Selective plasticity of callosal neurons in the adult contralesional cortex following murine traumatic brain injury

2022 | journal article; research paper

Jump to: Cite & Linked | Documents & Media | Details | Version history

Cite this publication

​Selective plasticity of callosal neurons in the adult contralesional cortex following murine traumatic brain injury​
Empl, L.; Chovsepian, A.; Chahin, M.; Kan, W. Y. V.; Fourneau, J.; Van Steenbergen, V. & Weidinger, S. et al.​ (2022) 
Nature Communications13(1) pp. 2659​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-29992-0 

Documents & Media

document.pdf6.27 MBAdobe PDF

License

GRO License GRO License

Details

Authors
Empl, Laura; Chovsepian, Alexandra; Chahin, Maryam; Kan, Wing Yin Vanessa; Fourneau, Julie; Van Steenbergen, Valérie; Weidinger, Sanofer; Marcantoni, Maite; Ghanem, Alexander; Bradley, Peter; Conzelmann, Karl Klaus; Cai, Ruiyao; Ghasemigharagoz, Alireza; Ertürk, Ali; Wagner, Ingrid; Kreutzfeldt, Mario; Merkler, Doron; Liebscher, Sabine; Bareyre, Florence M. 
Abstract
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) results in deficits that are often followed by recovery. The contralesional cortex can contribute to this process but how distinct contralesional neurons and circuits respond to injury remains to be determined. To unravel adaptations in the contralesional cortex, we used chronic in vivo two-photon imaging. We observed a general decrease in spine density with concomitant changes in spine dynamics over time. With retrograde co-labeling techniques, we showed that callosal neurons are uniquely affected by and responsive to TBI. To elucidate circuit connectivity, we used monosynaptic rabies tracing, clearing techniques and histology. We demonstrate that contralesional callosal neurons adapt their input circuitry by strengthening ipsilateral connections from pre-connected areas. Finally, functional in vivo two-photon imaging demonstrates that the restoration of pre-synaptic circuitry parallels the restoration of callosal activity patterns. Taken together our study thus delineates how callosal neurons structurally and functionally adapt following a contralateral murine TBI.
Issue Date
2022
Journal
Nature Communications 
Project
TRR 274: Checkpoints of Central Nervous System Recovery 
TRR 274 | C03: Glial sculpting of neuronal remodeling as a checkpoint of recovery in the injured CNS 
Working Group
RG Bareyre (Neuronal Repair) 
ISSN
2041-1723
Language
English

Reference

Citations


Social Media