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1.

Background

Neuronal transduction by adeno-associated viral (AAV) vectors has been demonstrated in cortex, brainstem, cerebellum, and sensory ganglia. Intrathecal delivery of AAV serotypes that transduce neurons in dorsal root ganglia (DRG) and spinal cord offers substantial opportunities to 1) further study mechanisms underlying chronic pain, and 2) develop novel gene-based therapies for the treatment and management of chronic pain using a non-invasive delivery route with established safety margins. In this study we have compared expression patterns of AAV serotype 5 (AAV5)- and AAV serotype 8 (AAV8)-mediated gene transfer to sensory neurons following intrathecal delivery by direct lumbar puncture.

Results

Intravenous mannitol pre-treatment significantly enhanced transduction of primary sensory neurons after direct lumbar puncture injection of AAV5 (rAAV5-GFP) or AAV8 (rAAV8-GFP) carrying the green fluorescent protein (GFP) gene. The presence of GFP in DRG neurons was consistent with the following evidence for primary afferent origin of the majority of GFP-positive fibers in spinal cord: 1) GFP-positive axons were evident in both dorsal roots and dorsal columns; and 2) dorsal rhizotomy, which severs the primary afferent input to spinal cord, abolished the majority of GFP labeling in dorsal horn. We found that both rAAV5-GFP and rAAV8-GFP appear to preferentially target large-diameter DRG neurons, while excluding the isolectin-B4 (IB4) -binding population of small diameter neurons. In addition, a larger proportion of CGRP-positive cells was transduced by rAAV5-GFP, compared to rAAV8-GFP.

Conclusions

The present study demonstrates the feasibility of minimally invasive gene transfer to sensory neurons using direct lumbar puncture and provides evidence for differential targeting of subtypes of DRG neurons by AAV vectors.  相似文献   

2.
In this study we examined the expression of P2X(3) receptor in mouse embryos from E9.5 to E14.5 using immunohistochemistry. We found a uniform labeling in the developing trigeminal and dorsal root ganglia (DRG), while adult DRG and trigeminal ganglia expressed P2X(3) only in small-diameter neurons. In the brainstem, the mesencephalic trigeminal and facial motor nuclei were immunoreactive for P2X(3). P2X(3) was also transiently expressed in the developing brain, and precursors of spinal motor neurons. We also detected immunolabeling in the paravertebral sympathetic chain ganglia, in the sympathoadrenal cells and in non-neural tissues including testis, epidermis, wall of the aorta, as well as in subepidermal structures and mesenchymal tissues of limbs, branchial arches and tail.  相似文献   

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During development, dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons extend their axons toward the dorsolateral part of the spinal cord and enter the spinal cord through the dorsal root entry zone (DREZ). After entering the spinal cord, these axons project into the dorsal mantle layer after a ‘waiting period’ of a few days. We revealed that the diffusible axonal guidance molecule netrin-1 is a chemorepellent for developing DRG axons. When DRG axons orient themselves toward the DREZ, netrin-1 proteins derived from the ventral spinal cord prevent DRG axons from projecting aberrantly toward the ventral spinal cord and help them to project correctly toward the DREZ. In addition to the ventrally derived netrin-1, the dorsal spinal cord cells adjacent to the DREZ transiently express netrin-1 proteins during the waiting period. This dorsally derived netrin-1 contributes to the correct guidance of DRG axons to prevent them from invading the dorsal spinal cord. In general, there is a complete lack of sensory axonal regeneration after a spinal cord injury, because the dorsal column lesion exerts inhibitory activities toward regenerating axons. Netrin-1 is a novel candidate for a major inhibitor of sensory axonal regeneration in the spinal cord; because its expression level stays unchanged in the lesion site following injury, and adult DRG neurons respond to netrin-1-induced axon repulsion. Although further studies are required to show the involvement of netrin-1 in preventing the regeneration of sensory axons in CNS injury, the manipulation of netrin-1-induced repulsion in the CNS lesion site may be a potent approach for the treatment of human spinal injuries.  相似文献   

5.

Background

The complex neuronal circuitry of the dorsal horn of the spinal cord is as yet poorly understood. However, defining the circuits underlying the transmission of information from primary afferents to higher levels is critical to our understanding of sensory processing. In this study, we have examined phosphodiesterase 1C (Pde1c) BAC transgenic mice in which a green fluorescent protein (GFP) reporter gene reflects Pde1c expression in sensory neuron subpopulations in the dorsal root ganglia and spinal cord.

