The Cortical “Upper Motoneuron” in Health and Disease
Abstract
:1. A Critique of the Term ‘Upper Motoneuron’
2. Origins of the Corticospinal Tract Projection (CSP)
3. The Wide Spectrum of Primate Corticospinal Fibres
4. Corticospinal Projections and Terminations
5. Somatotopy in the Corticospinal Tract
6. The Origin of the Cortico-Motoneuronal Projections
7. Organisation of the CM System as an Exemplar of the UMN
8. What Does the CM System Contribute to Skilled Movement?
9. The UMN and Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis
- A general concept on the function of the CM system is that it may subserve complex adaptive motor behaviours (including the examples of skilled tool use, but also vocalisation and advanced forms of locomotion), which obviously characterise much of the human motor repertoire [58,60]. It is striking that it is these same highly evolved behaviours that are affected in the early forms of the disease, as commented on over 130 years ago by Hughlings Jackson in his Croonian Lecture [61].
- The split-hand syndrome, with dramatic differences in the strength of thenar vs. hypothenar intrinsic hand muscles is now recognised as a key feature in some forms of ALS [56,62]. This pattern of weakness appears to reflect loss of monosynaptic corticospinal inputs to the respective motoneuron pools that were first shown in the non-human primate, where stimulation of motor cortex was shown to evoke significantly larger CM EPSPs in thenar vs. hypothenar motoneurons [63]. For the intrinsic thumb muscles, it may be that the CM input represents such a large component of the excitatory input that when this input is compromised by ALS, the result is both a weakness and a poverty of movement. In the case of the split-hand syndrome, there is now good evidence that the pattern of weakness in ALS patients reflects changes in the corticospinal influence over these muscles, with clear changes in the short latency MEP [62]. This MEP is known to be dominated by direct CM action but may include other complex actions set up by the TMS pulse. Since investigation of the LMN in these patients suggests that peripheral changes do not make a significant contribution to the development of the split-hand phenomenon [64], this reinforces the importance of CM pathology in ALS.The accumulating evidence for cortical involvement in the early stages of ALS [18,58] is consistent with what we know about the degenerative processes affecting motor cortex pyramidal neurons with long corticofugal projections, including Betz cells. Recent work has particularly highlighted the loss of dendritic spines and altered synaptic inputs to the apical dendrites of Betz cells in post-mortem brains of patients with different forms of ALS, but not in other neurodegenerative diseases [65]. Similar changes have been seen in layer V pyramidal neurons in the cortex of TDP-43 mouse models of ALS [66,67]. It is further suggested that transmission of the pathogen pTDP-43 by the long axons of motor cortex corticofugal neurons results, in turn, in the degeneration of neurons in their subcortical targets. In particular, direct CM projections could provide a monosynaptic route for pTDP-43 transmission from motor cortex, resulting in degeneration of α-motoneurons in the brainstem and spinal cord [18].
- Other recent studies have highlighted significant differences in the pattern of weakness in ALS patients which are consistent with the known connectivity of the CSP in humans and non-human primates [68,69]. An example is shown in Figure 1 from a recent study by Ludolph et al. [68], which included both retrospective and prospective studies of a large cohort of ALS patients whose muscle strength was assessed in different pairs of both upper and lower limb muscles, using the MRC scale. The study looked for any statistical sign of asymmetry, in each patient, between pairs of muscle groups, with one group known to receive strong CM connections and the other known to receive weaker connections. The pairs tested included wrist extensors vs. flexors, elbow flexors vs. extensors and, in the lower limb, knee flexors vs. extensors and plantar extensors vs. flexors. In the upper limb, strength was compared for a muscle group known to receive one of the strongest CM projections (thumb abductors) vs. one of the weakest (elbow extensors). The results showed a greater relative weakness for the muscle groups with normally receive strong CM projections, consistent with loss of CM influence during ALS [70]. These findings need following up, in a manner similar to that followed for the split-hand syndrome, to investigate the relative contribution of UMN and LMN to the weakness [59].
- A neurodegenerative process selectively targeting, in its early phase, pyramidal neurons with long corticofugal axons, including CM projections, may result in an UMN syndrome that is different from that caused, for example, by acute stroke or spinal injury to the UMN and its axon. Kinnear Wilson [71] famously questioned the suggestion that ALS could be considered as a disease of the “pyramidal system” because although ALS patients exhibited “awkwardness of finger movements”, they only suffered from slight weakness and there was no spasticity. However, all the recent studies discussed above actually point to a consistent pattern of weakness in the hands and radial digits of ALS patients. Moreover, since selective damage to the CST is well known to result in poverty of hand and finger movement without spasticity [72,73,74], there is no need to invoke higher order motor deficits to explain the symptoms observed in early ALS, although such deficits may well play a part in later stages of the disease.
- Progress in the understanding and treatment of ALS is dependent upon animal models. ALS appears to be a uniquely human disease and this has certainly made finding a good animal model difficult [18]. The involvement of the fast conducting CST and particularly of the CM system in ALS poses the question of whether a macaque model, whose motor system exhibits these same features, would allow additional insights to the progress already gained by the focus on rat and mouse studies [66,67,75], which do not share these features. Indeed, because in the rodent, corticospinal projections from sensorimotor cortex avoid the ventral horn and have limited direct effects on motor control [2,3], the layer V pyramidal neurons giving rise to these projections do not strictly qualify as ‘upper motor neurons’ in the sense that I have discussed in this short review. There are of course many features of motor cortex pyramidal neurons which are common to mouse, rat, macaque, and human [65,66,67,75], but we should also be aware that there are some striking differences, for example, in the shape and duration of their action potentials [12] and in some of the fast K+ ion channels involved in repolarisation [76]. These features would undoubtedly impact on the signals transmitted by the corticospinal tract and therefore on the different species-specific functions of this system.
10. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Lemon, R.N. The Cortical “Upper Motoneuron” in Health and Disease. Brain Sci. 2021, 11, 619. https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci11050619
Lemon RN. The Cortical “Upper Motoneuron” in Health and Disease. Brain Sciences. 2021; 11(5):619. https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci11050619
Chicago/Turabian StyleLemon, Roger N. 2021. "The Cortical “Upper Motoneuron” in Health and Disease" Brain Sciences 11, no. 5: 619. https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci11050619
APA StyleLemon, R. N. (2021). The Cortical “Upper Motoneuron” in Health and Disease. Brain Sciences, 11(5), 619. https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci11050619