Functionally reduced sensorimotor connections form with normal specificity despite abnormal muscle spindle development: The role of spindle-derived neurotrophin 3

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Abstract

The mechanisms controlling the formation of synaptic connections between muscle spindle afferents and spinal motor neurons are believed to be regulated by factors originating from muscle spindles. Here, we find that the connections form with appropriate specificity in mice with abnormal spindle development caused by the conditional elimination of the neuregulinl receptor ErbB2 from muscle precursors. However, despite a modest (~30%) decrease in the number of afferent terminals on motor neuron somata, the amplitude of afferent-evoked synaptic potentials recorded in motor neurons was reduced by ~80%, suggesting that many of the connections that form are functionally silent. The selective elimination of neurotrophin 3 (NT3) from muscle spindles had no effect on the amplitude of afferent-evoked ventral root potentials until the second postnatal week, revealing a late role for spindle-derived NT3 in the functional maintenance of the connections. These findings indicate that spindle-derived factors regulate the strength of the connections but not their initial formation or their specificity. copyright © 2009 Society for Neurosdence.

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APA

Shneider, N. A., Mentis, G. Z., Schustak, J., & O’Donovan, M. J. (2009). Functionally reduced sensorimotor connections form with normal specificity despite abnormal muscle spindle development: The role of spindle-derived neurotrophin 3. Journal of Neuroscience, 29(15), 4719–4735. https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.5790-08.2009

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