Ronaldo M. Ichiyama
University of Leeds
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Featured researches published by Ronaldo M. Ichiyama.
Nature Neuroscience | 2009
Grégoire Courtine; Yury Gerasimenko; Rubia van den Brand; Aileen Yew; Pavel Musienko; Hui Zhong; Bingbing Song; Yan Ao; Ronaldo M. Ichiyama; Igor Lavrov; Roland R. Roy; Michael V. Sofroniew; V. Reggie Edgerton
After complete spinal cord transections that removed all supraspinal inputs in adult rats, combinations of serotonergic agonists and epidural electrical stimulation were able to acutely transform spinal networks from nonfunctional to highly functional and adaptive states as early as 1 week after injury. Using kinematics, physiological and anatomical analyses, we found that these interventions could recruit specific populations of spinal circuits, refine their control via sensory input and functionally remodel these locomotor pathways when combined with training. The emergence of these new functional states enabled full weight-bearing treadmill locomotion in paralyzed rats that was almost indistinguishable from voluntary stepping. We propose that, in the absence of supraspinal input, spinal locomotion can emerge from a combination of central pattern-generating capability and the ability of these spinal circuits to use sensory afferent input to control stepping. These findings provide a strategy by which individuals with spinal cord injuries could regain substantial levels of motor control.
Neuroscience Letters | 2005
Ronaldo M. Ichiyama; Yu.P. Gerasimenko; Hui Zhong; Roland R. Roy; V. R. Edgerton
The locomotor ability of the spinal cord of adult rats deprived of brain control was tested by epidural spinal cord stimulation. The studies were performed on six rats that had a complete spinal cord transection (T7-T9) and epidural electrode implantations 2-3 weeks before testing was initiated. The stimulating epidural electrodes were implanted at the T12-L6 spinal segments. Epidural electrical stimulation of the dorsal surface of the spinal cord at frequencies between 1 and 50 Hz and intensities between 1 and 10 V without any pharmacological facilitation was used. Stimulation at each of the lumbar spinal cord segments elicited some rhythmic activity in the hindlimbs. However, stimulation at most segmental levels usually evoked activity in only one leg and was maintained for short periods of time (< 10s). Bilateral hindlimb locomotor activity was evoked most often with epidural stimulation at 40-50 Hz applied at the L2 segment. A necessary condition for initiation of locomotor activity was providing a specific amount (at least 5%) of body weight support. Therefore, the rat spinal cord isolated from brain control is capable of producing bilateral stepping patterns induced most readily by epidural stimulation applied at the L2 spinal segment. Furthermore, the induced stepping patterns were dependent on sensory feedback associated with weight bearing.
Brain | 2009
Irin C. Maier; Ronaldo M. Ichiyama; Grégoire Courtine; Lisa Schnell; Igor Lavrov; V. Reggie Edgerton; Martin E. Schwab
Locomotor training on treadmills can improve recovery of stepping in spinal cord injured animals and patients. Likewise, lesioned rats treated with antibodies against the myelin associated neurite growth inhibitory protein, Nogo-A, showed increased regeneration, neuronal reorganization and behavioural improvements. A detailed kinematic analysis showed that the hindlimb kinematic patterns that developed in anti-Nogo-A antibody treated versus treadmill trained spinal cord injured rats were significantly different. The synchronous combined treatment group did not show synergistic effects. This lack of synergistic effects could not be explained by an increase in pain perception, sprouting of calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) positive fibres or by interference of locomotor training with anti-Nogo-A antibody induced regeneration and sprouting of descending fibre tracts. The differential mechanisms leading to behavioural recovery during task-specific training and in regeneration or plasticity enhancing therapies have to be taken into account in designing combinatorial therapies so that their potential positive interactive effects can be fully expressed.
The Journal of Neuroscience | 2007
Jeffrey C. Petruska; Ronaldo M. Ichiyama; Devin L. Jindrich; Eric D. Crown; Keith E. Tansey; Roland R. Roy; V. Reggie Edgerton; Lorne M. Mendell
Although recovery from spinal cord injury is generally meager, evidence suggests that step training can improve stepping performance, particularly after neonatal spinal injury. The location and nature of the changes in neural substrates underlying the behavioral improvements are not well understood. We examined the kinematics of stepping performance and cellular and synaptic electrophysiological parameters in ankle extensor motoneurons in nontrained and treadmill-trained rats, all receiving a complete spinal transection as neonates. For comparison, electrophysiological experiments included animals injured as young adults, which are far less responsive to training. Recovery of treadmill stepping was associated with significant changes in the cellular properties of motoneurons and their synaptic input from spinal white matter [ipsilateral ventrolateral funiculus (VLF)] and muscle spindle afferents. A strong correlation was found between the effectiveness of step training and the amplitude of both the action potential afterhyperpolarization and synaptic inputs to motoneurons (from peripheral nerve and VLF). These changes were absent if step training was unsuccessful, but other spinal projections, apparently inhibitory to step training, became evident. Greater plasticity of axonal projections after neonatal than after adult injury was suggested by anatomical demonstration of denser VLF projections to hindlimb motoneurons after neonatal injury. This finding confirmed electrophysiological measurements and provides a possible mechanism underlying the greater training susceptibility of animals injured as neonates. Thus, we have demonstrated an “age-at-injury”-related difference that may influence training effectiveness, that successful treadmill step training can alter electrophysiological parameters in the transected spinal cord, and that activation of different pathways may prevent functional improvement.
