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Laboratoire de Neurophysiologie, Faculté de Médecine, Université Laval, Quebec G1K 7P4, Canada
Submitted 20 May 2004; accepted in final form 21 July 2004
| ABSTRACT |
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| INTRODUCTION |
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Previous studies have shown that low-frequency (515 Hz) stimulation produces short-term synaptic plasticity in thalamocortical pathways (Castro-Alamancos and Connors 1996
; Steriade et al. 1998b
). The callosal pathway is implicated in the synchronization of various cortically generated rhythms and oscillatory activities during states of waking and sleep, and may play an important role in the induction of synaptic plasticity (Steriade 2003
; Steriade and Timofeev 2003
). We have previously shown that homosynaptic potentiation of responses in callosal pathways can be obtained by stimulating at the frequency of 10 Hz, even in animals with extensive thalamic lesions (Nuñez et al. 1993
; Steriade et al. 1993
). In those experiments, only 10-Hz stimulation was used, only intrinsically bursting (IB) neurons were recorded, and the duration of potentiation was not measured.
In this study, we applied single pulses to callosal pathway to evoke control excitatory postsynaptic potential (EPSP) responses that were followed by rhythmic pulse-trains at different frequencies, representing the conditioning stimulation; thereafter, single pulses were applied again to test changes in synaptic responses by comparing the amplitudes of control and conditioned EPSPs. With all frequencies used, we found increased amplitudes of conditioned EPSPs compared with control; the enhancement of test EPSPs evoked by single pulses lasted for about 530 min in animals under barbiturate anesthesia. To test the possibility that this EPSPs' potentiation may be dependent on N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptors at callosal synapses (Kumar and Huguenard 2001
), we performed microdialysis with an NMDA receptor blocker in barbiturate-treated animals, made recordings in animals under ketamine-xylazine anesthesia (which blocks NMDA receptors), and found that NMDA blockade significantly reduces EPSPs' potentiation.
| METHODS |
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Experiments were conducted on 33 adult cats under barbiturate anesthesia (pentobarbital sodium, 35 mg/kg, ip) and 10 adult cats under ketamine-xylazine anesthesia (1015 and 23 mg/kg, im, respectively). The animals were paralyzed with gallamine triethiodide after the EEG showed typical signs of deep general anesthesia, essentially consisting of sequences of spindle waves (714 Hz) under barbiturate anesthesia and slow oscillation (0.51 Hz) under ketamine-xylazine anesthesia. Supplementary doses of anesthetics were administered at the slightest changes toward activated EEG patterns. The cats were ventilated artificially with the control of end-tidal CO2 at 3.53.7%. The body temperature was maintained at 3738°C, and the heart rate was
90100 beats/min. Stability of intracellular recordings was ensured by the drainage of cisterna magna, hip suspension, bilateral pneumothorax, and filling the hole made for recordings with a solution of 4% agar.
Recordings and stimulation
Intracellular recordings from left suprasylvian association areas 5 and 7 were performed using glass micropipettes filled with a solution of 3 M potassium-acetate (KAc). A high-impedance amplifier with active bridge circuitry was used to record the membrane potential (Vm) and inject current into the neurons. Field potentials were recorded in the vicinity of impaled neurons, using bipolar coaxial electrodes, with the ring (pial surface) and the tip (cortical depth) separated by 0.81 mm.
Stimulating electrodes were inserted in homotopic points of the contralateral (right) areas 5 and 7 (Fig. 1A). We used low-intensity (0.020.5 mA) and short-duration (0.050.2 ms) stimuli, which were preserved for the same neuron throughout the experiment. The amplitude of EPSPs was measured from the baseline (1 ms before stimulus artifact) to the peak of EPSPs to avoid multisynaptic responses that may be contained after the initial slope of the EPSP.
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Microdialysis
To assess the involvement of NMDA receptors in the callosal-induced potentiation, the NMDA receptor blocker D-(-)-2-amino-5-phosphonopentanoic acid (AP-5, Tocris), was applied locally using reverse microdialysis technique. The membrane of the microdialysis probe (membrane: 2 mm length, 0.22 mm diam; EICOM) was inserted in the cortex, and the recording micropipettes were placed at 0.20.3 mm from the membrane. The microdialysis probe was perfused either with artificial cerebrospinal fluid (ACSF, concentration in mM: 124 NaCl, 2.5 KCl, 26 NaHCO3, 1.25 NaH2PO4, 2 MgSO4, 1 MgCl2, and 1 CaCl2) or with a solution of AP-5 (1 mM) dissolved in ACSF. The concentration of AP-5 in the cortex is expected to reach
10% of the concentration in the perfused solution (100 µM) (Juhasz et al. 1989
; Quan and Blatteis 1989
). The changes in callosally evoked EPSPs after application of pulse-trains at 40 Hz were tested during the perfusion of ACSF only, during the application of AP-5, and 2030 min after washout with ACSF in the same neurons.
