquisition software (CARDS by S. Tiedemann) and
template-matching program (Forster and Handwerker, 1990 )]. Statistical
evaluations are based on ANOVA, t test, or
2 test, as appropriate (CSS statistic software
package; StatSoft, Tulsa, OK).
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RESULTS |
Ectopic ongoing activity originates within dorsal root ganglia
A total of 1660 afferent nerve fibers projecting to the dorsal
roots L4 or L5 was analyzed in this study. Among these, 81 exhibited
ongoing action potential activity. To identify the location where the
ectopic activity was generated, averaging of dorsal root activity
triggered by spontaneously occurring action potentials was used in 15 of 81 units (Fig. 1A). In all 15 cases, the origin of
ectopic ongoing activity was estimated to be inside or very close to
the DRG.
Ectopic ongoing activity develops in axotomized DRG neurons that
supply skeletal muscle but not in those which supply skin
We examined the occurrence of ongoing activity in DRG neurons that
projected either into a nerve supplying skin (sural nerve) or into a
nerve supplying skeletal muscle (gastrocnemius-soleus n.). Axotomized
cutaneous DRG neurons never exhibited ongoing activity: all 293 myelinated and 638 unmyelinated units were silent (Table
1, E1-E3). The same result was obtained
from DRG neurons projecting to skin in controls without preceding nerve
lesion (Table 1, E4). In contrast, DRG neurons with myelinated axons that supplied muscle before axotomy did show spontaneous activity (59 of 278, 21.2%; Table 1, E1,E2). The prevalence of spontaneous activity
in these neurons was similar no matter whether the preceding nerve
lesion was small (sural and gastrocnemius-soleus nerve cut; Table 1,
E1) or whether it was large (additionally tibial and peroneal nerve
cut; p > 0.7, 2 test;
Table 1, E2). The prevalence of spontaneous activity varied across
animals in group E1 [23.2 ± 15.5% (mean ± SD), range
3.8-45.8%] and to similar extent in group E2 (24.5 ± 14.3%;
range 10.5-42.3%). Ongoing activity in axotomized DRG neurons with
unmyelinated axons was rare and was found exclusively in group E2
(Table 1). In controls, with one exception ongoing discharges were
absent in DRG neurons supplying muscle (Table 1, E4).
Rate of ongoing activity and prevalence of bursting discharge
pattern in lesioned DRG neurons increase with the total number of
axotomized sensory neurons
The rate of ongoing activity in DRG neurons was obtained from time
periods of at least 5 min. Axotomized A neurons in group E1 (small
nerve lesion) exhibited a significantly lower mean discharge rate than
those in group E2 [large nerve lesion; 2.7 ± 3.1 impulses (imp)/sec (mean ± SD) vs 6.0 ± 3.8 imp/sec;
p < 0.001, t test; Fig.
2A]. Across animals,
the mean rate of spontaneous activity varied both in group E1 (2.7 ± 2.2 imp/sec; range, 0.9-5.8 imp/sec) and in group E2 (5.4 ± 1.3 imp/sec; range, 3.5-6.9 imp/sec). Two DRG neurons with
unmyelinated axons discharged at <0.1 Hz.

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Figure 2.
A, Mean discharge rate (±SEM) of
spontaneously active DRG neurons with myelinated axons
projecting into the GS nerve. B, Prevalence
of different types of discharge pattern among DRG neurons that was
significantly different between E1 and E2/E3
(p < 0.001, 2 test).
Experimental groups: E1, GS and sural nerve cut;
E2, tibial, peroneal, sural, and GS nerve cut;
E3, GS nerve intact, tibial, peroneal, and sural nerve
cut.
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During the observation periods the pattern of firing in single A
neurons remained fixed. Among different A neurons, two main discharge
patterns could be distinguished: (1) an "irregular" pattern with a
broad unimodal distribution of interspike intervals (Fig.
3A); and (2) a "bursting"
discharge pattern, characterized by trains of action
potentials interrupted by longer intervals (Fig.
3B). Bursting neurons exhibited usually two, sometimes
three separable peaks in their interspike interval histogram, as judged by visual inspection (Fig. 3, compare histograms in A, B).
