Spinal Cord
spinal cord
Niccolò Zampieri
We are interested in understanding the development and function of spinal sensorimotor circuits. We combine mouse genetics, molecular profiling, viral tracing techniques, and behavioral analysis to study how spinal circuits are wired during development and reveal their roles in the control of posture and locomotion.
Dr. Simon Danner
A Postdoctoral Fellow/Research Associate position is available in Dr. Simon Danner’s laboratory at the Department of Neurobiology and Anatomy, Drexel University College of Medicine to study the spinal locomotor circuitry and its interactions with the musculoskeletal system and afferent feedback. The qualified postdoc will work on several collaborative, interdisciplinary, NIH-funded projects to uncover the connectivity and function of somatosensory afferents and various genetically or anatomically identified interneurons. The studies involve the development of computer models of mouse, rat, and cat biomechanics connected with models of the spinal locomotor circuitry. The successful candidate will closely collaborate with other computational and experimental neuroscientists: they will use experimental data to implement and refine the model, and use the model to derive predictions that will then be tested experimentally by our collaborators. Essential Functions: • Work with existing and develop new biomechanical models of the mouse, rat and cat • Develop neural network models of the spinal locomotor circuits • Integrate the neural network and biomechanical models to simulate locomotor behavior • Use numerical optimization to optimize the neuromechanical models • Apply machine learning/reinforcement learning • Use the models to derive experimentally testable predictions • Closely collaborate with experimental neuroscientists • Analyze kinematic and electrophysiological data • Write and submit research manuscripts • Present novel findings at national and international conferences The qualified candidate will benefit from joining a well-funded research group that works in a dynamic, collaborative and interdisciplinary environment. The highly collegial Danner lab is a member of the Neuroengineering Program, the Theoretical & Computational Neuroscience group, and the Spinal Cord Research Center within Drexel University College of Medicine’s Department of Neurobiology and Anatomy (http://drexel.edu/medicine/About/Departments/Neurobiology-Anatomy/) in Philadelphia, PA. The Department provides an outstanding scientific environment for multidisciplinary training. Interactions and collaborations between labs and between other departments are encouraged.
Dr. Ariel Levine
The Spinal Circuits and Plasticity Unit at the National Institutes of Health, led by Dr. Ariel Levine, has a postdoctoral position available to investigate the spinal cord cellular basis of motor behavior in mice. The Levine lab seeks to uncover the molecular, cellular, and circuit mechanisms of motor behavior and motor learning. In particular, we want to know how diverse spinal cord cell types cooperate with CNS-wide motor networks to mediate normal movements and learn new ones. We use a wide array of techniques including sophisticated mouse genetics, behavioral analysis, cell-type specific genetic and viral manipulations, circuit tracing, and single cell sequencing (and we're always excited to incorporate new approaches too!). The lab is located within the Porter Neuroscience Research Center, a world-class center for basic and translational neuroscience with outstanding facilities, generous resources, and a fantastic collaborative environment on the main campus of NIH.
Expanding mechanisms and therapeutic targets for neurodegenerative disease
A hallmark pathological feature of the neurodegenerative diseases amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and frontotemporal dementia (FTD) is the depletion of RNA-binding protein TDP-43 from the nucleus of neurons in the brain and spinal cord. A major function of TDP-43 is as a repressor of cryptic exon inclusion during RNA splicing. By re-analyzing RNA-sequencing datasets from human FTD/ALS brains, we discovered dozens of novel cryptic splicing events in important neuronal genes. Single nucleotide polymorphisms in UNC13A are among the strongest hits associated with FTD and ALS in human genome-wide association studies, but how those variants increase risk for disease is unknown. We discovered that TDP-43 represses a cryptic exon-splicing event in UNC13A. Loss of TDP-43 from the nucleus in human brain, neuronal cell lines and motor neurons derived from induced pluripotent stem cells resulted in the inclusion of a cryptic exon in UNC13A mRNA and reduced UNC13A protein expression. The top variants associated with FTD or ALS risk in humans are located in the intron harboring the cryptic exon, and we show that they increase UNC13A cryptic exon splicing in the face of TDP-43 dysfunction. Together, our data provide a direct functional link between one of the strongest genetic risk factors for FTD and ALS (UNC13A genetic variants), and loss of TDP-43 function. Recent analyses have revealed even further changes in TDP-43 target genes, including widespread changes in alternative polyadenylation, impacting expression of disease-relevant genes (e.g., ELP1, NEFL, and TMEM106B) and providing evidence that alternative polyadenylation is a new facet of TDP-43 pathology.
