Developmental studies identified four classes (V0, V1, V2, V3) of embryonic interneurons in the ventral spinal cord. Very little however is known about their adult phenotypes. In order to further characterize interneuron cell types in the adult, the location, neurotransmitter phenotype, calciumbuffering protein expression and axon distributions of V1-derived neurons in the mouse spinal cord was determined. In the mature (P20 and older) spinal cord, most V1-derived neurons are located in lateral LVII and in LIX, few in medial LVII and none in LVIII. Approximately 40% express calbindin and/or parvalbumin, while few express calretinin. Of seven groups of ventral interneurons identified according to calcium-buffering protein expression, two groups (1 and 4) correspond with V1-derived neurons. Group 1 are Renshaw cells and intensely express calbindin and coexpress parvalbumin and calretinin. They represent 9% of the V1 population. Group 4 express only parvalbumin and represent 27% of V1-derived neurons. V1-derived group 4 neurons receive contacts from primary sensory afferents and are therefore proprioceptive interneurons and the most ventral neurons in this group receive convergent calbindin-IR Renshaw cell inputs. This subgroup resembles Ia inhibitory interneurons (IaINs) and represents 13% of V1-derived neurons. Adult V1-interneuron axons target LIX and LVII and some enter the deep dorsal horn. V1-axons do not cross the midline. V1 derived axonal varicosities were mostly (>80%) glycinergic and a third were GABAergic. None were glutamatergic or cholinergic. In summary, V1 interneurons develop into ipsilaterally projecting, inhibitory interneurons that include Renshaw cells, Ia inhibitory interneurons and other unidentified proprioceptive interneurons.Keywords inhibitory interneurons; engrailed-1; motor control; GABA; glycine; calbindin; parvalbumin; calretinin; motoneurons; ventral horn; spinal cord; development; V1 During the past 50 years, classical studies in the spinal cord have uncovered a wealth of details about the organization of interneuronal networks that control motoneuron firing, segmental reflexes and generate locomotor patterns in mammals (Jankowska et al., 1992). These studies, which relied heavily on the physiological identification of synaptic inputs and (Renshaw 1946;Eccles et al., 1954). IaINs are characterized by inputs from sensory Ia muscle afferents, provide reciprocal inhibition to antagonistic motor pools (Eccles et al., 1956) and are modulated by RCs (Hultborn et al., 1971). Despite enormous progress in further identification of interneurons using these methods, much is unknown and this approach is not without limitations (Edgley, 2001;Jankowska, 2001). Thus a comprehensive classification of ventral interneurons into major subclasses has not yet emerged.Recent studies indicate that distinct cell types in the adult spinal cord are derived from genetically-discrete populations of embryonic neurons (Jessell, 2000;Briscoe and Ericson, 2001;Lee and Pfaff, 2001;Goulding et al., 2002, Sa...
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