Title: The Response of Rubrospinal Neurons to Axotomy at Different Stages of Development in the North American Opossum
Abstract: Rubral axons can grow around a lesion of their pathway in the thoracic spinal cord of developing opossums and a critical period exists for that plasticity. The critical period probably begins when rubral axons first grow into the thoracic cord, and it extends until approximately postnatal day 30. We previously noted that most rubrospinal neurons die after transection of their axon during the critical period, suggesting that plasticity results primarily from growth of axons not damaged by the lesion (Xu and Martin, J. Comp. Neurol. 271, 368–381, 1989). That observation led us to study the response of rubrospinal neurons to axotomy in more detail and at additional stages of development, using a prelabeling paradigm. We first injected fast blue (FB) into the caudal thoracic or rostral lumbar spinal cord in animals ranging from estimated postnatal day 9 to 50 and, about 4 days later, lesioned the rubrospinal tract several segments rostral to the injection. Approximately 30 days later, the animals were killed so that the red nucleus could be searched for labeled neurons. During the critical period for plasticity, rubrospinal neurons showed signs of degeneration 1 week after their axon was cut. When animals were killed 2–3 weeks after lesioning, there was an obvious decrease in axotomized neurons within the red nucleus, and by 4 weeks, more than 75% of them had degenerated. The marked susceptibility of rubrospinal neurons to axotomy during the critical period for plasticity is consistent with the hypothesis that developmental plasticity of the rubrospinal tract results primarily from growth of axons that were not damaged by the lesion. Our results also suggest that survival of axotomized rubrospinal neurons increases with age.
Publication Year: 1992
Publication Date: 1992-01-01
Language: en
Type: article
Indexed In: ['crossref', 'pubmed']
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Cited By Count: 32
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