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Ipsilesional versus contralesional postural deficits induced by unilateral brain trauma : A side reversal by opioid mechanism

Watanabe, Hiroyuki LU ; Nosova, Olga ; Sarkisyan, Daniil ; Andersen, Marlene Storm ; Zhang, Mengliang LU ; Rodrick-Kehn, Linda ; Clausen, Fredrik ; Gawel, Kinga ; Kehr, Jan and Hallberg, Mathias , et al. (2020) In Brain Communications 2(2).
Abstract

Unilateral traumatic brain injury and stroke result in asymmetric postural and motor deficits including contralateral hemiplegia and hemiparesis. In animals, a localized unilateral brain injury recapitulates the human upper motor neuron syndrome in the formation of hindlimb postural asymmetry with contralesional limb flexion and the asymmetry of hindlimb nociceptive withdrawal reflexes. The current view is that these effects are developed due to aberrant activity of motor pathways that descend from the brain into the spinal cord. These pathways and their target spinal circuits may be regulated by local neurohormonal systems that may also mediate effects of brain injury. Here, we evaluate if a unilateral traumatic brain injury induces... (More)

Unilateral traumatic brain injury and stroke result in asymmetric postural and motor deficits including contralateral hemiplegia and hemiparesis. In animals, a localized unilateral brain injury recapitulates the human upper motor neuron syndrome in the formation of hindlimb postural asymmetry with contralesional limb flexion and the asymmetry of hindlimb nociceptive withdrawal reflexes. The current view is that these effects are developed due to aberrant activity of motor pathways that descend from the brain into the spinal cord. These pathways and their target spinal circuits may be regulated by local neurohormonal systems that may also mediate effects of brain injury. Here, we evaluate if a unilateral traumatic brain injury induces hindlimb postural asymmetry, a model of postural deficits, and if this asymmetry is spinally encoded and mediated by the endogenous opioid system in rats. A unilateral right-sided controlled cortical impact, a model of clinical focal traumatic brain injury was centred over the sensorimotor cortex and was observed to induce hindlimb postural asymmetry with contralateral limb flexion. The asymmetry persisted after complete spinal cord transection, implicating local neurocircuitry in the development of the deficits. Administration of the general opioid antagonist naloxone and ?-Antagonist ?-funaltrexamine blocked the formation of postural asymmetry. Surprisingly, ?-Antagonists nor-binaltorphimine and LY2444296 did not affect the asymmetry magnitude but reversed the flexion side; instead of contralesional (left) hindlimb flexion the ipsilesional (right) limb was flexed. The postural effects of the right-side cortical injury were mimicked in animals with intact brain via intrathecal administration of the opioid ?-Agonist (2)-(trans)-3,4-Dichloro-N-methyl-N-[2-(1-pyrrolidiny)-cyclohexyl]benzeneacetamide that induced hindlimb postural asymmetry with left limb flexion. The ?-Antagonist naltrindole produced no effect on the contralesional (left) flexion but inhibited the formation of the ipsilesional (right) limb flexion in brain-injured rats that were treated with ?-Antagonist. The effects of the antagonists were evident before and after spinal cord transection. We concluded that the focal traumatic brain injury-induced postural asymmetry was encoded at the spinal level, and was blocked or its side was reversed by administration of opioid antagonists. The findings suggest that the balance in activity of the mirror symmetric spinal neural circuits regulating contraction of the left and right hindlimb muscles is controlled by different subtypes of opioid receptors; and that this equilibrium is impaired after unilateral brain trauma through side-specific opioid mechanism.

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organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Hindlimbs, Opioid system, Postural deficits, Traumatic brain injury
in
Brain Communications
volume
2
issue
2
article number
fcaa208
pages
18 pages
publisher
Oxford University Press
external identifiers
  • scopus:85105729599
  • pmid:33364602
ISSN
2632-1297
DOI
10.1093/braincomms/fcaa208
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
f3179beb-7f98-4db1-8f72-fb973096b0fc
date added to LUP
2021-04-07 11:28:27
date last changed
2024-05-02 12:36:46
@article{f3179beb-7f98-4db1-8f72-fb973096b0fc,
  abstract     = {{<p>Unilateral traumatic brain injury and stroke result in asymmetric postural and motor deficits including contralateral hemiplegia and hemiparesis. In animals, a localized unilateral brain injury recapitulates the human upper motor neuron syndrome in the formation of hindlimb postural asymmetry with contralesional limb flexion and the asymmetry of hindlimb nociceptive withdrawal reflexes. The current view is that these effects are developed due to aberrant activity of motor pathways that descend from the brain into the spinal cord. These pathways and their target spinal circuits may be regulated by local neurohormonal systems that may also mediate effects of brain injury. Here, we evaluate if a unilateral traumatic brain injury induces hindlimb postural asymmetry, a model of postural deficits, and if this asymmetry is spinally encoded and mediated by the endogenous opioid system in rats. A unilateral right-sided controlled cortical impact, a model of clinical focal traumatic brain injury was centred over the sensorimotor cortex and was observed to induce hindlimb postural asymmetry with contralateral limb flexion. The asymmetry persisted after complete spinal cord transection, implicating local neurocircuitry in the development of the deficits. Administration of the general opioid antagonist naloxone and ?-Antagonist ?-funaltrexamine blocked the formation of postural asymmetry. Surprisingly, ?-Antagonists nor-binaltorphimine and LY2444296 did not affect the asymmetry magnitude but reversed the flexion side; instead of contralesional (left) hindlimb flexion the ipsilesional (right) limb was flexed. The postural effects of the right-side cortical injury were mimicked in animals with intact brain via intrathecal administration of the opioid ?-Agonist (2)-(trans)-3,4-Dichloro-N-methyl-N-[2-(1-pyrrolidiny)-cyclohexyl]benzeneacetamide that induced hindlimb postural asymmetry with left limb flexion. The ?-Antagonist naltrindole produced no effect on the contralesional (left) flexion but inhibited the formation of the ipsilesional (right) limb flexion in brain-injured rats that were treated with ?-Antagonist. The effects of the antagonists were evident before and after spinal cord transection. We concluded that the focal traumatic brain injury-induced postural asymmetry was encoded at the spinal level, and was blocked or its side was reversed by administration of opioid antagonists. The findings suggest that the balance in activity of the mirror symmetric spinal neural circuits regulating contraction of the left and right hindlimb muscles is controlled by different subtypes of opioid receptors; and that this equilibrium is impaired after unilateral brain trauma through side-specific opioid mechanism. </p>}},
  author       = {{Watanabe, Hiroyuki and Nosova, Olga and Sarkisyan, Daniil and Andersen, Marlene Storm and Zhang, Mengliang and Rodrick-Kehn, Linda and Clausen, Fredrik and Gawel, Kinga and Kehr, Jan and Hallberg, Mathias and Schouenborg, Jens and Marklund, Niklas and Bakalkin, Georgy}},
  issn         = {{2632-1297}},
  keywords     = {{Hindlimbs; Opioid system; Postural deficits; Traumatic brain injury}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{2}},
  publisher    = {{Oxford University Press}},
  series       = {{Brain Communications}},
  title        = {{Ipsilesional versus contralesional postural deficits induced by unilateral brain trauma : A side reversal by opioid mechanism}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/braincomms/fcaa208}},
  doi          = {{10.1093/braincomms/fcaa208}},
  volume       = {{2}},
  year         = {{2020}},
}