Functional redundancy of ventral spinal locomotor pathways Article

Loy, DN, Magnuson, DSK, Ping Zhang, Y et al. (2002). Functional redundancy of ventral spinal locomotor pathways . JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, 22(1), 315-323. 10.1523/jneurosci.22-01-00315.2002

cited authors

  • Loy, DN; Magnuson, DSK; Ping Zhang, Y; Onifer, SM; Mills, MD; Cao, QL; Darnall, JB; Fajardo, LC; Burke, DA; Whittemore, SR

authors

abstract

  • Identification of long tracts responsible for the initiation of spontaneous locomotion is critical for spinal cord injury (SCl) repair strategies. Pathways derived from the mesencephalic locomotor region and pontomedullary medial reticular formation responsible for fictive locomotion in decerebrate preparations project to the thoracolumbar levels of the spinal cord via reticulospinal axons in the ventrolateral funiculus (VLF). However, white matter regions critical for spontaneous over-ground locomotion remain unclear because cats, monkeys, and humans display varying degrees of locomotor recovery after ventral SCls. We studied the contributions of myelinated tracts in the VLF and ventral columns (VC) to spontaneous over-ground locomotion in the adult rat using demyelinating lesions. Animals received ethidium bromide plus photon irradiation producing discrete demyelinating lesions sufficient to stop axonal conduction in the VLF, VC, VLF-VC, or complete ventral white matter (CV). Behavior [open-field Basso, Beattie, and Bresnahan (BBB) scores and grid walking] and transcranial magnetic motorevoked potentials (tcMMEP) were studied at 1, 2, and 4 weeks after lesion. VLF lesions resulted in complete loss or severe attenuation of tcMMEPs, with mean BBB scores of 18.0, and no grid walking deficits. VC lesions produced behavior similar to VLF-lesioned animals but did not significantly affect tcMMEPs. VC-VLF and CV lesions resulted in complete loss of tcMMEP signals with mean BBB scores of 12.7 and 6.5, respectively. Our data support a diffuse arrangement of axons within the ventral white matter that may comprise a system of multiple descending pathways subserving spontaneous over-ground locomotion in the intact animal.

publication date

  • January 1, 2002

published in

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

start page

  • 315

end page

  • 323

volume

  • 22

issue

  • 1