TY - JOUR
T1 - Eccentric rehabilitation induces white matter plasticity and sensorimotor recovery in chronic spinal cord injury
AU - Faw, Timothy D.
AU - Lakhani, Bimal
AU - Schmalbrock, Petra
AU - Knopp, Michael V.
AU - Lohse, Keith R.
AU - Kramer, John L.K.
AU - Liu, Hanwen
AU - Nguyen, Huyen T.
AU - Phillips, Eileen G.
AU - Bratasz, Anna
AU - Fisher, Lesley C.
AU - Deibert, Rochelle J.
AU - Boyd, Lara A.
AU - McTigue, Dana M.
AU - Basso, D. Michele
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors would like to sincerely thank Mss. Jennifer Ferris, Cristina Rubino, and Drs. Piotr Kozlowski, Alex MacKay, and Irene Vavasour (UBC) for technical assistance with myelin water imaging and analysis, along with Messrs. Phillip McHenry, Demarris Murphy, Justin Nicholes, Jacob Reventlow, and Drs. Matthew Bjelac and Raquel Minarsch (OSU) for assistance with experimental procedures in human participants. This work was funded by the National Institutes of Health [F31NS096921 (TDF), R01NS074883 (DMB)] and the Craig H. Neilsen Foundation [316282 (DMB)]. TDF was also supported by a Promotion of Doctoral Studies Level II Scholarship from the Foundation for Physical Therapy Research. Images presented in this report were generated using the instruments and services at the Campus Microscopy and Imaging Facility (OSU) supported in part by National Cancer Institute (NCI) P30CA016058. Animal experiments were performed with assistance from the OSU Neuroscience Department Surgical Core supported by National Institute for Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS) P30NS104177. The authors report no competing interests.
Funding Information:
This work was funded by the National Institutes of Health [ F31NS096921 (TDF), R01NS074883 (DMB)] and the Craig H. Neilsen Foundation [ 316282 (DMB)]. TDF was also supported by a Promotion of Doctoral Studies Level II Scholarship from the Foundation for Physical Therapy Research. Images presented in this report were generated using the instruments and services at the Campus Microscopy and Imaging Facility (OSU) supported in part by National Cancer Institute (NCI) P30CA016058 . Animal experiments were performed with assistance from the OSU Neuroscience Department Surgical Core supported by National Institute for Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS) P30NS104177 .
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021
PY - 2021/12
Y1 - 2021/12
N2 - Experience-dependent white matter plasticity offers new potential for rehabilitation-induced recovery after neurotrauma. This first-in-human translational experiment combined myelin water imaging in humans and genetic fate-mapping of oligodendrocyte lineage cells in mice to investigate whether downhill locomotor rehabilitation that emphasizes eccentric muscle actions promotes white matter plasticity and recovery in chronic, incomplete spinal cord injury (SCI). In humans, of 20 individuals with SCI that enrolled, four passed the imaging screen and had myelin water imaging before and after a 12-week (3 times/week) downhill locomotor treadmill training program (SCI + DH). One individual was excluded for imaging artifacts. Uninjured control participants (n = 7) had two myelin water imaging sessions within the same day. Changes in myelin water fraction (MWF), a histopathologically-validated myelin biomarker, were analyzed in a priori motor learning and non-motor learning brain regions and the cervical spinal cord using statistical approaches appropriate for small sample sizes. PDGFRα-CreERT2:mT/mG mice, that express green fluorescent protein on oligodendrocyte precursor cells and subsequent newly-differentiated oligodendrocytes upon tamoxifen-induced recombination, were either naive (n = 6) or received a moderate (75 kilodyne), contusive SCI at T9 and were randomized to downhill training (n = 6) or unexercised groups (n = 6). We initiated recombination 29 days post-injury, seven days prior to downhill training. Mice underwent two weeks of daily downhill training on the same 10% decline grade used in humans. Between-group comparison of functional (motor and sensory) and histological (oligodendrogenesis, oligodendroglial/axon interaction, paranodal structure) outcomes occurred post-training. In humans with SCI, downhill training increased MWF in brain motor learning regions (postcentral, precuneus) and mixed motor and sensory tracts of the ventral cervical spinal cord compared to control participants (P < 0.05). In mice with thoracic SCI, downhill training induced oligodendrogenesis in cervical dorsal and lateral white matter, increased axon-oligodendroglial interactions, and normalized paranodal structure in dorsal column sensory tracts (P < 0.05). Downhill training improved sensorimotor recovery in mice by normalizing hip and knee motor control and reducing hyperalgesia, both of which were associated with new oligodendrocytes in the cervical dorsal columns (P < 0.05). Our findings indicate that eccentric-focused, downhill rehabilitation promotes white matter plasticity and improved function in chronic SCI, likely via oligodendrogenesis in nervous system regions activated by the training paradigm. Together, these data reveal an exciting role for eccentric training in white matter plasticity and sensorimotor recovery after SCI.
