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Silencing long ascending propriospinal neurons after spinal cord injury improves hindlimb stepping in the adult rat
[article]
2021
bioRxiv
pre-print
Long ascending propriospinal neurons (LAPNs) are a subpopulation of spinal cord interneurons that directly connect the lumbar and cervical enlargements. In uninjured animals, conditionally silencing LAPNs resulted in disrupted left-right coordination of the hindlimbs and forelimbs in a context-dependent manner, demonstrating that LAPNs secure alternation of the fore- and hindlimb pairs during overground stepping in the adult rat. Given their ventrolateral location in the spinal cord white
doi:10.1101/2021.05.18.444653
fatcat:vbkri4lhn5chpbncfmhoa47r5e