Results

Using double labeling immunofluorescence, we demonstrate GFP expression in specific subpopulations of primary sensory neurons and a distinct neuronal expression pattern within the spinal cord dorsal horn. In the dorsal root ganglia, their distribution is restricted to those subpopulations of primary sensory neurons that give rise to unmyelinated C fibers (neurofilament 200 negative). A small proportion of both non-peptidergic (IB4-binding) and peptidergic (CGRP immunoreactive) subclasses expressed GFP. However, GFP expression was more common in the non-peptidergic than the peptidergic subclass. GFP was also expressed in a subpopulation of the primary sensory neurons immunoreactive for the vanilloid receptor TRPV1 and the ATP-gated ion channel P2X3. In the spinal cord dorsal horn, GFP positive neurons were largely restricted to lamina I and to a lesser extent lamina II, but surprisingly did not coexpress markers for key neuronal populations present in the superficial dorsal horn.

Conclusion

The expression of GFP in subclasses of nociceptors and also in dorsal horn regions densely innervated by nociceptors suggests that Pde1c marks a unique subpopulation of nociceptive sensory neurons.  相似文献   

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7.
RNA blot analysis and non-isotopic in situ hybridization cytochemistry were used to study the expression of the mRNA for the glial sodium channel NaG, belonging to Na+ channel subfamily 2, in rat dorsal root ganglia (DRG). mRNA hybridizing at high stringency with an antisense riboprobe against the NaG sequence was observed in both Schwann cells and spinal sensory neurons in situ within DRG, but was expressed at higher levels in the latter. In contrast, hybridization was not detectable in neurons within hippocampus, cerebellum and spinal cord. The expression of the mRNA hybridizing with the NaG probe appears to be developmentally regulated in both Schwann cells and DRG neurons, with levels increasing as development proceeds. Thus, in addition to the mRNAs for types I and II/IIA α-subunits and β1-subunit in DRG neurons and types II/IIA and III α-subunits and β1-subunit in Schwann cells, the mRNA for an additional sodium channel belonging to subfamily 2 is expressed in these cells in situ. Special issue dedicated to Dr. Marion E. Smith.  相似文献   

8.
Adult spinal cord motor and dorsal root ganglion (DRG) sensory neurons express multiple neuregulin-1 (NRG-1) isoforms that act as axon-associated factors promoting neuromuscular junction formation and Schwann cell proliferation and differentiation. NRG-1 isoforms are also expressed by muscle and Schwann cells, suggesting that motor and sensory neurons are themselves acted on by NRG-1 isoforms produced by their peripheral targets. To test this hypothesis, we examined the expression of the NRG-1 receptor subunits erbB2, erbB3, and erbB4 in rat lumbar DRG and spinal cord. All three erbB receptors are expressed in these tissues. Sciatic nerve transection, an injury that induces Schwann cell expression of NRG-1, alters erbB expression in DRG and cord. Virtually all DRG neurons are erbB2- and erbB3-immunoreactive, with erbB4 also detectable in many neurons. In spinal cord white matter, erbB2 and erbB4 antibodies produce dense punctate staining, whereas the erbB3 antibody primarily labels glial cell bodies. Spinal cord dorsal and ventral horn neurons, including alpha-motor neurons, exhibit erbB2, erbB3, and erbB4 immunoreactivity. Spinal cord ventral horn also contains a population of small erbB3+/S100beta+/GFAP- cells (GFAP-negative astrocytes or oligodendrocytes). We conclude that sensory and motor neurons projecting into sciatic nerve express multiple erbB receptors and are potentially NRG-1 responsive.  相似文献   

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Sema3A (Sema III, SemD, collapsin-1) can induce neuronal growth cone collapse and axon repulsion of distinct neuronal populations. To study Sema3A function in patterning afferent projections into the developing spinal cord, we employed the recombinant adenoviral vector technique in embryonic rat spinal cord slices. Virus solution was injected in the dorsal aspect of organotypic spinal cord cultures with segmentally attached dorsal root ganglia (sc-DRG). In cultures grown in the presence of nerve growth factor (NGF), injected either with the control virus AdCMVLacZ or with vehicle only, afferent innervation patterns were similar to those of control. However, unilateral injection of AdCMVSema3A/AdCMVLacZ in sc-DRG slices revealed a strong inhibitory effect on NGF-dependent sensory afferent growth. Ectopic Sema3A in the dorsal spinal cord, the target area of NGF-responsive DRG fibers in vivo, created an exclusion zone for these fibers and as a result they failed to reach and innervate their appropriate target zones. Taken together, gain of Sema3A function in the dorsal aspect of sc-DRG cultures revealed a dominant inhibitory effect on NGF-dependent, nociceptive sensory DRG afferents, an observation in line with the model proposed by E. K. Messersmith et al. (1995, Neuron 14, 949-959), suggesting that Sema3A secreted by spinal cord cells can act to repel central sensory fibers during the formation of lamina-specific connections in the spinal cord.  相似文献   