The Journal of Neuroscience | 2011
Difei Wang; Ronaldo M. Ichiyama; Rong-Rong Zhao; Melissa R. Andrews; James W. Fawcett
Chondroitinase ABC (ChABC) in combination with rehabilitation has been shown to promote functional recovery in acute spinal cord injury. For clinical use, the optimal treatment window is concurrent with the beginning of rehabilitation, usually 2–4 weeks after injury. We show that ChABC is effective when given 4 weeks after injury combined with rehabilitation. After C4 dorsal spinal cord injury, rats received no treatment for 4 weeks. They then received either ChABC or penicillinase control treatment followed by hour-long daily rehabilitation specific for skilled paw reaching. Animals that received both ChABC and task-specific rehabilitation showed the greatest recovery in skilled paw reaching, approaching similar levels to animals that were treated at the time of injury. There was also a modest increase in skilled paw reaching ability in animals receiving task-specific rehabilitation alone. Animals treated with ChABC and task-specific rehabilitation also showed improvement in ladder and beam walking. ChABC increased sprouting of the corticospinal tract, and these sprouts had more vGlut1+ve presynaptic boutons than controls. Animals that received rehabilitation showed an increase in perineuronal net number and staining intensity. Our results indicate that ChABC treatment opens a window of opportunity in chronic spinal cord lesions, allowing rehabilitation to improve functional recovery.
The Journal of Neuroscience | 2008
Ronaldo M. Ichiyama; Grégoire Courtine; Yury Gerasimenko; Grace J. Yang; Rubia van den Brand; Igor Lavrov; Hui Zhong; Roland R. Roy; V. Reggie Edgerton
Locomotor training improves function after a spinal cord injury both in experimental and clinical settings. The activity-dependent mechanisms underlying such improvement, however, are sparsely understood. Adult rats received a complete spinal cord transection (T9), and epidural stimulation (ES) electrodes were secured to the dura matter at L2. EMG electrodes were implanted bilaterally in selected muscles. Using a servo-controlled body weight support system for bipedal stepping, five rats were trained 7 d/week for 6 weeks (30 min/d) under quipazine (0.3 mg/kg) and ES (L2; 40 Hz). Nontrained rats were handled as trained rats but did not receive quipazine or ES. At the end of the experiment, a subset of rats was used for c-fos immunohistochemistry. Three trained and three nontrained rats stepped for 1 h (ES; no quipazine) and were returned to their cages for 1 h before intracardiac perfusion. All rats could step with ES and quipazine administration. The trained rats had higher and longer steps, narrower base of support at stance, and lower variability in EMG parameters than nontrained rats, and these properties approached that of noninjured controls. After 1 h of stepping, the number of FOS+ neurons was significantly lower in trained than nontrained rats throughout the extent of the lumbosacral segments. These results suggest that training reinforces the efficacy of specific sensorimotor pathways, resulting in a more selective and stable network of neurons that controls locomotion.
Respiratory Physiology & Neurobiology | 2010
Gérard Hilaire; Nicolas Voituron; Clément Menuet; Ronaldo M. Ichiyama; Hari H. Subramanian; Mathias Dutschmann
Serotonin (5-HT) is a neuromodulator-transmitter influencing global brain function. Past and present findings illustrate a prominent role for 5-HT in the modulation of ponto-medullary autonomic circuits. 5-HT is also involved in the control of neurotrophic processes during pre- and postnatal development of neural circuits. The functional implications of 5-HT are particularly illustrated in the alterations to the serotonergic system, as seen in a wide range of neurological disorders. This article reviews the role of 5-HT in the development and control of respiratory networks in the ponto-medullary brainstem. The review further examines the role of 5-HT in breathing disorders occurring at different stages of life, in particular, the neonatal neurodevelopmental diseases such as Rett, sudden infant death and Prader-Willi syndromes, adult diseases such as sleep apnoea and mental illness linked to neurodegeneration.