The first peak in these histograms represents intraburst interspike intervals and the second peak interburst intervals (Fig. 3). The majority (24 of 29; 82.8%) of axotomized A neurons in
group E1 showed an irregular pattern, the remaining (5 of 29; 17.2%)
fired in bursts. This was significantly different in group E2: here, more A neurons (19 of 30; 63.3%) exhibited a bursting discharge pattern than an irregular pattern (11 of 30, 36.7%; 24 of 29 vs 11 of
30; p < 0.001, 2 test;
Fig. 2B, Table 2).
Axotomized A neurons with a bursting pattern exhibited a significantly
higher overall discharge rate than those that fired irregularly
(p < 0.01, ANOVA; Table 2).

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Figure 3.
Representative examples of discharge patterns in
DRG neurons with ongoing activity. Histograms show the distribution of
temporal distances between successive spikes (interspike intervals);
bin width, 1 msec. A, E1 neuron exhibiting an
irregular discharge pattern and a unimodal distribution of interspike
intervals. Left inset shows ongoing activity at low
temporal resolution. Right inset shows the response of
the unit (*) with a fixed latency after electrical stimulation: CV,
12.5 m/sec; note that immediately after a spontaneously occurring
action potential the electrically evoked spike is missing because of to
axonal membrane refractoriness. Ten days after nerve lesion.
B, E2 neuron exhibiting bursting discharges. Intraburst
(interburst) interspike interval marked with a
(b) in the oscilloscope trace; corresponding
peaks of the histogram likewise marked with a and
b. Seven days after nerve lesion, CV 14.8 m/sec.
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Uninjured DRG neurons develop ongoing activity after axotomy of
neighboring DRG neurons
Without any preceding peripheral nerve lesion, 1 of 92 DRG neurons
with myelinated axons projecting into the GS nerve was spontaneously
active (Table 1, E4). In contrast, when major branches of the sciatic
nerve (tibial, peroneal, and sural nerve, group E3) had been transected
6-12 d before the experiments, 19 of 101 A neurons projecting into the
intact GS nerve exhibited ongoing discharges (p < 0.001, 2 test; Table 1, E3). Their
overall mean discharge rate and the distribution of discharge patterns
resembled those obtained in neurons of group E2, where the GS nerve had
been transected in addition to tibial, peroneal, and sural nerve (Fig.
2). One unit fired tonically (40.7 Hz), i.e., its discharge had a
highly regular interspike interval and was not interrupted by longer
periods. Axotomized neurons (in group E1, E2) exhibiting bursting
discharges had a higher mean firing frequency than nonaxotomized
bursting neurons (in group E3; p < 0.05, ANOVA; Table
2).
Most DRG neurons with ongoing activity have myelinated axons of
medium conduction velocity
The distribution of conduction velocities among DRG neurons with
myelinated axons exhibiting ongoing activity was similar in groups E1
and E2 (Fig. 4). Approximately one-third
of the total number of units in both groups conducted faster than 30 m/sec (32.4% in group E1; 31.6% in group E2). Among these fast
conducting units, <2.5% exhibited ongoing activity (1 of 46 in group
E1; 1 of 43 in group E2; Fig. 4).

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Figure 4.
Conduction velocity distribution of DRG neurons
projecting into the gastrocnemius soleus nerve in experimental groups
E1-E4, separately for neurons with and without ongoing activity.
Experimental groups: E1, GS and sural nerve cut;
E2, tibial, peroneal, sural, and GS nerve cut;
E3, GS nerve intact, tibial, peroneal, sural nerve cut;
E4, no previous nerve lesion.
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It is well known that chronic axotomy induces a slowing in conduction
velocity (Michaelis et al., 1996 ). This has also been observed in the
present study: 39 of 193 (20.2%) A neurons in groups E3 and E4 that
had not been chronically axotomized conducted faster than 45 m/sec in
contrast to 10 of 278 (3.6%) axotomized A neurons in groups E1 and E2
(p < 0.001, 2
test; Fig. 4). Among the 29 axons in group E3 conducting faster than 45 m/sec, one was spontaneously active. Thus, in all groups, the vast
majority of DRG neurons exhibiting ongoing activity had myelinated
axons of medium conduction velocity.
