Selective degeneration of a physiological subtype of spinal motor neuron in mice with SOD1-linked ALS

Significance We describe a method that allows, for the first time to our knowledge, the preparation of viable acute spinal cord slices from adult mice, enabling patch-clamp recording from fluorescent motor neurons. From electrophysiological parameters, four subtypes of motor neurons were identified....

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2014-11, Vol.111 (47), p.16883-16888
Hauptverfasser: Hadzipasic, Muhamed, Tahvildari, Babak, Nagy, Maria, Bian, Minjuan, Horwich, Arthur L., McCormick, David A.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Significance We describe a method that allows, for the first time to our knowledge, the preparation of viable acute spinal cord slices from adult mice, enabling patch-clamp recording from fluorescent motor neurons. From electrophysiological parameters, four subtypes of motor neurons were identified. Two fast firing subtypes innervated fast twitch muscle, whereas the two slow firing subtypes innervated slow twitch muscle. In superoxide dismutase 1-linked amyotrophic lateral sclerosis mice, the same four firing types were observed before the onset of symptoms, but the fastest firing type was lost after symptoms developed. Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS; Lou Gehrig’s disease) affects motor neurons (MNs) in the brain and spinal cord. Understanding the pathophysiology of this condition seems crucial for therapeutic design, yet few electrophysiological studies in actively degenerating animal models have been reported. Here, we report a novel preparation of acute slices from adult mouse spinal cord, allowing visualized whole cell patch-clamp recordings of fluorescent lumbar MN cell bodies from ChAT-eGFP or superoxide dismutase 1-yellow fluorescent protein (SOD1YFP) transgenic animals up to 6 mo of age. We examined 11 intrinsic electrophysiologic properties of adult ChAT-eGFP mouse MNs and classified them into four subtypes based on these parameters. The subtypes could be principally correlated with instantaneous (initial) and steady-state firing rates. We used retrograde tracing using fluorescent dye injected into fast or slow twitch lower extremity muscle with slice recordings from the fluorescent-labeled lumbar MN cell bodies to establish that fast and slow firing MNs are connected with fast and slow twitch muscle, respectively. In a G85R SOD1YFP transgenic mouse model of ALS, which becomes paralyzed by 5–6 mo, where MN cell bodies are fluorescent, enabling the same type of recording from spinal cord tissue slices, we observed that all four MN subtypes were present at 2 mo of age. At 4 mo, by which time substantial neuronal SOD1YFP aggregation and cell loss has occurred and symptoms have developed, one of the fast firing subtypes that innvervates fast twitch muscle was lost. These results begin to describe an order of the pathophysiologic events in ALS.
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1419497111