At the end of experiments, the cats were given a lethal dose of pentobarbital (50 mg/kg, iv). The experimental procedures were approved by the committee for animal care of Laval University and were performed according to National Institutes of Health guiding principles.
| RESULTS |
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500 Hz) and vice versa. Finally, we present the results obtained using microdialysis of AP-5 in barbiturate-treated animals as well as the data collected in animals under ketamine-xylazine anesthesia. Database and stability of long-term recordings
Of >170 neurons recorded intracellularly in areas 5 and 7, we retained 42 neurons for analysis that could be recorded for periods of time from 20 to 120 min under barbiturate anesthesia, with resting Vm (without current) of 72 ± 0.9 (SE) mV and Vm fluctuations that did not exceed 12 mV. Of those 42 neurons, 34 were regular-spiking (RS), 5 were fast-rhythmic-bursting (FRB), and 3 were IB, as characterized by responses to depolarizing current pulses (see Steriade 2001
). In addition, seven RS neurons could be recorded before and after AP-5 microdialysis. Ten other neurons were recorded under ketamine-xylazine anesthesia.
Under barbiturate anesthesia, we tested 23 neurons with single conditioning pulse-trains (10, 20, 30, 40, 50, and 100 Hz) and 19 neurons with two or more conditioning pulse-trains. Under ketamine-xylazine anesthesia, we tested three neurons with single conditioning pulse-trains (10 and 50 Hz) and seven neurons with two or more conditioning pulse-trains (10, 40, and 100 Hz).
Neurons responsive to contralateral cortical stimulation (Fig. 1A) were located at depths between 0.3 and 1.5 mm. This wide distribution corroborates earlier morphological and physiological studies showing that callosal projecting and receiving neurons of cats and ferrets are located not only in layers 2/3 but also in infragranular layers (Barbaresi et al. 1994
; Innocenti 1986
; Innocenti et al. 2002
). The peculiar amplitude and latency of callosally evoked responses in FRB neurons, which display EPSPs whose amplitudes are two- to threefold larger, and latencies two- to threefold shorter, than in other neuronal classes (Cissé et al. 2003
), were also observed in these experiments. Thus the control EPSPs in the FRB neuron depicted in Fig. 2B had an amplitude of
1012 mV and a latency of 1.4 ms compared with lower amplitudes and longer latencies of control EPSPs in other neuronal classes.
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5 ms in Fig. 2A;
6 ms in Fig. 3) do not necessarily indicate that di- or polysynaptic pathways are involved, since there was no jitter in the onset latency for EPSPs activated from the contralateral cortex, the EPSPs could follow high frequencies of stimulation, and the latencies for antidromic invasion in this pathway can be as long as 18 ms (Cissé et al. 2003
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Single electrical volleys were applied every 2 or 3 s to the callosal pathway to evoke control EPSPs (minimum 20). They were followed by 815 pulse-trains, lasting for 0.21 s (depending on the frequency used), separated by 2 or 3 s, delivered at frequencies of 1020 Hz (Fig. 2A) or higher frequencies, 40100 Hz (Fig. 2B), which represented the conditioning stimulation. Thereafter, single pulses were applied again to test synaptic changes by comparing the amplitudes of control and conditioned EPSPs. In some neurons (n = 0 12), conditioning pulse-trains at low and fast frequencies were successively applied to compare their relative efficiency (Figs. 3 and 5). Rhythmic pulse-trains induced different degrees of facilitation of tested EPSPs in 41 of 42 tested neurons, regardless of the frequency used for the conditioning stimulation. Similar results were obtained in areas 5 and 7.
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54% in neuron depicted in Fig. 2A, the highest potentiation seen with conditioning pulse-trains at these relatively low frequencies). In a neuronal sample (n = 17) tested with pulse-trains at 1020 Hz as conditioning stimulation, all neurons displayed potentiation of tested EPSPs. The amplitudes of control EPSPs (in mV) were 5.41 ± 0.83 and 6.7 ± 0.94 after conditioning stimulation. The average potentiation was 24%.
With higher frequency (4050 Hz) as conditioning stimulation (Fig. 2B), all 41 neurons displayed potentiation of tested EPSPs. The amplitude of test EPSPs (in mV) was 6.5 ± 0.7, whereas conditioned EPSPs had amplitudes of 7.9 ± 0.7; the average percentage of potentiation was 21%. A similar degree of facilitation was seen with conditioning pulse-trains at 100 Hz (data not shown; see Figs. 5B and 6). The time-course of facilitated EPSPs varied among tested neurons. In the FRB neuron depicted in Fig. 2B, the potentiation lasted
4 min (t-test, P < 0.001).