The distributions of conduction velocity of A neurons exhibiting
bursting discharges and of those that fired irregularly were not
statistically different (p > 0.05, modified
2 test of Brandt-Snedecor; Sachs,
1984 ).
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DISCUSSION |
After peripheral nerve transection, afferent neurons supplying
skeletal muscle but not those supplying skin generated
action potential activity originating within the DRG. Such ectopic
activity was observed in axotomized neurons as well as in intact
neurons. A large nerve lesion induced a higher rate of ectopic activity and a higher incidence of bursting discharge pattern than a small nerve
lesion. Almost all neurons exhibiting ectopic discharges had myelinated
axons of low and medium conduction velocity.
Ectopic ongoing activity originated within dorsal root ganglia
Action potential activity reported here very likely originated
within the DRG, although an accurate localization of the site where the
ongoing activity originated was not possible. Based on spike-triggered
averaging, calculations were made under the assumption that the
conduction velocity (CV) of peripheral and central axonal branch of the
afferent neurons was identical, but for many afferent neurons the
central CV in the dorsal root is in fact lower than the peripheral CV
(Rindos et al., 1984 ). Taking this difference into account shifts the
origin of ectopic activity to a more proximal location than the
calculated one (Fig. 1, see example). However, the calculation error is
probably small, first, because the difference in CV is small for
myelinated afferent neurons compared with unmyelinated ones (Rindos et
al., 1984 ), and, second, because the averaging electrode was positioned
close (<15 mm) to the DRG while the distance of the single fiber
recording electrode from the DRG was always >45 mm. Intracellular
studies will have to elucidate whether the ectopic activity is
generated by the membrane of the soma or whether it originates along
the course of the axon within the DRG.
Muscle, not skin, afferents develop ongoing discharges of
DRG origin
After peripheral nerve transection, ongoing discharges of DRG
origin were exclusively present in muscle afferents with myelinated axons; all cutaneous afferents were silent. Apparently similar results
have been obtained in studies investigating ectopic discharges originating within a neuroma: here, the prevalence of ongoing activity
was much higher in the GS nerve neuroma than in the sural nerve neuroma
(Proske et al., 1995 ; Michaelis et al., 1995 ; Tal et al., 1999 ) and in
the superficial peroneal nerve neuroma (Blumberg and Jänig,
1984 ). Some fast-conducting myelinated muscle afferents ending in a
neuroma exhibited ongoing activity (Proske et al., 1995 ), whereas
ongoing activity originating in the DRG was virtually absent in
fast-conducting myelinated muscle afferents, as shown in our study
(Fig. 4). Therefore, the mechanisms underlying ectopic impulse
generation in the neuroma and in the DRG are probably different (see
below). Furthermore, it is unclear whether ongoing discharges of
neuroma and DRG origin develop in the same group of muscle afferent
neurons or in separate subgroups of neurons.
The present study implies that ongoing activity of DRG origin after
complete sciatic nerve transection (Wall and Devor, 1983 ; Devor and
Wall, 1990 ; Devor et al., 1994 ; Michaelis et al., 1996 ) and after
spinal nerve lesion (Lee et al., 1999 ; Liu et al., 2000a ,b ) very likely
also appeared in muscle afferents. The rate of ectopic ongoing activity
in DRG neurons, 3-8 d after spinal nerve lesion (Liu et al., 2000a ),
was not significantly different from the rate of ongoing activity
recorded in the present experiments after lesioning of most hindlimb nerves.
In the chronic constriction injury (CCI) nerve lesion model of the
sciatic nerve, ectopic ongoing activity also originated in the DRG and
occurred in afferent neurons with myelinated fibers but not in those
with unmyelinated ones (Kajander and Bennett, 1992 ). This nerve lesion
model is considered to be a combined mechanical and inflammatory lesion
model (Maves et al., 1993 ; Clatworthy et al., 1995 ). Major differences
of DRG pathophysiology have been implicated between the models of CCI
and spinal nerve lesion (Ramer and Bisby, 1999 ). Therefore, in the CCI
model, not only muscle afferents but also cutaneous afferents may
develop ongoing discharges of DRG origin.
