Thoracic VGluT2+Spinal Interneurons Regulate Structural and Functional Plasticity of Sympathetic Networks after High-Level Spinal Cord Injury

Author:

Noble Benjamin T.,Brennan Faith H.ORCID,Wang Yan,Guan Zhen,Mo Xiaokui,Schwab Jan M.ORCID,Popovich Phillip G.ORCID

Abstract

Traumatic spinal cord injury (SCI) above the major spinal sympathetic outflow (T6 level) disinhibits sympathetic neurons from supraspinal control, causing systems-wide “dysautonomia.” We recently showed that remarkable structural remodeling and plasticity occurs within spinal sympathetic circuitry, creating abnormal sympathetic reflexes that exacerbate dysautonomia over time. As an example, thoracic VGluT2+spinal interneurons (SpINs) become structurally and functionally integrated with neurons that comprise the spinal–splenic sympathetic network and immunological dysfunction becomes progressively worse after SCI. To test whether the onset and progression of SCI-induced sympathetic plasticity is neuron activity dependent, we selectively inhibited (or excited) thoracic VGluT2+interneurons using chemogenetics. New data show that silencing VGluT2+interneurons in female and male mice with a T3 SCI, using hM4Di designer receptors exclusively activated by designer drugs (GiDREADDs), blocks structural plasticity and the development of dysautonomia. Specifically, silencing VGluT2+interneurons prevents the structural remodeling of spinal sympathetic networks that project to lymphoid and endocrine organs, reduces the frequency of spontaneous autonomic dysreflexia (AD), and reduces the severity of experimentally induced AD. Features of SCI-induced structural plasticity can be recapitulated in the intact spinal cord by activating excitatory hM3Dq-DREADDs in VGluT2+interneurons. Collectively, these data implicate VGluT2+excitatory SpINs in the onset and propagation of SCI-induced structural plasticity and dysautonomia, and reveal the potential for neuromodulation to block or reduce dysautonomia after severe high-level SCI.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENTIn response to stress or dangerous stimuli, autonomic spinal neurons coordinate a “fight or flight” response marked by increased cardiac output and release of stress hormones. After a spinal cord injury (SCI), normally harmless stimuli like bladder filling can result in a “false” fight or flight response, causing pathological changes throughout the body. We show that progressive hypertension and immune suppression develop after SCI because thoracic excitatory VGluT2+spinal interneurons (SpINs) provoke structural remodeling in autonomic networks within below-lesion spinal levels. These pathological changes can be prevented in SCI mice or phenocopied in uninjured mice using chemogenetics to selectively manipulate activity in VGluT2+SpINs. Targeted neuromodulation of SpINs could prevent structural plasticity and subsequent autonomic dysfunction in people with SCI.

Funder

United States Department of Defence

Craig H. Neilsen Foundation

Wings for Life Spinal Research Foundation

HHS | National Institutes of Health

Ray W. Poppleton Endowment

National Institute of Disability, Independent Living and Rehabilitation Research

European Union

Hunt and Curtis endowment

Publisher

Society for Neuroscience

Subject

General Neuroscience

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