Computational models of spinal locomotor circuitry
To effectively move in complex and changing environments, animals must control locomotor speed and gait, while precisely coordinating and adapting limb movements to the terrain. The underlying neuronal control is facilitated by circuits in the spinal cord, which integrate supraspinal commands and afferent feedback signals to produce coordinated rhythmic muscle activations necessary for stable locomotion. I will present a series of computational models investigating dynamics of central neuronal interactions as well as a neuromechanical model that integrates neuronal circuits with a model of the musculoskeletal system. These models closely reproduce speed-dependent gait expression and experimentally observed changes following manipulation of multiple classes of genetically-identified neuronal populations. I will discuss the utility of these models in providing experimentally testable predictions for future studies.
From agents, to actions, to interactions, to societies: primates' brain networks for social processing
Visualization and manipulation of our perception and imagery by BCI
We have been developing Brain-Computer Interface (BCI) using electrocorticography (ECoG) [1] , which is recorded by electrodes implanted on brain surface, and magnetoencephalography (MEG) [2] , which records the cortical activities non-invasively, for the clinical applications. The invasive BCI using ECoG has been applied for severely paralyzed patient to restore the communication and motor function. The non-invasive BCI using MEG has been applied as a neurofeedback tool to modulate some pathological neural activities to treat some neuropsychiatric disorders. Although these techniques have been developed for clinical application, BCI is also an important tool to investigate neural function. For example, motor BCI records some neural activities in a part of the motor cortex to generate some movements of external devices. Although our motor system consists of complex system including motor cortex, basal ganglia, cerebellum, spinal cord and muscles, the BCI affords us to simplify the motor system with exactly known inputs, outputs and the relation of them. We can investigate the motor system by manipulating the parameters in BCI system. Recently, we are developing some BCIs to visualize and manipulate our perception and mental imagery. Although these BCI has been developed for clinical application, the BCI will be useful to understand our neural system to generate the perception and imagery. In this talk, I will introduce our study of phantom limb pain [3] , that is controlled by MEG-BCI, and the development of a communication BCI using ECoG [4] , that enable the subject to visualize the contents of their mental imagery. And I would like to discuss how much we can control our cortical activities that represent our perception and mental imagery. These examples demonstrate that BCI is a promising tool to visualize and manipulate the perception and imagery and to understand our consciousness. References 1. Yanagisawa, T., Hirata, M., Saitoh, Y., Kishima, H., Matsushita, K., Goto, T., Fukuma, R., Yokoi, H., Kamitani, Y., and Yoshimine, T. (2012). Electrocorticographic control of a prosthetic arm in paralyzed patients. AnnNeurol 71, 353-361. 2. Yanagisawa, T., Fukuma, R., Seymour, B., Hosomi, K., Kishima, H., Shimizu, T., Yokoi, H., Hirata, M., Yoshimine, T., Kamitani, Y., et al. (2016). Induced sensorimotor brain plasticity controls pain in phantom limb patients. Nature communications 7, 13209. 3. Yanagisawa, T., Fukuma, R., Seymour, B., Tanaka, M., Hosomi, K., Yamashita, O., Kishima, H., Kamitani, Y., and Saitoh, Y. (2020). BCI training to move a virtual hand reduces phantom limb pain: A randomized crossover trial. Neurology 95, e417-e426. 4. Ryohei Fukuma, Takufumi Yanagisawa, Shinji Nishimoto, Hidenori Sugano, Kentaro Tamura, Shota Yamamoto, Yasushi Iimura, Yuya Fujita, Satoru Oshino, Naoki Tani, Naoko Koide-Majima, Yukiyasu Kamitani, Haruhiko Kishima (2022). Voluntary control of semantic neural representations by imagery with conflicting visual stimulation. arXiv arXiv:2112.01223.