Finally most afferent neurons that could be activated and/or depressed
by electrical stimulation of the lumbar sympathetic trunk via the DRG
in rats with sciatic nerve lesion (McLachlan et al., 1993 ; Devor et
al., 1994 ; Michaelis et al., 1996 ) and in rats with spinal nerve lesion
(Häbler et al., 2000 ) had ongoing activity of DRG origin. It is
therefore very likely that these afferent neurons originally innervated
skeletal muscle, too.
Peripheral nerve lesion induces ongoing discharges of DRG origin in
axotomized and nonaxotomized afferent neurons: indication for a
paracrine intraganglionic signal
We found ongoing activity of DRG origin with a similar prevalence
of ~20% in axotomized and in nonaxotomized muscle afferent neurons
when major branches of the sciatic nerve had been transected. Because
there was almost no ongoing activity in muscle afferents in controls
without any previous nerve lesion, it is tempting to assume that a
paracrine signal induced or generated by axotomized DRG neurons
triggered the ectopic activity also in nonaxotomized muscle afferent
neurons. This idea is supported by our finding that the total number of
lesioned afferent neurons significantly affected mean rate and
discharge pattern of ongoing activity: the discharge frequency was high
and mostly of bursting pattern when the total number of lesioned
afferents was large, whereas the discharge rate was low and its pattern
predominantly nonbursting when the nerve lesion was small. From our
finding that the percentage of spontaneously firing neurons did not
change with the extent of the nerve lesion, one can conclude that the
amount of the paracrine signal that is liberated already by a
relatively small nerve lesion is large enough to trigger spontaneous
discharges in most sensitive neurons; an increased amount of this
signal, e.g., after a larger nerve lesion, leads to increased discharge
frequency but does not enhance the percentage of firing neurons.
The nature of this paracrine signal inducing the ectopic activity after
nerve injury is unknown. It may be produced by the DRG cells or the
satellite cells. Future investigations have to show whether these
signals are related to other signals (neurotrophins, cytokines) that
are at present discussed to be involved in sprouting of sympathetic
fibers in the DRG after peripheral nerve lesion (Ramer et al., 1999 ).
Recently it has been demonstrated that nerve injury enhances the
incidence of DRG neurons exhibiting high-frequency oscillations in
their membrane potential and that ectopic spike activity is always
based on the presence of these membrane potential oscillations (Amir et
al., 1999 ). An intriguing question is whether the paracrine signal
enhances the incidence of membrane potential oscillation after nerve injury.
Discharges in DRG neurons depolarize many nonspiking neurons in the
same DRG (Utzschneider et al., 1992 ; Amir and Devor, 1996 ). Such
"cross-excitation" induced by ectopic activity in neighboring lesioned nerves may also contribute to ongoing discharges in
nonaxotomized muscle afferents, as observed in the present study.
Our finding that only muscle afferent neurons exhibited spontaneous
ectopic activity in the DRG but not cutaneous afferent neurons argues
that either the hypothetical paracrine signal specifically reacts with
these muscle afferent neurons or the signal-induced mechanism leading
to the ectopic ongoing activity in the DRG is specific for muscle
afferent neurons.
A role of a TTX-sensitive Na+
conductance for ectopic impulse generation in DRG neurons
Recent studies have shown that nerve injury-induced
ectopic discharges of DRG origin, which, according to our results, have been very likely generated by muscle afferents could effectively be
suppressed by low doses of lidocaine without concomitantly blocking
impulse propagation (Devor et al., 1992 ; Omana-Zapata 1997a ; Amir et
al., 1999 ). Tetrodotoxin (TTX) was similarly effective (Omana-Zapata et
al., 1997b ; Amir et al., 1999 ). In concordance with this, sciatic nerve
transection induced an upregulation of the TTX-sensitive type III
Na+ channel in those DRGs that contained
axotomized neurons (Waxman et al., 1994 ; Dib-Hajj et al., 1996 );
correspondingly, after sciatic nerve injury rapidly repriming
Na+ currents were enhanced in some DRG
neurons (Rizzo et al., 1995 ; Cummins and Waxman, 1997 ). This increases
their excitability and may ultimately lead to ongoing action potential
activity. From these studies it remains open whether the observed
changes are restricted to axotomized neurons that comprise ~50% of
neurons in DRG L4 and L5 after sciatic nerve transection (Devor et al., 1985 ) or whether the type III Na+ channel
is upregulated in nonlesioned neighboring afferent neurons, too. In any
event, because enhanced Na+ currents have
been found in axotomized cutaneous afferents (Rizzo et al., 1995 ),
whereas axotomized cutaneous DRG neurons did not develop ongoing
ectopic activity as shown here, additional mechanisms must exist that
underlie the development of spontaneous firing in muscle DRG neurons.
