Recovery from spinal cord injury mediated by antibodies to neurite growth inhibitors
- 1 November 1995
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature
- Vol. 378 (6556) , 498-501
- https://doi.org/10.1038/378498a0
Abstract
There is little axonal growth after central nervous system (CNS) injury in adult mammals. The administration of antibodies (IN-1) to neutralize the myelin-associated neurite growth inhibitory proteins leads to long-distance regrowth of a proportion of CNS axons after injury. Our aim was: to determine if spinal cord lesion in adult rats, followed by treatment with antibodies to neurite growth inhibitors, can lead to regeneration and anatomical plasticity of other spinally projecting pathways; to determine if the anatomical projections persist at long survival intervals; and to determine whether this fibre growth is associated with recovery of function. We report here that brain stem-spinal as well as corticospinal axons undergo regeneration and anatomical plasticity after application of IN-1 antibodies. There is a recovery of specific reflex and locomotor functions after spinal cord injury in these adult rats. Removal of the sensorimotor cortex in IN-1-treated rats 2-3 months later abolished the recovered contact-placing responses, suggesting that the recovery was dependent upon the regrowth of these pathways.Keywords
This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- Neurotrophin-3 enhances sprouting of corticospinal tract during development and after adult spinal cord lesionNature, 1994
- Recovery of function after spinal cord hemisection in newborn and adult rats: Differential effects on reflex and locomotor functionExperimental Neurology, 1992
- Regeneration of Lesioned Septohippocampal Acetylcholinesterase‐positive Axons is Improved by Antibodies Against the Myelin‐associated Neurite Growth Inhibitors NI‐35/250European Journal of Neuroscience, 1991
- Criteria for assessing recovery of function after spinal cord injury: Behavioral methodsExperimental Neurology, 1990
- Spinal cord transplants permit the growth of serotonergic axons across the site of neonatal spinal cord transectionDevelopmental Brain Research, 1987
- Development of serotonin immunoreactivity in the rat spinal cord and its plasticity after neonatal spinal cord lesionsDevelopmental Brain Research, 1987
- Infant lesion effect: III. Anatomical correlates of sparing and recovery of function after spinal cord damage in newborn and adult catsDevelopmental Brain Research, 1983
- Infant lesion effect: II. Sparing and recovery of function after spinal cord damage in newborn and adult catsDevelopmental Brain Research, 1983
- Anatomical Plasticity and Sparing of Function After Spinal Cord Damage in Neonatal CatsScience, 1982
- Relationship between residual hindlimb-assisted locomotion and surviving axons after incomplete spinal cord injuriesExperimental Neurology, 1977