CNStalk: Being awake while asleep, being asleep while awake
Mechanisms of Axon Growth and Regeneration
Almost everybody that has seen neurons under a microscope for the first time is fascinated by their beauty and their complex shape. Early on during development, however, there are hardly any signs of their future complexity, but the neurons look round and simple. How do neurons develop their sophisticated structure? How do they initially generate domains that later have distinct function within neuronal circuits, such as the axon? And, can a better understanding of the underlying developmental mechanisms help us in pathological conditions, such as a spinal cord injury, to induce axons to regenerate? Here, I will talk about the cytoskeleton as a driving force for neuronal polarization. We will then explore how cytoskeletal changes help to reactivate the growth program of injured CNS axons to elicit axon regeneration after a spinal cord injury. Finally, we will discuss whether axon growth and synapse formation may be processes in neurons that might exclude each other. Following this developmental hypothesis, it will help us to generate a novel perspective on regeneration failure in the adult CNS, and how we can overcome this failure to induce axon regeneration. Thus, this talk will describe how we can exploit developmental mechanisms to induce axon regeneration after a spinal cord injury.
NMC4 Short Talk: Decoding finger movements from human posterior parietal cortex
Restoring hand function is a top priority for individuals with tetraplegia. This challenge motivates considerable research on brain-computer interfaces (BCIs), which bypass damaged neural pathways to control paralyzed or prosthetic limbs. Here, we demonstrate the BCI control of a prosthetic hand using intracortical recordings from the posterior parietal cortex (PPC). As part of an ongoing clinical trial, two participants with cervical spinal cord injury were each implanted with a 96-channel array in the left PPC. Across four sessions each, we recorded neural activity while they attempted to press individual fingers of the contralateral (right) hand. Single neurons modulated selectively for different finger movements. Offline, we accurately classified finger movements from neural firing rates using linear discriminant analysis (LDA) with cross-validation (accuracy = 90%; chance = 17%). Finally, the participants used the neural classifier online to control all five fingers of a BCI hand. Online control accuracy (86%; chance = 17%) exceeded previous state-of-the-art finger BCIs. Furthermore, offline, we could classify both flexion and extension of the right fingers, as well as flexion of all ten fingers. Our results indicate that neural recordings from PPC can be used to control prosthetic fingers, which may help contribute to a hand restoration strategy for people with tetraplegia.
Making spinal sensory interneurons from stem cells for regenerative therapies
Dr. Gupta is carrying out his post doctoral studies in the Buter Laboratory in UCLA. He is applying his his knowledge of embryology to stem cells for developing regenerative therapies to treat spinal cord injuries. In this talk, he will discuss how understanding the logic for spinal cord development led us to derive diverse sensory neuronal classes from embryonic stem cells. The spinal sensory neurons enableus to perceive our environment through modalities that are lost in spinal injury patients. These ESC derived senory neurons can help regain sensation in spina cord injury patients through regenerative therapies.
Regenerative Neuroimmunology - a stem cell perspective
There are currently no approved therapies to slow down the accumulation of neurological disability that occurs independently of relapses in multiple sclerosis (MS). International agencies are engaging to expedite the development of novel strategies capable of modifying disease progression, abrogating persistent CNS inflammation, and support degenerating axons in people with progressive MS. Understanding why regeneration fails in the progressive MS brain and developing new regenerative approaches is a key priority for the Pluchino Lab. In particular, we aim to elucidate how the immune system, in particular its cells called myeloid cells, affects brain structure and function under normal healthy conditions and in disease. Our objective is to find how myeloid cells communicate with the central nervous system and affect tissue healing and functional recovery by stimulating mechanisms of brain plasticity mechanisms such as the generation of new nerve cells and the reduction of scar formation. Applying combination of state-of-the-art omic technologies, and molecular approaches to study murine and human disease models of inflammation and neurodegeneration, we aim to develop experimental molecular medicines, including those with stem cells and gene therapy vectors, which slow down the accumulation of irreversible disabilities and improve functional recovery after progressive multiple sclerosis, stroke and traumatic injuries. By understanding the mechanisms of intercellular (neuro-immune) signalling, diseases of the brain and spinal cord may be treated more effectively, and significant neuroprotection may be achieved with new tailored molecular therapeutics.