Journal of Neuroscience Methods | 2006
Yury Gerasimenko; Igor Lavrov; Grégoire Courtine; Ronaldo M. Ichiyama; Christine J. Dy; Hui Zhong; Roland R. Roy; V. Reggie Edgerton
Motor responses in hindlimb muscles to epidural spinal cord stimulation in normal awake rats during bipedal standing were studied. Stimulation at L2 or S1 induced simultaneous and bilateral responses in the vastus lateralis, semitendinosus, tibialis anterior, and medial gastrocnemius muscles. Stimulation at S1 evoked an early (ER), middle (MR) and late (LR) response: stimulation at L2 elicited only a MR and LR. Vibration and double epidural stimulation testing suggests that the ER is a direct motor response, whereas the MR and LR are mediated synaptically. MR has properties of a monosynaptic reflex, i.e., inhibited during vibration and depressed during the second pulse of a double stimulation. Some components of the LR seem to be mediated by afferents associated with the flexor reflex and probably involve group II afferents. During bipedal treadmill stepping, the MR was modulated in extensors, whereas the LR was modulated in flexors. These results show differential modulation of monosynaptic and polysynaptic reflexes in flexor and extensor motor pools during locomotion. Monosynaptic responses to stimulation at either L2 or S1 generally were amplified in extensors during the stance phase and in flexors during the swing phase of the step cycle. No correlation was found between the ER and the EMG background during stepping, whereas both the MR and LR were closely correlated with the changes in the EMG activity level of the corresponding muscle. These data demonstrate the feasibility of using epidural stimulation for examining monosynaptic and polysynaptic pathways to motor pools associated with multiple muscles during movement and over a prolonged period.
European Journal of Neuroscience | 2007
Christie Engesser-Cesar; Ronaldo M. Ichiyama; Amber L. Nefas; Mary Ann Hill; V. Reggie Edgerton; Carl W. Cotman; Aileen J. Anderson
Exercise, through manual step training, robotic step training or voluntary wheel running, is emerging as a promising therapy after spinal cord injury (SCI). Animal models provide a tool to investigate the mechanisms by which physical activity influences recovery from SCI. In the present study, we extend previous experiments showing improved recovery after SCI with both pre‐ and post‐injury running in a flat‐surface running wheel and investigate mechanisms of recovery. We tested a clinically relevant model using post‐injury wheel running, in which we provided mice with access to wheels either 3 days or 7 days/week. Open field behavior, observed for 15 weeks following moderate T9 contusion injury, showed a significant linear increase in locomotor improvements across groups, sedentary, 3‐day runners and 7‐day runners. Kinematic analysis of treadmill walking revealed that both wheel‐running groups, 3 and 7 days/week, improved stepping ability compared with sedentary controls. Stereological quantification of neuron number in the injured segment of the spinal cord revealed no differences between the groups. However, stereological quantification of serotonin immunostaining using isotropic virtual planes showed increases in serotonin fiber length caudal to the lesion in the running groups. These observations suggest that improvement in function may be related to changes in serotonin fibers immediately caudal to the injury epicenter.
Progress in Brain Research | 2009
Andy J. Fong; Roland R. Roy; Ronaldo M. Ichiyama; Igor Lavrov; Grégoire Courtine; Yury Gerasimenko; Yu-Chong Tai; Joel W. Burdick; V. Reggie Edgerton
Over the past 20 years, tremendous advances have been made in the field of spinal cord injury research. Yet, consumed with individual pieces of the puzzle, we have failed as a community to grasp the magnitude of the sum of our findings. Our current knowledge should allow us to improve the lives of patients suffering from spinal cord injury. Advances in multiple areas have provided tools for pursuing effective combination of strategies for recovering stepping and standing after a severe spinal cord injury. Muscle physiology research has provided insight into how to maintain functional muscle properties after a spinal cord injury. Understanding the role of the spinal networks in processing sensory information that is important for the generation of motor functions has focused research on developing treatments that sharpen the sensitivity of the locomotor circuitry and that carefully manage the presentation of proprioceptive and cutaneous stimuli to favor recovery. Pharmacological facilitation or inhibition of neurotransmitter systems, spinal cord stimulation, and rehabilitative motor training, which all function by modulating the physiological state of the spinal circuitry, have emerged as promising approaches. Early technological developments, such as robotic training systems and high-density electrode arrays for stimulating the spinal cord, can significantly enhance the precision and minimize the invasiveness of treatment after an injury. Strategies that seek out the complementary effects of combination treatments and that efficiently integrate relevant technical advances in bioengineering represent an untapped potential and are likely to have an immediate impact. Herein, we review key findings in each of these areas of research and present a unified vision for moving forward. Much work remains, but we already have the capability, and more importantly, the responsibility, to help spinal cord injury patients now.