The purpose of this study was to evaluate the degree of functional recovery in adult rats with completely transected spinal cord following experimental treatment regimens that include implantation of peripheral nerve segments and local application of acidic fibroblast growth factor (aFGF). Rats were randomly divided to five groups: (1) spinal cord transection, (2) spinal cord transection and aFGF treatment, (3) spinal cord transection and peripheral nerve grafts, (4) spinal cord transection, aFGF treatment, and peripheral nerve grafts, and (5) sham control (laminectomy only). The locomotor behavior of all rats was analyzed by the Basso, Beattie and Bresnahan (BBB) open field locomotor test over the six months survival time. Immunohistochemisty for neurofilament protein, and somatosensory (SSEP) and motor evoked potentials (MEP) were used to evaluate axon growth across the damage site following the different treatments. The results show four principal findings: (1) Only the combination of peripheral nerve grafts and aFGF treatment improved hindlimb locomotor function after spinal cord transection. (2) The SSEP and MEP demonstrated electrophysiological evidence of both sensory and motor information crossing the damaged site, but only in the combined nerve grafts and aFGF treatment rats. (3) Immunostaining demonstrated neurofilament positive axons extending through the graft area and into distal end of spinal cord, but only in the group with combined nerve grafts and aFGF treatment. (4) Retransection of group 4 rats eliminated the behavioral recovery, MEP, and SSEP responses, indicating that the improvement of hindlimb locomotor activity came from supraspinal control. These results demonstrate the ability of the repair strategy combining peripheral nerve grafts and aFGF treatment to facilitate the regeneration of spinal ascending and descending tracts and also recovery of motor behavior following spinal cord injury.
This study developed a slice culture model system to study axonal regeneration after spinal cord injury. This model was tested in studies of the roles of acidic fibroblast growth factor (aFGF) and peripheral nerve segments in axonal growth between pieces of spinal cord. Transverse sections of P15-P18 Sprague-Dawley rat spinal cord were collected for organotypic slice cultures. Group I consisted of two slices of spinal cord in contact with each other during the culture period. Group II consisted of two slices that were separated by 3 mm and connected by two segments of intercostal nerves. Group III consisted of single slices for studies of neuron survival. Some cultures from each group included aFGF in the culture medium. Bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) was included in the medium for some cultures. The results showed three principal findings. First, counts of neurofilament-positive cells demonstrated that treatment with aFGF significantly increased the number of surviving neurons in culture. Second, neurofilament immunostaining and DiI tracing demonstrated axons crossing the junction between the two pieces of spinal cord or growing through the intercostal nerve segments, and these axons were seen only in cultures with aFGF treatment. Third, few cells were double stained for neurofilament and BrdU, and these were found only with aFGF treatment. These results demonstrate that (1) organotypic slice cultures present a useful model to study regeneration from spinal cord injury, (2) aFGF rescues neurons and promotes axonal growth in these cultures, and (3) segments of intercostal nerves promote axon growth between slices of spinal cord.
The effects of peripheral nerve grafts (PNG) and acidic fibroblast growth factor (αFGF) combined with step training on the locomotor performance of complete spinal cord-transected (ST, T8) adult rats were studied. Rats were assigned randomly to five groups (N = 10 per group): sham control (laminectomy only), ST only, ST-step-trained, repaired (ST with PNG and αFGF treatment), or repaired-step-trained.Step-trained rats were stepped bipedally on a treadmill 20 min/day, 5 days/ week for 6 months. Bipolar intramuscular EMG electrodes were implanted in the soleus and tibialis anterior (TA) muscles of ST-step-trained (n = 3) and repaired-step-trained (n = 2) rats. Gait analysis was conducted at 3 and 6 months after surgery. Stepping analysis was completed on the best continuous 10-s period of stepping performed in a 2-min trial. Significantly better stepping (number of steps, stance duration, swing duration, maximum step length, and maximum step height) was observed in the repaired and repaired-step-trained than in the ST and ST-steptrained rats. Mean EMG amplitudes in both the soleus and TA were significantly higher and the patterns of activation of flexors and extensors more reciprocal in the repaired-step-trained than ST-step-trained rats. 5-HT fibers were present in the lumbar area of repaired but not ST rats. Thus, PNG plus αFGF treatment resulted in a clear improvement in locomotor performance with or without step training. Furthermore, the number of 5-HT fibers observed below the lesion was related directly to stepping performance. These observations indicate that the improved stepping performance in Repaired rats may be due to newly formed supraspinal control via regeneration.
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