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Spinal microcircuits go through multiphasic homeostatic compensations in a mouse model of motoneuron degeneration. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explores how neural circuits in mice adapt during early stages of progressive motoneuron degeneration, which helps maintain normal movement despite cell loss.
  • It finds that, early on, a specific pre-motor circuit's neurotransmission is significantly reduced due to decreased density of glycine receptors, but this impairment is not widespread across all spinal inhibitory circuits.
  • Later stages of the disease show recovery in neurotransmission and increased excitation of motoneurons, indicating that spinal microcircuits undergo specific compensatory changes that help preserve muscle force output.

Article Abstract

In many neurological conditions, early-stage neural circuit adaptation preserves relatively normal behavior. In some diseases, spinal motoneurons progressively degenerate yet movement remains initially preserved. This study investigates whether these neurons and associated microcircuits adapt in a mouse model of progressive motoneuron degeneration. Using a combination of in vitro and in vivo electrophysiology and super-resolution microscopy, we find that, early in the disease, neurotransmission in a key pre-motor circuit, the recurrent inhibition mediated by Renshaw cells, is reduced by half due to impaired quantal size associated with decreased glycine receptor density. This impairment is specific and not a widespread feature of spinal inhibitory circuits. Furthermore, it recovers at later stages of disease. Additionally, an increased probability of release from proprioceptive afferents leads to increased monosynaptic excitation of motoneurons. We reveal that, in this motoneuron degenerative condition, spinal microcircuits undergo specific multiphasic homeostatic compensations that may contribute to preservation of force output.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2024.115046DOI Listing

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