Regeneration and plasticity of descending motor pathways following spinal cord injury

Spinal cord injury (SCI) results in paralysis due in part to the inability of central nervous system (CNS) axons to regenerate following their transection. However, after anatomically incomplete SCI, partial spontaneous recovery can often occur. I studied the regeneration and plasticity of descen...

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Main Author: Hilton, Brett Jason
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2016
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/59882
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-598822018-01-05T17:29:25Z Regeneration and plasticity of descending motor pathways following spinal cord injury Hilton, Brett Jason Spinal cord injury (SCI) results in paralysis due in part to the inability of central nervous system (CNS) axons to regenerate following their transection. However, after anatomically incomplete SCI, partial spontaneous recovery can often occur. I studied the regeneration and plasticity of descending pathways involved in forelimb motor function following SCI to better understand the mechanisms underlying axon regeneration failure and spontaneous motor recovery. In Chapter 2, I developed an injury model in adult mice that results in complete axotomy of the rubrospinal tract and sustained deficits in forelimb motor function. I found that when a left dorsolateral funiculus crush injury was instigated at vertebral level C4, there were sustained deficits in left forelimb function while when the same injury was instigated at vertebral level C6, there was spontaneous recovery in left forelimb function to baseline levels. In Chapter 3, I used the injury model developed in Chapter 2 in conditional PTEN KO mice to test the hypotheses that 1) PTEN deletion promotes rubrospinal axonal regeneration following SCI and 2) Aging significantly diminishes the regenerative capacity of PTEN deleted rubrospinal neurons. I found that when PTEN was deleted within rubrospinal neurons in 4 week old mice, there was significant rostral axon growth and regeneration past the lesion site to ~1 mm relative to controls. However, when PTEN was deleted within rubrospinal neurons in 7-8 month old mice, while rostral axon growth occurred, there was no caudal regeneration. Thus, there is an age-dependent decline in regeneration of CNS neurons. In Chapter 4, I used optogenetic and chemogenetic tools to assess motor cortical plasticity in adult mice. I found that following ablation of the dorsal corticospinal tract, the motor cortex is able to re-establish output to the limbs and the minor dorsolateral corticospinal tract representing 3% of direct spinal cord transmission is able to partially mediate spontaneous recovery. Taken together, these data demonstrate an age-related decline in axon regeneration in the adult mammalian CNS and show that a minor corticospinal pathway is necessary for spontaneous recovery following SCI. Science, Faculty of Zoology, Department of Graduate 2016-12-05T21:11:39Z 2017-05-31T00:00:00 2016 2017-02 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/59882 eng Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
description Spinal cord injury (SCI) results in paralysis due in part to the inability of central nervous system (CNS) axons to regenerate following their transection. However, after anatomically incomplete SCI, partial spontaneous recovery can often occur. I studied the regeneration and plasticity of descending pathways involved in forelimb motor function following SCI to better understand the mechanisms underlying axon regeneration failure and spontaneous motor recovery. In Chapter 2, I developed an injury model in adult mice that results in complete axotomy of the rubrospinal tract and sustained deficits in forelimb motor function. I found that when a left dorsolateral funiculus crush injury was instigated at vertebral level C4, there were sustained deficits in left forelimb function while when the same injury was instigated at vertebral level C6, there was spontaneous recovery in left forelimb function to baseline levels. In Chapter 3, I used the injury model developed in Chapter 2 in conditional PTEN KO mice to test the hypotheses that 1) PTEN deletion promotes rubrospinal axonal regeneration following SCI and 2) Aging significantly diminishes the regenerative capacity of PTEN deleted rubrospinal neurons. I found that when PTEN was deleted within rubrospinal neurons in 4 week old mice, there was significant rostral axon growth and regeneration past the lesion site to ~1 mm relative to controls. However, when PTEN was deleted within rubrospinal neurons in 7-8 month old mice, while rostral axon growth occurred, there was no caudal regeneration. Thus, there is an age-dependent decline in regeneration of CNS neurons. In Chapter 4, I used optogenetic and chemogenetic tools to assess motor cortical plasticity in adult mice. I found that following ablation of the dorsal corticospinal tract, the motor cortex is able to re-establish output to the limbs and the minor dorsolateral corticospinal tract representing 3% of direct spinal cord transmission is able to partially mediate spontaneous recovery. Taken together, these data demonstrate an age-related decline in axon regeneration in the adult mammalian CNS and show that a minor corticospinal pathway is necessary for spontaneous recovery following SCI. === Science, Faculty of === Zoology, Department of === Graduate
author Hilton, Brett Jason
spellingShingle Hilton, Brett Jason
Regeneration and plasticity of descending motor pathways following spinal cord injury
author_facet Hilton, Brett Jason
author_sort Hilton, Brett Jason
title Regeneration and plasticity of descending motor pathways following spinal cord injury
title_short Regeneration and plasticity of descending motor pathways following spinal cord injury
title_full Regeneration and plasticity of descending motor pathways following spinal cord injury
title_fullStr Regeneration and plasticity of descending motor pathways following spinal cord injury
title_full_unstemmed Regeneration and plasticity of descending motor pathways following spinal cord injury
title_sort regeneration and plasticity of descending motor pathways following spinal cord injury
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/59882
work_keys_str_mv AT hiltonbrettjason regenerationandplasticityofdescendingmotorpathwaysfollowingspinalcordinjury
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