An example of the residual facilitation of tested EPSPs, for periods lasting from 18 to 30 min (n = 27), is shown in Fig. 3, A and B, which also compares the effects exerted by low (10 Hz) and fast (40 Hz) frequencies of conditioning pulse-trains. In this RS neuron, the facilitation induced by 10 Hz stimulation was
50% (t-test, P < 0.01) and lasted for
25 min, whereas 40-Hz conditioning stimulation further enhanced the amplitudes of EPSPs by
24% (t-test, P < 0.05). Figure 3C shows a neuron in which the potentiation lasted for 30 min.
We also examined the potentiation after successive conditioning 50-Hz pulse-trains applied to callosal pathway after complete recovery following the first conditioning pulse-train (n = 7 RS neurons). Figure 4, A and B, shows that, after decreasing amplitudes of EPSPs to control level (
9.5 mV in A,
1.7 mV in B), there was again an increased amplitude after the second conditioning pulse-train (although the potentiation was slightly weaker), with highly significant enhancement (P < 0.01 and P < 0.001).
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To determine whether preferred frequencies of conditioning stimulation are detectable, we applied pulse-trains with incremental and decremental frequencies, i.e., from lower to higher and back to lower frequencies, and in decremental way, i.e., from higher to lower frequencies (Fig. 5, A and B). Data in Fig. 5A show progressively increased facilitation of test EPSPs by increasing the frequency of conditioning stimulation from 10 to 70 Hz and depression from 70 to 10 Hz. If conditioning stimuli started with higher frequencies, facilitation was only induced by the early conditioning pulse-train, and test EPSPs diminished gradually with decreasing frequencies of conditioning stimuli (Fig. 5B). Applying conditioning stimuli with decremental (50010 Hz) and progressively incremental (10500 Hz) frequencies (Fig. 5C) showed that 1) when rhythmic pulse-trains were applied in decremental way, single test EPSPs depressed gradually from higher to lower frequencies (30010 Hz); whereas 2) when rhythmic pulse-trains were applied in incremental way, single test EPSPs increased gradually after each rhythmic pulse-trains from 10 to 100 Hz and thereafter remained virtually constant from 120 to 500 Hz.
Comparison between potentiation in neurons recorded in stimulated and naïve pathways
We analyzed changes in amplitude of EPSPs in a population of neurons in which successive control-conditioned EPSPs were recorded in the same experiment (n = 42) compared with changes in a subpopulation of neurons (n = 15) recorded at the very beginning of each experiment, in which the stimulation protocol was applied for the first time (Fig. 6). Figure 6B shows similar enhancement in those neurons that were potentiated by stimulating a naïve callosal pathway. In these experiments, a smaller number of neurons displayed small (<10%) amplitude changes, suggesting that potentiation of the stimulated pathways lasted for very long periods of time and that, once potentiated, the pathway could only slightly be further potentiated.
Reduction in EPSPs potentiation during AP-5 microdialysis in barbiturate-anesthetized animals and under ketamine-xylazine anesthesia
To test the possible participation of NMDA receptors in the callosally evoked potentiation of EPSPs, seven neurons were recorded under barbiturate anesthesia before and after AP-5 microdialysis. The amplitudes of control EPSPs diminished by
20% during AP-5 microdialysis, and the facilitation induced by conditioning 40-Hz pulse-trains was also reduced from 40% (t-test, P < 0.01), before microdialysis, to 8% (t-test, P > 0.4), during microdialysis (Fig. 7A). In another RS neuron, conditioning pulse-trains at 40 Hz were first delivered during the application of AP-5 and then after washing. Similarly, the amplitude of control EPSPs was lower under AP-5 than after washing: the conditioning protocol induced no significant change under AP-5 (t-test, P > 0.1) and a potentiation of 56% (t-test, P < 0.01) after washing (Fig. 7B). The plot in Fig. 7C, with the results from seven neurons, shows that AP-5 microdialysis strikingly reduced or abolished the EPSPs' potentiation by pulse-trains at 4050 Hz.
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| DISCUSSION |
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2025%) of callosally evoked EPSPs in animals under barbiturate anesthesia, which does not necessarily require high-frequency stimulation since the potentiation is present at all frequencies from 10 to
200 Hz. 2) The EPSPs potentiation lasted from 24 min to
2030 min. 3) The EPSPs' potentiation was reduced during AP-5 microdialysis in barbiturate-anesthetized animals and was not present under ketamine-xylazine anesthesia.