12.
We have measured arginine vasopressin in the neural lobe, the trigeminal ganglion (TG), dorsal root ganglia (DRG), spinal cord, trigeminal and sciatic nerves of the rat by radioimmunoassay. In control rats, the neural lobe contained 1600 pg/mg, the ganglia 52.5, 21.0, 8.5, 4.28, 3.85 pg/mg in the lumbar, sacral, cervical, thoracic, and trigeminal ganglion, respectively, the spinal cord contained 5.1, 4.3, 4.2 and 2.6 pg/mg in the lumbar, thoracic, sacral and cervical cord, respectively and the trigeminal and sciatic nerves contained 3.8 and 13 pg/mg. Neonatal capsaicin treatment depleted about 38–67% of AVP in the ganglia. Residual AVP amounted to 526.8, 30.55, 20.75, 12.88, 4.95, 2.74, 2.14, 7.94 and 2.53 pg/mg in the neural lobe, lumbar, thoracic, sacral, cervical DRG, lumbar, thoracic spinal cord, the sciatic and trigeminal nerves respectively. Capsaicin destroyed about 40.5% of total cells and 52% of AVP-immunoreactive neurons.  相似文献   

13.
Dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons extend axons to specific targets in the gray matter of the spinal cord. During development, DRG axons grow into the dorsolateral margin of the spinal cord and projection into the dorsal mantle layer occurs after a ;waiting period' of a few days. Netrin 1 is a long-range diffusible factor expressed in the ventral midline of the developing neural tube, and has chemoattractive and chemorepulsive effects on growing axons. Netrin 1 is also expressed in the dorsal spinal cord. However, the roles of dorsally derived netrin 1 remain totally unknown. Here, we show that dorsal netrin 1 controls the correct guidance of primary sensory axons. During the waiting period, netrin 1 is transiently expressed or upregulated in the dorsal spinal cord, and the absence of netrin 1 results in the aberrant projection of sensory axons, including both cutaneous and proprioceptive afferents, into the dorsal mantle layer. Netrin 1 derived from the dorsal spinal cord, but not the floor plate, is involved in the correct projection of DRG axons. Furthermore, netrin 1 suppresses axon outgrowth from DRG in vitro. Unc5c(rcm) mutant shows abnormal invasion of DRG axons as observed in netrin 1 mutants. These results are the first direct evidence that netrin 1 in the dorsal spinal cord acts as an inhibitory cue for primary sensory axons and is a crucial signal for the formation of sensory afferent neural networks.  相似文献   

14.
We studied the distribution of sugar residues in the oligosaccharide chains of complex carbohydrates in tissue sections of rat spinal cord, brainstem, and sensory ganglia using twelve lectin-horseradish peroxidase conjugates. Glycoconjugates containing terminal galactose residues were localized apparently in the Golgi apparatus in a population of predominantly small B-type neurons in spinal and trigeminal ganglia. Large A-type neurons rarely showed reactivity with galactose-binding lectins. A cells stained for glycoconjugates with N-glycosidically linked oligosaccharides and glycogen. The central and peripheral processes of the small neurons, mostly unmyelinated C fibers in sensory roots and spinal nerves, contained an abundance of glycoconjugates with terminal alpha-galactose residues. The central projections and terminals of small to medium-sized primary sensory neurons in the spinal and trigeminal ganglia were visualized in Lissauer's tract and the substantia gelatinosa in the spinal cord, and in the spinal trigeminal tract and the nucleus trigeminus in the lower medulla with lectins specific for terminal alpha-galactose residues. In addition, fibers of the solitary system and the area postrema were reactive with these lectins. The peripheral and central nervous system elements with affinity for galactopyranosyl-specific lectins correspond in distribution with neuroanatomical regions thought to be involved in the transmission and relay of somatic and visceral afferent inputs such as pain and temperature. Such specific localization of a glycosubstance to a distinct subpopulation of neurons and their peripheral and central processes suggests that the particular glycoconjugate may be of physiological significance.  相似文献   

15.
A widely distributed antigen developmentally regulated in the nervous system   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11  
We have identified a glycoprotein (BEN) of 95-100 x 10(3) Mr using a monoclonal antibody. This protein is transiently expressed at the cell surface of the peripherally projecting neurons, i.e. motoneurons of the spinal cord and cranial nuclei, sensory neurons of the dorsal root and cranial sensory ganglia and sympathetic, parasympathetic and enteric neurons. In vitro cultures of dorsal root and sympathetic ganglia have shown that BEN is expressed on neurons but not on glial cells. On motor and sensory neurons, BEN first appears at the level of the cell body just after withdrawal from the cell cycle. Soon afterwards, expression of the antigen extends to the elongating axon. After a few days, BEN is no longer expressed by the motor and sensory neurons, disappearing first from the cell body and then progressively from the fibres. The loss of expression is concomitant with the onset of intense proliferation of satellite and Schwann cells. This modulated expression within the nervous system is unlike that of any surface glycoprotein so far described in vertebrates. Preliminary biochemical analysis indicates that, although it bears the adhesion-associated epitope HNK-1, BEN does not share characteristics with any previously described axonal glycoprotein. Consequently, we speculate that this glycoprotein might be a novel molecule implicated in selective adhesion phenomena, such as axonal fasciculation.  相似文献   

