Spinal cord injury is associated with changes in synaptic properties of the mouse major pelvic ganglion

Autor: Cindy W. Kyi, Virginia B. Garcia, Michael L. Garcia, David J. Schulz
Rok vydání: 2022
Předmět:
Zdroj: Journal of Neurophysiology. 128:892-909
ISSN: 1522-1598
0022-3077
DOI: 10.1152/jn.00477.2021
Popis: Spinal cord injury (SCI) has substantial impacts on autonomic function. In part, SCI results in loss of normal autonomic activity that contributes to injury-associated pathology such as neurogenic bladder, bowel, and sexual dysfunction. Yet little is known of the impacts of SCI on peripheral autonomic neurons that directly innervate these target organs. In this study, we measured changes in synaptic properties of neurons of the mouse major pelvic ganglion (MPG) associated with acute and chronic SCI. Our data show that functional and physiological properties of synapses onto MPG neurons are altered after SCI and differ between acute and chronic injury. After acute injury excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs) show increased rise and decay time constants leading to overall broader and longer EPSPs, whereas in chronic-injured animals EPSPs are reduced in amplitude and show faster rise and decay leading to shorter EPSPs. Synaptic depression and low-pass filtering are also altered in injured animals. Finally, cholinergic currents are smaller in acute-injured animals but larger in chronic-injured animals relative to control animals. These changes in synaptic properties are associated with differences in nicotinic receptor subunit expression as well. MPGiCHRNA3/imRNA levels decreased after injury, whereasiCHRNA4/imRNAs increased. Furthermore, changes in the correlations of α- and β-subunit mRNAs suggest that nicotinic receptor subtype composition is altered after injury. Taken together, our data demonstrate that peripheral autonomic neurons are fundamentally altered after SCI, suggesting that longer-term therapeutic approaches could target these neurons directly to potentially help ameliorate neurogenic target organ dysfunction.bNEWamp; NOTEWORTHY/bSpinal cord injury (SCI) has substantial impacts on autonomic function, yet little is known of the impacts of SCI on autonomic neurons that directly innervate effectors impacted by injury. Here we investigated changes at the cellular level associated with SCI in neurons that are "downstream" of the central injury. An understanding of these off-target impacts of SCI ultimately will be critical in the context of effective restoration of function through neuromodulation of pharmacological therapeutic approaches.
Databáze: OpenAIRE