Numbing intraneuronal Tau levels to prevent neurodegeneration in tauopathies
Intraneuronal accumulation of the microtubule associated protein Tau is largely recognized as an important toxic factor linked to neuronal cell death in Alzheimer’s disease and tauopathies. While there has been progress uncovering mechanisms leading to the formation of toxic Tau tangles, less is known about how intraneuronal Tau levels are regulated in health and disease. Here, I will discuss our recent work showing that the intracellular trafficking adaptor protein Numb is critical to control intraneuronal Tau levels. Inactivation of Numb in retinal ganglion cells increases monomeric and oligomeric Tau levels and leads to axonal blebbing in optic nerves, followed by significant neuronal cell loss in old mice. Interestingly, overexpression of the long isoform of Numb (Numb-72) decreases intracellular Tau levels by promoting exocytosis of monomeric Tau. In TauP301S and triple transgenic AD mouse models, expression of Numb-72 in RGCs reduces the number of axonal blebs and prevents neurodegeneration. Finally, inactivation of Numb in TauP301S mice accelerates neurodegeneration in both the retina and spinal cord and leads to precocious paralysis. Taken together, these results uncover Numb as a essential regulator of Tau homeostasis in neurons and as a potential therapeutic agent for AD and tauopathies.
Anatomical and functional characterization of the neuronal circuits underlying ejaculation
During sexual behavior, copulation related sensory information and modulatory signals from the brain must be integrated and converted into the motor and secretory outputs that characterize ejaculation (Lenschow and Lima, Current Opinion in Neurobiology, 2020). Studies in humans and rats suggest the existence of interneurons in the lumbar spinal cord that mediates that step: the spinal ejaculation generator (SEG). My work aimed at gaining mechanistic insights about the neuronal circuits controlling ejaculation thereby applying cutting-edge techniques. More specifically, we mapped anatomically and functionally the spinal circuit for ejaculation starting from the main muscle being involved in sperm expulsion: the bulbospongiosus muscle (BSM). Combining viral tracing strategies with electrophysiology, we specifically show that the BSM motoneurons receive direct synaptic input from a group of interneurons located in between lumbar segment 2 and 3 and expressing the peptide galanin. Electrically and optogenetically activating the galanin positive cells (the SEG) lead to the activation of the motoneurons innervating the BSM and the muscle itself. Finally, inhibition of SEG cells using DREADDs (Designer Receptors Exclusively Activated by Designer Drugs) in sexual behaving animals is currently conducted to reveal whether ejaculation can be prevented.
Life of Pain and Pleasure
The ability to experience pain is old in evolutionary terms. It is an experience shared across species. Acute pain is the body’s alarm system, and as such it is a good thing. Pain that persists beyond normal tissue healing time (3-4 months) is defined as chronic – it is the system gone wrong and it is not a good thing. Chronic pain has recently been classified as both a symptom and disease in its own right. It is one of the largest medical health problems worldwide with one in five adults diagnosed with the condition. The brain is key to the experience of pain and pain relief. This is the place where pain emerges as a perception. So, relating specific brain measures using advanced neuroimaging to the change patients describe in their pain perception induced by peripheral or central sensitization (i.e. amplification), psychological or pharmacological mechanisms has tremendous value. Identifying where amplification or attenuation processes occur along the journey from injury to the brain (i.e. peripheral nerves, spinal cord, brainstem and brain) for an individual and relating these neural mechanisms to specific pain experiences, measures of pain relief, persistence of pain states, degree of injury and the subject's underlying genetics, has neuroscientific and potential diagnostic relevance. This is what neuroimaging has afforded – a better understanding and explanation of why someone’s pain is the way it is. We can go ‘behind the scenes’ of the subjective report to find out what key changes and mechanisms make up an individual’s particular pain experience. A key area of development has been pharmacological imaging where objective evidence of drugs reaching the target and working can be obtained. We even now understand the mechanisms of placebo analgesia – a powerful phenomenon known about for millennia. More recently, researchers have been investigating through brain imaging whether there is a pre-disposing vulnerability in brain networks towards developing chronic pain. So, advanced neuroimaging studies can powerfully aid explanation of a subject’s multidimensional pain experience, pain relief (analgesia) and even what makes them vulnerable to developing chronic pain. The application of this goes beyond the clinic and has relevance in courts of law, and other areas of society, such as in veterinary care. Relatively far less work has been directed at understanding what changes in the brain occur during altered states of consciousness induced either endogenously (e.g. sleep) or exogenously (e.g. anaesthesia). However, that situation is changing rapidly. Our recent multimodal neuroimaging work explores how anaesthetic agents produce altered states of consciousness such that perceptual experiences of pain and awareness are degraded. This is bringing us fascinating insights into the complex phenomenon of anaesthesia, consciousness and even the concept of self-hood. These topics will be discussed in my talk alongside my ‘side-story’ of life as a scientist combining academic leadership roles with doing science and raising a family.
