Extracellular Glutamate in the Dorsal Horn of the Lumbar Spinal Cord in the Freely Moving Rat During Hindlimb Stepping

The capacity to reestablish locomotor function after complete spinal cord transection in the adult mammal is now well documented. Further studies have shown different neurotransmitters to be involved in the initiation and maintenance of these locomotor patterns. However, there has been no in vivo ev...

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Published inPharmacology, biochemistry and behavior Vol. 63; no. 4; pp. 581 - 588
Main Authors Walwyn, W.M, Ta-Huang, J, Ackerson, L, Maidment, N.T, Edgerton, V.R
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published New York, NY Elsevier Inc 01.08.1999
Elsevier Science
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Summary:The capacity to reestablish locomotor function after complete spinal cord transection in the adult mammal is now well documented. Further studies have shown different neurotransmitters to be involved in the initiation and maintenance of these locomotor patterns. However, there has been no in vivo evidence of the changes in glutamate or any other neurotransmitter in the extracellular space of the dorsal horn during an alternating motor pattern such as hindlimb stepping. This study describes an in vivo microdialysis technique to measure extracellular glutamate in the dorsal horn of the spinal cord in the fully awake intact rat. A concentric microdialysis probe was placed in the dorsal horn at L5, and 18 h later dialysate samples were collected at 20-min intervals before, during, and after 20 min of hindlimb stepping. During stepping, extracellular glutamate rose 150% above resting levels and returned to resting levels 40 min later. This increase may have occurred either as a result of primary afferent depolarization or modulation by the descending and ascending supraspinal pathways. In another series of experiments extracellular glutamate was, therefore, measured in the dorsal horn of the chronic spinally transected rat during 20 min of hindlimb stepping. Although the spinal group did not take as many steps as the intact group, those taking more than 40 steps showed a significant rise in extracellular glutamate, and the number of steps taken by the individual spinal rats correlated positively with the individual values of extracellular glutamate ( r 2 = 0.63). These results are consistent with glutamate being an important neurotransmitter in the spinal cord in normal locomotion.
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ISSN:0091-3057
1873-5177
DOI:10.1016/S0091-3057(99)00032-5