Botulinum toxin’s axonal transport from periphery to the spinal cord

Occurrence of cleaved SNAP-25 in ipsilateral lumbal ventral horn following botulinum toxin A (30U/kg) subcutaneous injection into the rat hind paw. [Display omitted] ► Peripheral BTX-A cleaves SNAP-25 in dorsal and ventral horn of the spinal cord. ► Axonal transport of BTX-A occurs at low intramuscu...

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Published inNeurochemistry international Vol. 61; no. 2; pp. 236 - 239
Main Authors Matak, Ivica, Riederer, Peter, Lacković, Zdravko
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Kidlington Elsevier Ltd 01.07.2012
Elsevier
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Summary:Occurrence of cleaved SNAP-25 in ipsilateral lumbal ventral horn following botulinum toxin A (30U/kg) subcutaneous injection into the rat hind paw. [Display omitted] ► Peripheral BTX-A cleaves SNAP-25 in dorsal and ventral horn of the spinal cord. ► Axonal transport of BTX-A occurs at low intramuscular dose. ► BTX-A retrograde transport occurs via peripheral nerves and is microtubule-dependent. ► Truncated SNAP-25 is localized within cholinergic neurons of the ventral horn. Axonal transport of enzymatically active botulinum toxin A (BTX-A) from periphery to the CNS has been described in facial and trigeminal nerve, leading to cleavage of synaptosomal-associated protein 25 (SNAP-25) in central nuclei. Aim of present study was to examine the existence of axonal transport of peripherally applied BTX-A to spinal cord via sciatic nerve. We employed BTX-A-cleaved SNAP-25 immunohistochemistry of lumbar spinal cord after intramuscular and subcutaneous hind limb injections, and intraneural BTX-A sciatic nerve injections. Truncated SNAP-25 in ipsilateral spinal cord ventral horns and dorsal horns appeared after single peripheral BTX-A administrations, even at low intramuscular dose applied (5U/kg). Cleaved SNAP-25 appearance in the spinal cord after BTX-A injection into the sciatic nerve was prevented by proximal intrasciatic injection of colchicine (5mM, 2μl). Cleaved SNAP-25 in ventral horn, using choline-acetyltransferase (ChAT) double labeling, was localized within cholinergic neurons. These results extend the recent findings on BTX-A retrograde axonal transport in facial and trigeminal nerve. Appearance of truncated SNAP-25 in spinal cord following low-dose peripheral BTX-A suggest that the axonal transport of BTX-A occurs commonly following peripheral application.
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ISSN:0197-0186
1872-9754
DOI:10.1016/j.neuint.2012.05.001