Recurrent problems in spinal-cord and cerebellar circuits
One of the best established recurrent inhibitory pathways is the recurrent inhibition of mammalian motoneurons through Renshaw cells. Golgi cells form an inhibitory feedback circuit in the granular layer of cerebellum. Feedback inhibitory pathways are long established “textbook” elements of neural circuitry, but in both cases their functional role has not been well established. Here I will present some new observations on the function of recurrent inhibition in the spinal-cord, supporting the idea that this connection frequency tunes transmission of inputs through motoneurons. Secondly, I will discuss evidence that the function of Golgi cells is much more complex than classical studies based on circuit connectivity suggest.
Molecular controls over corticospinal neuron axon branching at specific spinal segments
Corticospinal neurons (CSN) are the cortical projection neurons that innervate the spinal cord and some brainstem targets with segmental precision to control voluntary movement of specific functional motor groups, limb sections, or individual digits, yet molecular regulation over CSN segmental target specificity is essentially unknown. CSN subpopulations exhibit striking axon targeting specificity from development into maturity: Evolutionarily newer rostrolateral CSN exclusively innervate bulbar-cervical targets (CSNBC-lat), while evolutionarily older caudomedial CSN (CSNmed) are more heterogeneous, with distinct subpopulations extending axons to either bulbar-cervical or thoraco-lumbar segments. The cervical cord, with its evolutionarily enhanced precision of forelimb movement, is innervated by multiple CSN subpopulations, suggesting inter-neuronal interactions in establishing corticospinal connectivity. I identify that Lumican, previously unrecognized in axon development, controls the specificity of cervical spinal cord innervation by CSN. Remarkably, Lumican, an extracellular matrix protein expressed by CSNBC-lat, non-cell-autonomously suppresses axon collateralization in the cervical cord by CSNmed. Intersectional viral labeling and mouse genetics further identify that Lumican controls axon collateralization by multiple subpopulations in caudomedial sensorimotor cortex. These results identify inter-axonal molecular crosstalk between CSN subpopulations as a novel mechanism controlling corticospinal connectivity and competitive specificity. Further, this mechanism has potential implications for evolutionary diversification of corticospinal circuitry with finer scale precision. "" Complementing this work, to comprehensively elucidate related axon projection mechanisms functioning at tips of growing CSN axons in vivo, I am currently applying experimental and analytic approaches recently developed in my postdoc lab (Poulopoulos*, Murphy*, Nature, 2019) to quantitatively and subcellularly “map” RNA and protein molecular machinery of subtype-specific growth cones, in parallel to their parent somata, isolated directly in vivo from developing subcerebral projection neurons (SCPN; the broader cortical output neuron population targeting both brainstem and spinal cord; includes CSN). I am investigating both normal development and GC-soma dysregulation with mutation of central CSN-SCPN transcriptional regulator Ctip2/Bcl11b.
Parallel ascending spinal pathways for affective touch and pain
Each day we experience myriad somatosensory stimuli: hugs from loved ones, warm showers, a mosquito bite, and sore muscles after a workout. These tactile, thermal, itch, and nociceptive signals are detected by peripheral sensory neuron terminals distributed throughout our body, propagated into the spinal cord, and then transmitted to the brain through ascending spinal pathways. Primary sensory neurons that detect a wide range of somatosensory stimuli have been identified and characterized. In contrast, very little is known about how peripheral signals are integrated and processed within the spinal cord and conveyed to the brain to generate somatosensory perception and behavioral responses. We tackled this question by developing new mouse genetic tools to define projection neuron (PN) subsets of the anterolateral pathway, a major ascending spinal cord pathway, and combining these new tools with advanced anatomical, physiological, and behavioral approaches. We found that Gpr83+ PNs, a newly identified subset of spinal cord output neurons, and Tacr1+ PNs are largely non-overlapping populations that innervate distinct sets of subnuclei within the lateral parabrachial nucleus (PBNL) of the pons in a zonally segregated manner. In addition, Gpr83+ PNs are highly sensitive to cutaneous mechanical stimuli, receive strong synaptic inputs from primary mechanosensory neurons, and convey tactile information bilaterally to the PBNL in a non-topographically organized manner. Remarkably, Gpr83+ mechanosensory limb of the anterolateral pathway controls behaviors associated with different hedonic values (appetitive or aversive) in a scalable manner. This is the first study to identify a dedicated spinal cord output pathway that conveys affective touch signals to the brain and to define parallel ascending circuit modules that cooperate to convey tactile, thermal and noxious cutaneous signals from the spinal cord to the brain. This study has also revealed exciting new therapeutic opportunities for developing treatments for neurological disorders associated with pain and affective touch.
