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Kainate and metabolic perturbation mimicking spinal injury differentially contribute to early damage of locomotor networks in the in vitro neonatal rat spinal cord

Taccola, Giuliano
•
Margaryan, G.
•
Mladinic, Miranda
•
Nistri, Andrea
2008
  • journal article

Periodico
NEUROSCIENCE
Abstract
Acute spinal cord injury evolves rapidly to produce secondary damage even to initially spared areas. The result is loss of locomotion, rarely reversible in man. It is, therefore, important to understand the early pathophysiological processes which affect spinal locomotor networks. Regardless of their etiology, spinal lesions are believed to include combinatorial effects of excitotoxicity and severe stroke-like metabolic perturbations. To clarify the relative contribution by excitotoxicity and toxic metabolites to dysfunction of locomotor networks, spinal reflexes and intrinsic network rhythmicity, we used, as a model, the in vitro thoraco- lumbar spinal cord of the neonatal rat treated (1 h) with either kainate or a pathological medium (containing free radicals and hypoxic/aglycemic conditions), or their combination. After washout, electrophysiological responses were monitored for 24 h and cell damage analyzed histologically. Kainate suppressed fictive locomotion irreversibly, while it reversibly blocked neuronal excitability and intrinsic bursting induced by synaptic inhibition block. This result was associated with significant neuronal loss around the central canal. Combining kainate with the pathological medium evoked extensive, irreversible damage to the spinal cord. The pathological medium alone slowed down fictive locomotion and intrinsic bursting: these oscillatory patterns remained throughout without regaining their control properties. This phenomenon was associated with polysynaptic reflex depression and preferential damage to glial cells, while neurons were comparatively spared. Our model suggests distinct roles of excitotoxicity and metabolic dysfunction in the acute damage of locomotor networks, indicating that different strategies might be necessary to treat the various early components of acute spinal cord lesion.
DOI
10.1016/j.neuroscience.2008.06.008
WOS
WOS:000258909300025
Archivio
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11767/12161
info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/scopus/2-s2.0-49349106393
Diritti
closed access
Soggetti
  • Locomotion

  • Spinal cord injury

  • Excitotoxicity

  • Motoneuron

Scopus© citazioni
54
Data di acquisizione
Jun 14, 2022
Vedi dettagli
Web of Science© citazioni
51
Data di acquisizione
Mar 6, 2024
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