To access the full text documents, please follow this link: http://hdl.handle.net/10459.1/60325

Smn-deficiency increases the intrinsic excitability of motoneurons
Arumugam, Saravanan; Garcera, Ana; Soler i Tatché, Rosa Ma.; Tabares, Lucía
During development, motoneurons experience significant changes in their size and in the number and strength of connections that they receive, which requires adaptive changes in their passive and active electrical properties. Even after reaching maturity, motoneurons continue to adjust their intrinsic excitability and synaptic activity for proper functioning of the sensorimotor circuit in accordance with physiological demands. Likewise, if some elements of the circuit become dysfunctional, the system tries to compensate for the alterations to maintain appropriate function. In Spinal Muscular Atrophy (SMA), a severe motor disease, spinal motoneurons receive less excitation from glutamatergic sensory fibers and interneurons and are electrically hyperexcitable. Currently, the origin and relationship among these alterations are not completely established. In this study, we investigated whether Survival of Motor Neuron (SMN), the ubiquitous protein defective in SMA, regulates the excitability of motoneurons before and after the establishment of the synaptic contacts. To this end, we performed patch-clamp recordings in embryonic spinal motoneurons forming complex synaptic networks in primary cultures, and in differentiated NSC-34 motoneuron-like cells in the absence of synaptic contacts. Our results show that in both conditions, Smn-deficient cells displayed lower action potential threshold, greater action potential amplitudes, and larger density of voltage-dependent sodium currents than cells with normal Smn-levels. These results indicate that Smn participates in the regulation of the cell-autonomous excitability of motoneurons at an early stage of development. This finding may contribute to a better understanding of motoneuron excitability in SMA during the development of the disease. This study was supported by Fundación Tatiana Pérez de Guzmán el Bueno, the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation/FEDER (BFU2013-43763-P and BFU2016-78934-P), Instituto de Salud Carlos III, Fondo de Investigaciones Sanitarias (PI14/00060), Unión Europea, Fondo Europeo de Desarrollo Regional (FEDER) ‘‘Una manera de hacer Europa’’ and Generalitat de Catalunya (SGR740).
-Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA)
-Motoneurons
-Hyperexcitability
-Ion currents
cc-by (c) Arumugam et al., 2017
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
article
publishedVersion
Frontiers Media
         

Full text files in this document

Files Size Format View
025925.pdf 4.687 MB application/pdf View/Open

Show full item record

Related documents

Other documents of the same author

 

Coordination

 

Supporters