AB - Experience-dependent white matter plasticity offers new potential for rehabilitation-induced recovery after neurotrauma. This first-in-human translational experiment combined myelin water imaging in humans and genetic fate-mapping of oligodendrocyte lineage cells in mice to investigate whether downhill locomotor rehabilitation that emphasizes eccentric muscle actions promotes white matter plasticity and recovery in chronic, incomplete spinal cord injury (SCI). In humans, of 20 individuals with SCI that enrolled, four passed the imaging screen and had myelin water imaging before and after a 12-week (3 times/week) downhill locomotor treadmill training program (SCI + DH). One individual was excluded for imaging artifacts. Uninjured control participants (n = 7) had two myelin water imaging sessions within the same day. Changes in myelin water fraction (MWF), a histopathologically-validated myelin biomarker, were analyzed in a priori motor learning and non-motor learning brain regions and the cervical spinal cord using statistical approaches appropriate for small sample sizes. PDGFRα-CreERT2:mT/mG mice, that express green fluorescent protein on oligodendrocyte precursor cells and subsequent newly-differentiated oligodendrocytes upon tamoxifen-induced recombination, were either naive (n = 6) or received a moderate (75 kilodyne), contusive SCI at T9 and were randomized to downhill training (n = 6) or unexercised groups (n = 6). We initiated recombination 29 days post-injury, seven days prior to downhill training. Mice underwent two weeks of daily downhill training on the same 10% decline grade used in humans. Between-group comparison of functional (motor and sensory) and histological (oligodendrogenesis, oligodendroglial/axon interaction, paranodal structure) outcomes occurred post-training. In humans with SCI, downhill training increased MWF in brain motor learning regions (postcentral, precuneus) and mixed motor and sensory tracts of the ventral cervical spinal cord compared to control participants (P < 0.05). In mice with thoracic SCI, downhill training induced oligodendrogenesis in cervical dorsal and lateral white matter, increased axon-oligodendroglial interactions, and normalized paranodal structure in dorsal column sensory tracts (P < 0.05). Downhill training improved sensorimotor recovery in mice by normalizing hip and knee motor control and reducing hyperalgesia, both of which were associated with new oligodendrocytes in the cervical dorsal columns (P < 0.05). Our findings indicate that eccentric-focused, downhill rehabilitation promotes white matter plasticity and improved function in chronic SCI, likely via oligodendrogenesis in nervous system regions activated by the training paradigm. Together, these data reveal an exciting role for eccentric training in white matter plasticity and sensorimotor recovery after SCI.
KW - Eccentric
KW - Oligodendrogenesis
KW - Rehabilitation
KW - Spinal cord injury
KW - White matter plasticity
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85114180691&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.expneurol.2021.113853
DO - 10.1016/j.expneurol.2021.113853
M3 - Article
C2 - 34464653
AN - SCOPUS:85114180691
VL - 346
JO - Experimental Neurology
JF - Experimental Neurology
SN - 0014-4886
M1 - 113853
ER -