GABA facilitates spike propagation through branch points of sensory axons in the spinal cord

被引:0
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作者
Krishnapriya Hari
Ana M. Lucas-Osma
Krista Metz
Shihao Lin
Noah Pardell
David A. Roszko
Sophie Black
Anna Minarik
Rahul Singla
Marilee J. Stephens
Robert A. Pearce
Karim Fouad
Kelvin E. Jones
Monica A. Gorassini
Keith K. Fenrich
Yaqing Li
David J. Bennett
机构
[1] University of Alberta,Neuroscience and Mental Health Institute
[2] University of Alberta,Faculty of Rehabilitation Medicine
[3] University of Alberta,Department of Biomedical Engineering, Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry
[4] University of Wisconsin-Madison,Department of Anesthesiology
[5] University of Alberta,Faculty of Kinesiology, Sport and Recreation
[6] Emory University,Department of Cell Biology
来源
Nature Neuroscience | 2022年 / 25卷
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摘要
Movement and posture depend on sensory feedback that is regulated by specialized GABAergic neurons (GAD2+) that form axo-axonic contacts onto myelinated proprioceptive sensory axons and are thought to be inhibitory. However, we report here that activating GAD2+ neurons directly with optogenetics or indirectly by cutaneous stimulation actually facilitates sensory feedback to motor neurons in rodents and humans. GABAA receptors located at or near nodes of Ranvier of sensory axons cause this facilitation by preventing spike propagation failure at the many axon branch points, which is otherwise common without GABA. In contrast, GABAA receptors are generally lacking from axon terminals and so cannot inhibit transmitter release onto motor neurons, unlike GABAB receptors that cause presynaptic inhibition. GABAergic innervation near nodes and branch points allows individual branches to function autonomously, with GAD2+ neurons regulating which branches conduct, adding a computational layer to the neuronal networks generating movement and likely generalizing to other central nervous system axons.
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页码:1288 / 1299
页数:11
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