Manipulations of spinal cord excitability evoke developmentally-dependent compensatory changes in the lamprey spinal cord

被引:0
作者
Ria Mishaal Cooke
Sophie Luco
David Parker
机构
[1] University of Cambridge,Department of Zoology
[2] University of Cambridge,Department of Physiology, Development and Neuroscience
[3] University of Leicester,Department of Cell Physiology and Pharmacology
来源
Journal of Comparative Physiology A | 2012年 / 198卷
关键词
Spinal cord; Compensatory plasticity; Lamprey; Excitability;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
We have examined homeostatic or compensatory plasticity evoked by tonic changes in spinal cord excitability in the lamprey, a model system for investigating spinal cord function. In larval animals, reducing excitability by incubating in tetrodotoxin or the glutamate receptor antagonists CNQX or CNQX/AP5 for 20–48 h resulted in a diverse set of cellular and synaptic changes that together were consistent with an increase in spinal cord excitability. Similar changes occurred to a tonic increase in excitation evoked by incubating in high potassium physiological solution (i.e. responses were unidirectional). We also examined developmental influences on these effects. In animals developing from the larval to adult form effects were reduced or absent, suggesting that at this stage the spinal cord was more tolerant of changes in activity levels. Responses had returned in adult animals, but they were now bi-directional (i.e. opposite effects were evoked by an increase or decrease in excitability). The spinal cord can thus monitor and adapt cellular and synaptic properties to tonic changes in excitability levels. This should be considered in analyses of spinal cord plasticity and injury.
引用
收藏
页码:25 / 41
页数:16
相关论文
共 171 条
  • [1] Abraham WC(2005)Memory retention—the stability versus plasticity dilemma Trends Neurosci 28 73-78
  • [2] Robins A(2004)Metaplastic facilitation and ultrastructural changes in synaptic properties are associated with long-term modulation of the lamprey locomotor network J Neurosci 24 9458-9468
  • [3] Bevan S(2006)Giant reticulospinal synapse in lamprey: molecular links between active and periactive zones Cell Tissue Res 326 301-310
  • [4] Parker D(2001)Contributions of identifiable neurons and neuron classes to lamprey vertebrate neurobiology Prog Neurobiol 63 441-466
  • [5] Brodin L(1989)Identification of excitatory interneurons contributing to generation of locomotion in lamprey: structure, pharmacology, and function J Neurophysiol 62 59-69
  • [6] Shupliakov O(1996)Induction of long-term potentiation is associated with major ultrastructural changes of activated synapses Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 93 8040-8045
  • [7] Buchanan J(2003)Synaptic gain control and homeostasis Curr Opin Neurobiol 13 560-567
  • [8] Buchanan J(2004)Homeostasis: a plea for a unified approach Adv Physiol Edu 28 180-187
  • [9] Grillner S(2007)Anti-homeostatic synaptic plasticity of glycine receptor function after chronic strychnine in developing cultured mouse spinal neurons J Neurochem 100 1143-1154
  • [10] Cullheim S(1988)Behavioral recovery following spinal transections: functional regeneration in the lamprey CNS Trends Neurosci 11 227-231