Functional types of muscle afferents that generate ongoing activity
of DRG origin
We found that almost all muscle afferents with spontaneous
activity had medium or low CV; most of the 30-40% fastest conducting afferents of the total CV distribution were silent. This finding is not
attributable to an activity-dependent reduction of axonal CV
that is significant in C-fiber axons but does not exceed 5% of CV in
myelinated axons (Torebjörk and Hallin, 1974 ). This result is
different from that published by Wall and Devor (1983) , who showed in
Wistar-derived Sabra-strain rats with sciatic nerve lesion, that the CV
distribution of myelinated axons was virtually identical for those with
ongoing activity generated in the DRG and for silent ones.
Most muscle afferents conducting in the range of 5-30 m/sec are group
III afferents. According to Mense and Meyer (1985) , the majority of
group III muscle afferents are non-nociceptive, being activated by
low-threshold pressure (44%) or contraction (23%); 33% group III
muscle afferents can only be activated by noxious mechanical or
chemical stimuli. Therefore it is likely that some of the slowly
conducting myelinated afferents with ectopic activity originating in
the DRG had nociceptive function.
Possible sensory consequences of ectopic discharges
An obvious consequence of ectopic ongoing activity is that it can
evoke sensations according to the functional type of sensory neurons
that generate these discharges. Ongoing activity in group III muscle
afferents as described in the present study may therefore generate
ongoing muscle pain or abnormal proprioceptive sensations. Moreover,
activity in group III muscle afferents may induce pain referred to the
skin or other deep somatic structures (Torebjörk et al., 1984 ;
Laursen et al., 1999 ).
Tactile allodynia is a cardinal symptom of neuropathic pain. One
explanation for the generation of tactile allodynia is the establishment of central sensitization triggered by ectopic afferent input. It has been shown that muscle afferents are capable of producing
a much greater central sensitization than cutaneous afferents (Wall and
Woolf, 1984 ), although it is usually thought that input from C-fibers
is necessary. However, there is recent evidence for rapid, nerve
lesion-induced phenotypic changes, e.g., an increase in brain-derived
neurotrophic factor (BDNF) expression in large-diameter DRG neurons
(Michael et al., 1999 ; Zhou et al., 1999 ). BDNF can enhance the
excitability of central neurons (Kerr et al., 1999 ). Thus, a phenotypic
switch of myelinated muscle afferents for BDNF could explain how
ectopic activity in these afferents induces central sensitization, even
in the absence of C-fiber activity (Liu et al., 2000b ).
In summary, we presented evidence that after nerve injury ongoing
activity of DRG origin appears exclusively in small-diameter myelinated
muscle afferents, both axotomized and unlesioned. This ectopic activity
is probably induced by a paracrine signal released in the DRG and may
contribute to neuropathic pain states.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Oct. 12, 1999; revised Jan. 27, 2000; accepted Jan. 27, 2000.
This work was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (Mi
457/2-1, Ja 240/15-1). We thank Ms. Sigrid Augustin for technical
assistance and Ms. Eike Tallone for expert help with the illustrations.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Martin Michaelis,
Physiologisches Institut, Christian-Albrechts-Universität,
Olshausenstrasse 40, D-24098 Kiel, Germany. E-mail:
M.Michaelis{at}physiologie.uni-kiel.de.
Prof. Liu's present address: Department of Physiology, Sun Yat-sen
University of Medical Sciences, No.74 Zhongshan Road 2, 510089 Guangzhou, China.
 |
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