4.7 Article

Engrailed-1 expression marks a primitive class of inhibitory spinal interneuron

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 24, Issue 25, Pages 5827-5839

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.5342-03.2004

Keywords

interneuron; spinal cord; transcription factor; zebrafish; circuitry; inhibition

Categories

Funding

  1. NINDS NIH HHS [R37 NS026539, NS44758, NS26539, R01 NS026539, F32 NS044758, R01 NS026539-25] Funding Source: Medline

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Studies in chicks and mice have suggested that transcription factors mark functional subtypes of interneurons in the developing spinal cord. We used genetic, morphological, and physiological studies to test this proposed association in zebrafish. We found that Engrailed-1 expression uniquely marks a class of ascending interneurons, called circumferential ascending (CiA) interneurons, with ipsilateral axonal projections in both motor and sensory regions of spinal cord. These cells express the glycine transporter 2 gene and are the only known ipsilateral interneurons positive for this marker of inhibitory transmission. Patch recordings show that the CiA neurons are rhythmically active during swimming. Pairwise recordings from the CiA interneurons and postsynaptic cells reveal that the Engrailed-1 neurons produce monosynaptic, strychnine-sensitive inhibition of dorsal sensory interneurons and also inhibit more ventral neurons, including motoneurons and descending interneurons. We conclude that Engrailed-1 expression marks a class of inhibitory interneuron that seems to provide all of the ipsilateral glycinergic inhibition in the spinal cord of embryonic and larval fish. Individual Engrailed-1-positive cells are multifunctional, playing roles in both sensory gating and motor pattern generation. This primitive cell type may have given rise to several, more specialized glycinergic inhibitory interneurons in birds and mammals. Our data support the view that the subdivision of spinal cord into different regions by transcription factors defines a primitive functional organization of spinal interneurons that formed a developmental and evolutionary foundation on which more complex systems were built.

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