4.6 Article

Cortical layer-specific modulation of neuronal activity after sensory deprivation due to spinal cord injury

期刊

JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-LONDON
卷 599, 期 20, 页码 4643-4669

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1113/JP281901

关键词

cortical layers; cortical reorganization; forelimb; gamma oscillation; hindlimb; sensory deprivation; sensory-evoked responses; sensory processing; slow-wave oscillation; somatosensory cortex; spinal cord injury

资金

  1. Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness
  2. Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities
  3. FEDER [BFU2016-80665-P, PID2019-105020GB, SAF2016-80647-R, BES2017-082029, RYC2019-026870-I]
  4. European Union [794926]
  5. Marie Curie Actions (MSCA) [794926] Funding Source: Marie Curie Actions (MSCA)

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Spinal cord injury immediately modifies the local circuitry within the deafferented cortex, with supragranular layers integrating corticocortical information better and infragranular layers integrating evoked sensory stimulation better. This layer-specific phenomenon can guide long-term alterations in neuronal excitability and plasticity associated with somatosensory network rearrangements and central sensory pathologies related to spinal cord injury.
Cortical areas have the capacity of large-scale reorganization following sensory deafferentation. However, it remains unclear whether this phenomenon is a unique process that homogeneously affects the entire deprived cortical region or whether it is susceptible to changes depending on neuronal networks across distinct cortical layers. Here, we studied how the local circuitry within each layer of the deafferented cortex forms the basis for neuroplastic changes after immediate thoracic spinal cord injury (SCI) in anaesthetized rats. In vivo electrophysiological recordings from deafferented hindlimb somatosensory cortex showed that SCI induces layer-specific changes mediating evoked and spontaneous activity. In supragranular layer 2/3, SCI increased gamma oscillations and the ability of these neurons to initiate up-states during spontaneous activity, suggesting an altered corticocortical network and/or intrinsic properties that may serve to maintain the excitability of the cortical column after deafferentation. On the other hand, SCI enhanced the infragranular layers' ability to integrate evoked sensory inputs leading to increased and faster neuronal responses. Delayed evoked response onsets were also observed in layer 5/6, suggesting alterations in thalamocortical connectivity. Altogether, our data indicate that SCI immediately modifies the local circuitry within the deafferented cortex allowing supragranular layers to better integrate spontaneous corticocortical information, thus modifying column excitability, and infragranular layers to better integrate evoked sensory inputs to preserve subcortical outputs. These layer-specific neuronal changes may guide the long-term alterations in neuronal excitability and plasticity associated with the rearrangements of somatosensory networks and the appearance of central sensory pathologies usually associated with spinal cord injury. Key points Sensory stimulation of forelimb produces cortical evoked responses in the somatosensory hindlimb cortex in a layer-dependent manner. Spinal cord injury favours the input statistics of corticocortical connections between intact and deafferented cortices. After spinal cord injury supragranular layers exhibit better integration of spontaneous corticocortical information while infragranular layers exhibit better integration of evoked sensory stimulation. Cortical reorganization is a layer-specific phenomenon.

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