Distal axotomy enhances retrograde presynaptic excitability onto injured pyramidal neurons via trans-synaptic signaling.

Nat Commun

UNC/NCSU Joint Department of Biomedical Engineering, UNC-Chapel Hill, Campus box 7575, Chapel Hill, NC, 27599-7575, USA.

Published: September 2017

Injury of CNS nerve tracts remodels circuitry through dendritic spine loss and hyper-excitability, thus influencing recovery. Due to the complexity of the CNS, a mechanistic understanding of injury-induced synaptic remodeling remains unclear. Using microfluidic chambers to separate and injure distal axons, we show that axotomy causes retrograde dendritic spine loss at directly injured pyramidal neurons followed by retrograde presynaptic hyper-excitability. These remodeling events require activity at the site of injury, axon-to-soma signaling, and transcription. Similarly, directly injured corticospinal neurons in vivo also exhibit a specific increase in spiking following axon injury. Axotomy-induced hyper-excitability of cultured neurons coincides with elimination of inhibitory inputs onto injured neurons, including those formed onto dendritic spines. Netrin-1 downregulation occurs following axon injury and exogenous netrin-1 applied after injury normalizes spine density, presynaptic excitability, and inhibitory inputs at injured neurons. Our findings show that intrinsic signaling within damaged neurons regulates synaptic remodeling and involves netrin-1 signaling.Spinal cord injury can induce synaptic reorganization and remodeling in the brain. Here the authors study how severed distal axons signal back to the cell body to induce hyperexcitability, loss of inhibition and enhanced presynaptic release through netrin-1.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5607003PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-017-00652-yDOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

retrograde presynaptic
8
presynaptic excitability
8
injured pyramidal
8
pyramidal neurons
8
dendritic spine
8
spine loss
8
synaptic remodeling
8
distal axons
8
directly injured
8
axon injury
8

Similar Publications

Neuromodulatory signaling is poised to serve as a neural mechanism for gain control, acting as a crucial tuning factor to influence neuronal activity by dynamically shaping excitatory and inhibitory fast neurotransmission. The endocannabinoid (eCB) signaling system, the most widely expressed neuromodulatory system in the mammalian brain, is known to filter excitatory and inhibitory inputs through retrograde, pre-synaptic action. However, whether eCBs exert retrograde gain control to ultimately facilitate reward-seeking behaviors in freely moving mammals is not established.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

BK channels mediate a presynaptic form of mGluR-LTD in the neonatal hippocampus.

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A

January 2025

Instituto de Neurociencias, Centro Interdisciplinario de Neurociencia de Valparaíso, Facultad de Ciencias, Universidad de Valparaíso, Valparaíso 2340000, Chile.

BK channels can control neuronal function, but their functional relevance in activity-dependent changes of synaptic function remains elusive. Here, we report that repetitive low-frequency stimulation activates BK channels through 12(S)HPETE, an arachidonic acid metabolite, produced downstream of postsynaptic metabotropic glutamate receptors (mGluRs) to trigger long-term depression (LTD) at CA3-CA1 synapses in hippocampal slices from P7-P10 mice. Activation of BK channels is subunit specific, as paxilline but not iberiotoxin blocked mGluR-LTD.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Differential participation of CaMKII/ROCK and NOS pathways in the cholinergic inhibitory drive operated by nicotinic α7 receptors in perisynaptic Schwann cells.

Biochem Pharmacol

January 2025

Laboratório de Farmacologia e Neurobiologia, Instituto de Ciências Biomédicas de Abel Salazar Universidade do Porto (ICBAS-UP), 4050-313 Porto, Portugal; Centro de Investigação Farmacológica e Inovação Medicamentosa (MedInUP/RISE-Health), Instituto de Ciências Biomédicas de Abel Salazar Universidade do Porto (ICBAS-UP), 4050-313 Porto, Portugal. Electronic address:

Nicotinic α7 receptors (α7 nAChRs) present in perisynaptic Schwann cells (PSCs) control acetylcholine (ACh) spillover from the neuromuscular synapse by transiently increasing intracellular Ca, which fosters adenosine release via type 1 equilibrative nucleoside transporters (ENT1) and retrograde activation of presynaptic A inhibitory receptors. The putative Ca-dependent pathways downstream α7 nAChRs involved in the sensing inhibitory drive operated by PSCs is unknown. Herein, we used phrenic nerve-hemidiaphragm preparations from Wistar rats.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The cannabinoid CB receptor positive allosteric modulator EC21a exhibits complicated pharmacology .

J Recept Signal Transduct Res

August 2024

Department of Pharmacology and Warren Center for Neuroscience Drug Discovery, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, USA.

Schizophrenia is a complex disease involving the dysregulation of numerous brain circuits and patients exhibit positive symptoms (hallucinations, delusions), negative symptoms (anhedonia), and cognitive impairments. We have shown that the antipsychotic efficacy of positive allosteric modulators (PAMs) of both the M muscarinic receptor and metabotropic glutamate receptor 1 (mGlu) involve the retrograde activation of the presynaptic cannabinoid type-2 (CB) receptor, indicating that CB activation or potentiation could result in a novel therapeutic strategy for schizophrenia. We used two complementary assays, receptor-mediated phosphoinositide hydrolysis and GIRK channel activation, to characterize a CB PAM scaffold, represented by the compound EC21a, to explore its potential as a starting point to optimize therapeutics for schizophrenia.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Oxytocin receptor (OXTR) is expressed in a distinct population of neurons in the lateral septum (LS), among other brain regions, and is responsible for regulating various social and nonsocial behaviors, including reward processing, feeding, social memory, anxiety, and fear. The LS serves as a key link between the cortical and subcortical regions, yet the synaptic inputs that drive the OXTR-expressing LS neurons have not been characterized. Here, we established retrograde and anterograde viral tracing in the mouse brain to map the input connections of the intermediate part of the LS where OXTR neurons are concentrated.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!