Emergent epileptiform activity in spinal sensory circuits drives ectopic bursting in afferent axons and sensory dysfunction after cord injury

Author:

Bryson Matthew1,Kloefkorn Heidi2,Idlett-Ali Shaquia3,Carrasco Dario I.4ORCID,Noble Donald James1ORCID,Martin Karmarcha1,Sawchuk Michael A.1,Au Yong Nicholas4ORCID,Garraway Sandra M.1,Hochman Shawn1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Cell Biology, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, GA, United States

2. Department of Chemical, Biological, and Environmental Engineering, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR, United States

3. University of Colorado School of Medicine

4. Department of Neurosurgery, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, GA, United States

Abstract

Abstract Spinal cord injury leads to hyperexcitability and dysfunction in spinal sensory processing. As hyperexcitable circuits can become epileptiform, we explored whether such activity emerges in a thoracic spinal cord injury (SCI) contusion model of neuropathic pain. Recordings from spinal sensory axons in multiple below-lesion segmental dorsal roots demonstrated that SCI facilitated the emergence of spontaneous ectopic burst spiking in afferent axons, which were correlated across multiple adjacent dorsal roots. Burst frequency correlated with behavioral mechanosensitivity. The same bursting events were recruited by afferent stimulation, and timing interactions with ongoing spontaneous bursts revealed that recruitment was limited by a prolonged post-burst refractory period. Ectopic bursting in afferent axons was driven by GABAA receptor activation, presumably by conversion of subthreshold GABAergic interneuronal presynaptic axoaxonic inhibitory actions to suprathreshold spiking. Collectively, the emergence of stereotyped bursting circuitry with hypersynchrony, sensory input activation, post-burst refractory period, and reorganization of connectivity represent defining features of an epileptiform network. Indeed, these same features were reproduced in naive animals with the convulsant 4-aminopyridine (fampridine). We conclude that spinal cord injury promotes the emergence of epileptiform activity in spinal sensory networks that promote profound corruption of sensory signaling. This includes hyperexcitability and bursting by ectopic spiking in afferent axons that propagate bidirectionally by reentrant central and peripheral projections as well as sensory circuit hypoexcitability during the burst refractory period. More broadly, the work links circuit hyperexcitability to epileptiform circuit emergence, further strengthening it as a conceptual basis to understand features of sensory dysfunction and neuropathic pain.

Funder

National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke

Paralyzed Veterans of America Research Foundation

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

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