16.
Immunohistochemical and radioimmunoassay studies revealed that both CGRP- and SP-like immunoreactivity in the caudal spinal trigeminal nucleus and tract, the substantia gelatinosa and the dorsal cervical spinal cord as well as in cell bodies of the trigeminal ganglion and the spinal dorsal root ganglion is markedly depleted by capsaicin which is known to cause degeneration of a certain number of primary sensory neurons. Higher brain areas and the ventral spinal cord were not affected by capsaicin treatment. Furthermore CGRP and substance P-like immunoreactivity were shown to be colocalized in the above areas and to coexist in cell bodies of the trigeminal ganglion and the spinal dorsal root ganglia. It is suggested that CGRP, like substance P, may have a neuromodulatory role on nociception and peripheral cardiovascular reflexes.  相似文献   

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18.
We used polyclonal antisera recognizing S100, a small acidic protein highly enriched in nervous tissue, to stain sections of embryonic chicken lumbosacral spinal cord and hindlimb. S100 immunoreactivity was detected in developing sensory neurons of the dorsal root ganglia (DRG) and motor neurons of the ventral spinal cord as early as embryonic day (E) 5, and staining persisted through hatching. In contrast, expression of S100 first became apparent in Schwann cells at E13, just before myelination, and was not detected in developing skin or muscle. Since S100 beta was present in motor and sensory neurons and is known to promote neuronal survival and neurite extension in vitro (Winningham-Major, Staecker, Barger, Coats, and Van Eldik, 1989), we tested the ability of S100 to promote neuron survival in an in ovo survival assay. Addition of S100 to chick embryos in ovo during the period of naturally occurring motor neuron cell death resulted in a significant increase in motor neuron survival, but had no effect on the in vivo survival of sensory neurons in the DRG. The findings that S100 is present in spinal motor neurons and that the addition of S100 enhances the survival of these cells in vivo are consistent with the possibility that S100 may act as a naturally occurring neuron survival factor during development.  相似文献   

19.
Summary Atrial natriuretic factor (ANF) is a cardiac hormone with various functions in body homeostasis. It is also processed in the brain and in the peripheral nervous system where it appears to play a role as a neuromodulator. Little is known about the presence of ANF throughout the spinal cord of the guinea-pig. We therefore examined the distribution of ANF and its possible interrelation with primary sensory afferents in this species. Using enzyme- and fluorescence-immunohistochemistry on deparaffinized sections, ANF-like immunoreactivity was found to be present in nerve fibers in laminae I/II of the spinal cord and in neurons of spinal and trigeminal ganglia. Tachykinins and ANF coexisted in very few fibers of the spinal cord but did not coexist in primary sensory spinal or trigeminal neurons. Our results indicate that spinal ANF-immunoreactive fibers are of dual origin, primary sensory and non-primary sensory. The possibly heterogeneous source of the non-primary sensory ANF, its possible coexistence with other co-transmitters and functional implications are discussed.Preliminary aspects of this study have been reported at the 2nd World Congress of Neuroscience in Budapest (Weihe et al. 1987) and at the Versammlung der Anatomischen Gesellschaft in Zürich (Nohr et al. 1989)  相似文献   

20.
This study examines key elements of glutamatergic transmission within sensory ganglia of the rat. We show that the soma of primary sensory neurons release glutamate when depolarized. Using acute dissociated mixed neuronal/glia cultures of dorsal root ganglia (DRG) or trigeminal ganglia and a colorimetric assay, we show that when glutamate uptake by satellite glial cells (SGCs) is inhibited, KCl stimulation leads to simultaneous increase of glutamate in the culture medium. With calcium imaging we see that the soma of primary sensory neurons and SGCs respond to AMPA, NMDA, kainate and mGluR agonists, and selective antagonists block this response. Using whole cell patch-clamp technique, inward currents were recorded from small diameter (<30 µm) DRG neurons from intact DRGs (ex-vivo whole ganglion preparation) in response to local application of the above glutamate receptor agonists. Following a chronic constriction injury (CCI) of either the inferior orbital nerve or the sciatic nerve, glutamate expression increases in the trigeminal ganglia and DRG respectively. This increase occurs in neurons of all diameters and is present in the somata of neurons with injured axons as well as in somata of neighboring uninjured neurons. These data provides additional evidence that glutamate can be released within the sensory ganglion, and that the somata of primary sensory neurons as well as SGCs express functional glutamate receptors at their surface. These findings, together with our previous gene knockdown data, suggest that glutamatergic transmission within the ganglion could impact nociceptive threshold.  相似文献   

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