Targeting the Endocannabinoid System for Management of Chemotherapy, HIV and Antiretroviral-Induced Neuropathic Pain
Chemotherapeutic drugs (used for treating cancer), HIV infection and antiretroviral therapy (ART) can independently cause difficult-to-manage painful neuropathy. Paclitaxel, a chemotherapeutic drug, for example is associated with high incidence of peripheral neuropathy, around 71% of the patients of which 27% of these develop neuropathic pain. Use of cannabis or phytocannabinoids has been reported to improve pain measures in patients with neuropathic pain, including painful HIV-associated sensory neuropathy and cancer pain. Phytocannabinoids and endocannabinoids, such as anandamide and 2-arachidonoylglycerol (2-AG), produce their effects via cannabinoid (CB) receptors, which are present both in the periphery and central nervous system. Endocannabinoids are synthesized in an “on demand” fashion and are degraded by various enzymes such as fatty acid amide hydrolase (FAAH) and monoacylglycerol lipase (MGL). Various studies, including those from our group, suggest that there are changes in gene and protein expression of endocannabinoid molecules during chemotherapy-induced neuropathic pain (CINP), HIV and antiretroviral-induced neuropathic pain. Analysis of endocannabinoid molecule expression in the brain, spinal cord and paw skin using LC-MS/MS show that there is a specific deficiency of the endocannabinoids 2-AG and/or anandamide in the periphery during CINP. Various drugs including endocannabinoids, cannabidiol, inhibitors of FAAH and MGL, CB receptor agonists, desipramine and coadministered indomethacin plus minocycline have been found to either prevent the development and/or attenuate established CINP, HIV and antiretroviral-induced neuropathic pain in a CB receptor-dependent manner. The results available suggest that targeting the endocannabinoid system for prevention and treatment of CINP, HIV-associated neuropathic pain and antiretroviral-induced neuropathic pain is a plausible therapeutic option.
A mechanosensory system in the spinal cord for posture, morphogenesis & innate immunity
How the brain comes to balance: Development of postural stability and its neural architecture in larval zebrafish
Maintaining posture is a vital challenge for all freely-moving organisms. As animals grow, their relationship to destabilizing physical forces changes. How does the nervous system deal with this ongoing challenge? Vertebrates use highly conserved vestibular reflexes to stabilize the body. We established the larval zebrafish as a new model system to understand the development of the vestibular reflexes responsible for balance. In this talk, I will begin with the biophysical challenges facing baby fish as they learn to swim. I’ll briefly review published work by David Ehrlich, Ph.D., establishing a fundamental relationship between postural stability and locomotion. The bulk of the talk will highlight unpublished work by Kyla Hamling. She discovered that a small (~50) population of molecularly-defined brainstem neurons called vestibulo-spinal cells act as a nexus for postural development. Her loss-of-function experiments show that these neurons contribute more to postural stability as animals grow older. I’ll end with brief highlights from her ongoing work examining tilt-evoked responses of these neurons using 2-photon imaging and the consequences of downstream activity in the spinal cord using single-objective light-sheet (SCAPE) microscopy
Modeling and optimization for neuromodulation in spinal cord stimulation
COSYNE 2022
Modeling and optimization for neuromodulation in spinal cord stimulation
COSYNE 2022
A novel approach to obtain high-resolution images of the electrical activity of the spinal cord.
