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review article

Natural and targeted circuit reorganization after spinal cord injury

Anderson, Mark A.
•
Squair, Jordan W.
•
Gautier, Matthieu  
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November 17, 2022
Nature Neuroscience

The authors summarize changes in circuits after spinal cord injury and current strategies to target these circuits in order to improve recovery, but also advocate for new concepts of reorganizing circuits informed by multi-omic single-cell atlases.

A spinal cord injury disrupts communication between the brain and the circuits in the spinal cord that regulate neurological functions. The consequences are permanent paralysis, loss of sensation and debilitating dysautonomia. However, the majority of circuits located above and below the injury remain anatomically intact, and these circuits can reorganize naturally to improve function. In addition, various neuromodulation therapies have tapped into these processes to further augment recovery. Emerging research is illuminating the requirements to reconstitute damaged circuits. Here, we summarize these natural and targeted reorganizations of circuits after a spinal cord injury. We also advocate for new concepts of reorganizing circuits informed by multi-omic single-cell atlases of recovery from injury. These atlases will uncover the molecular logic that governs the selection of 'recovery-organizing' neuronal subpopulations, and are poised to herald a new era in spinal cord medicine.

  • Details
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Type
review article
DOI
10.1038/s41593-022-01196-1
Web of Science ID

WOS:000884942400003

Author(s)
Anderson, Mark A.
Squair, Jordan W.
Gautier, Matthieu  
Hutson, Thomas H.
Kathe, Claudia  
Barraud, Quentin  
Bloch, Jocelyne
Courtine, Gregoire  
Date Issued

2022-11-17

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO

Published in
Nature Neuroscience
Volume

25

Start page

1584

End page

1596

Subjects

Neurosciences

•

Neurosciences & Neurology

•

corticospinal tract lesion

•

neural stem-cells

•

functional recovery

•

axon regeneration

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electrical-stimulation

•

critical regulator

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fibroblasts form

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motor recovery

•

scar formation

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fibrotic scar

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

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Available on Infoscience
December 5, 2022
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/193010
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