In the hippocampus, synaptic potentiation was induced in a number of ways, generally by delivering a train of 50100 stimuli at 100 Hz or higher frequency (Bliss and Collingridge 1993
; Bliss and Lømø 1973
; Rose and Dunwiddie 1986
). The "theta-burst stimulation" is one of the favored protocols to study synaptic facilitation; however, the frequency of stimulation must be
100 Hz, and it may fail to induce synaptic facilitation when interstimuli intervals between theta-bursts are <1 s (Larson et al. 1986
).
Compared with the above studies, the protocol used in this study shows that, in the callosal pathway, the interstimuli intervals between pulse-trains may be 23 s and that stimulation with relatively low frequencies (1020 Hz) can also induce EPSPs' facilitation. Earlier studies have reported that stimulation with frequencies between 5 and 15 Hz, mainly 10 Hz, produces augmenting responses in thalamocortical systems in vivo (Ferster and Lindström 1985
; Morin and Steriade 1981
; Morison and Dempsey 1942; Steriade et al. 1998b
), in vitro (Castro-Alamancos and Connors 1996
), and in computo (Bazhenov et al. 1998
). In vivo studies have shown that augmentation of responses during pulse-trains at 10 Hz and outlasting the stimulation period is also induced in the thalamus of decorticated animals (Steriade and Timofeev 1997
; Timofeev and Steriade 1998
), in neocortical areas after lesions of the appropriate thalamic nuclei (Morin and Steriade 1981
; Steriade and Yossif 1974
), and in disconnected neocortical slabs (Timofeev et al. 2002
). Thus both the thalamus and neocortex have the required neuronal machinery to elaborate synaptic plasticity. However, although the augmented cortical response to 10 Hz stimulation follows the first action potential of the rebound spike-burst in the simultaneously recorded thalamocortical neuron by
3 ms (Steriade et al. 1998b
), cortical networks have the ability to maintain and develop this form of synaptic plasticity in the absence of the thalamus (Steriade et al. 1993
). In the preceding studies on thalamocortical and intracortical systems, we used limited low-frequency stimulations (around 10 Hz), simulating sleep spindles. Below 5 Hz, augmented thalamocortical potentials could not be generated because successive stimuli reached the cortical neuronal pool after the postinhibitory rebound of the preceding response and elicited a primary response (see Fig. 4 in Morin and Steriade 1981
). Intracellular recordings of thalamic relay neurons in decorticated animals (Steriade and Timofeev 1997
) similarly showed that responses did not significantly change with successive stimuli <5 Hz.
One of the major findings in this study is that the callosal pathway displays potentiation of single EPSPs at all conditioning frequencies between 10 and
200 Hz, in virtually all tested neurons (41 of 42). This homosynaptic potentiation stands in contrast with the depression in neocortical neurons when using cortical and thalamic paired stimuli at intervals <50 ms, corresponding to frequencies >20 Hz (Fuentealba et al. 2004
). The presence of potentiation in the callosal pathway with conditioning pulse-trains at high frequencies (
50200 Hz) may be ascribed, at least partially, to the co-existence of NMDA receptors at callosal synapses (Kumar and Huguenard 2001
) and the fact that high-frequency stimulation, typically
100 Hz, activates the NMDA channel to generate a large Ca2+ influx and induce prolonged potentiation (Artola and Singer 1990
; Herron et al. 1986
). Indeed, our experiments showed that microdialysis with NMDA receptor blocker AP-5 significantly reduced the callosal potentiation of tested EPSPs.
By applying rhythmic pulse-trains to contralateral cortical areas, we induced facilitation of tested EPSPs, which could last for about 2030 min. It is conceivable that various (biochemical and/or neuronal) factors acting on cortical neurons during low- or fast-frequency brain rhythms, which were simulated in these experiments, would further amplify their impact on local and distant network to generate paroxysmal discharges. This is especially the case of bursting neurons with high propensity to seizures, such as FRB and IB cells (Grenier et al. 2003
; Steriade et al. 1993
), since some FRB neurons project to the thalamus (Steriade et al. 1998a
) and may further spread the paroxysmal process. Although synaptic plasticity is believed to characterize the cellular mechanism for memory formation (Collingridge et al. 1995
), another facet of this phenomenon may be the development from normal to paroxysmal activity.
| GRANTS |
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| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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| FOOTNOTES |
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Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: M. Steriade, Laboratoire de Neurophysiologie, Faculté de Médecine, Université Laval, Quebec G1K 7P4, Canada (E-mail: mircea.steriade{at}phs.ulaval.ca).
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