COSYNE 2025
Blood-spinal cord barrier alterations in a mouse model of centrifugation-induced hypergravity
FENS Forum 2024
Cerebrospinal fluid-contacting neurones are functionally connected to cardinal motor interneurons in the mice spinal cord
FENS Forum 2024
Comparative study of temporal inflammation pattern of two models of spinal cord injury: Contusion versus transection
FENS Forum 2024
Control of RVM to spinal cord pain descending pathway by vlPAG-SST neurons in a physiopathological context
FENS Forum 2024
The crosstalk between the epigenome and mitochondria as central player in neural fate decisions of the axotomized neurons after spinal cord injury
FENS Forum 2024
Disease-associated microglia-dependent and independent pathophysiology in spinal cord lesions in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
FENS Forum 2024
Dissecting the requirements for biological repair and restoration of walking following increasingly severe spinal cord injuries at different timepoints
FENS Forum 2024
Dynamics of immunoglobulin G distribution and neuronal internalization following spinal cord injury
FENS Forum 2024
Effect of continuous inhibition of Ia fiber activity on spasticity symptom and Ia-α motoneuron connection after spinal cord injury
FENS Forum 2024
Engineering human induced pluripotent stem cells for spinal cord repair
FENS Forum 2024
Epigenetic modulation of burn injury-induced nociception in murine spinal cord
FENS Forum 2024
Exploring the potential of induced neural stem cells (iNSCs) as therapy for spinal cord injury in a rat model
FENS Forum 2024
Exploring synergistic supraspinal and sensory effects on adaptive plasticity of the neuronal networks after spinal cord injury
FENS Forum 2024
Functional stimulation system for rehabilitation of gait and driving neural plasticity after spinal cord injury
FENS Forum 2024
The immediate effect of lumbar transcutaneous spinal cord stimulation in patients with multiple sclerosis: Preliminary results of a sham-controlled study
FENS Forum 2024
Impact of carnosine supplementation on cellular expressions of brain- and glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factors in lumbar and cervical enlargements after thoracic spinal cord injury
FENS Forum 2024
The impact of combination therapy in spinal cord injury treatment
FENS Forum 2024
Inhibition of glial scar formation after spinal cord injury in Noggin conditional knockout mice and by anti-Noggin antibody treatment
FENS Forum 2024
The inhibition of oligodendrocyte remyelination after spinal cord injury results in cognitive impairment and delayed/inhibited locomotor recovery in aged mice
FENS Forum 2024
Investigating the distribution of cocaine- and amphetamine-regulated transcript (CART) in the human spinal cord
FENS Forum 2024
Investigating the recovery of neonatal rats from compression spinal cord injury utilizing a novel 3D printed spacer model
FENS Forum 2024
Not just a highway: The role of the spinal cord in rats’ forelimb skilled function
FENS Forum 2024
Mapping neural recovery: Comparative molecular insights into spinal cord injury across species
FENS Forum 2024
Mapping orexin/hypocretin receptor expression in the central nervous system after incomplete spinal cord injury in mice
FENS Forum 2024
Melatonin-preconditioned human olfactory mucosal ectomesenchymal stem cells to treat spinal cord injury in rat
FENS Forum 2024
Microprinted 3D scaffolds for repair of spinal cord injury
FENS Forum 2024
Modulation of neuropathic pain and tactile perception in spinal cord injury during an exoskeleton training program
FENS Forum 2024
Myoelectric gesture recognition in patients with spinal cord injury using a medium-density EMG system
FENS Forum 2024
Network plasticity and GABAergic cellular dynamics in the different layers of the somatosensory cortex after a spinal cord injury
FENS Forum 2024
Neuroectodermal stem cells contribute to the functional and morphological improvement of chronic spinal cord injuries via various mechanisms
FENS Forum 2024
Neuronal connectivity and functional recovery of rats with spinal cord injury implanted with magnetic collagen hydrogels
FENS Forum 2024
Neuropilin-mediated Sema 3 signaling is crucial for chick spinal cord neuroprogenitor cells to exit the cell cycle and protect early-born neurons from apoptosis
FENS Forum 2024
Newly synthetic synaptic connector repairs neural circuits damaged by spinal cord injury: recovery from chronic spinal cord injury.
FENS Forum 2024
Plastic changes of neurons and pericellular synapses in spinal cord after peripheral nerve injury
FENS Forum 2024
Pharmacological treatment targeting angiotensin receptor type 2 after severe spinal cord injury improves axonal and myelin regeneration
FENS Forum 2024
Phase-locked epidural electrical stimulation of the spinal cord in Parkinson's rat model
FENS Forum 2024
Prolonged enhancement of spinal cord neuron activity by synaptic input from sensory neurons in reconstructed sensory-spinal cord network in vitro
FENS Forum 2024