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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

The neuroanatomical effect of brain injury during early development in a rat model

Hartle, Kelly D. 10 September 2010 (has links)
The brain responds to injury during early development with alterations in behaviour and dendritic morphology of motor cortex neurons. Rats were exposed to damage either prenatally or after the first postnatal week, using different models of damage and motor cortex was examined. Prenatal injury resulted in a decrease in length, complexity and volume in layer II neurons, but no differences in layer V neurons or behavioural tasks. Postnatal damage produced increases in length of basilar dendrites, but no differences in spine density at 2 months of age, whereas at 6 months of age, an overall decrease in apical and basilar spine density was observed. Findings demonstrate the maturational status of the brain at the time of injury play a crucial role in response to injury.
2

The neuroanatomical effect of brain injury during early development in a rat model

Hartle, Kelly D. 10 September 2010 (has links)
The brain responds to injury during early development with alterations in behaviour and dendritic morphology of motor cortex neurons. Rats were exposed to damage either prenatally or after the first postnatal week, using different models of damage and motor cortex was examined. Prenatal injury resulted in a decrease in length, complexity and volume in layer II neurons, but no differences in layer V neurons or behavioural tasks. Postnatal damage produced increases in length of basilar dendrites, but no differences in spine density at 2 months of age, whereas at 6 months of age, an overall decrease in apical and basilar spine density was observed. Findings demonstrate the maturational status of the brain at the time of injury play a crucial role in response to injury.
3

Electrophysiological properties of layer 5 pyramidal neurons in a mouse model of autism spectrum disorder

Holland, Carl Seiler 18 June 2016 (has links)
Both neuroinflammation, and an increase in microglial cells, have been associated with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) through observation in human subjects as well as in mouse models. A mother having an infection early in pregnancy increases the chances for autism in her child. (Atladottir et al., 2012). This process is known as Maternal Immune Activation (MIA), and the proposed mechanism is that inflammatory signals cross from the mother to child; then in response to increased pro-inflammatory cytokines, microglia within the brain are activated to combat the infection. Microglia are essential to healthy synaptogenesis and neuronal growth, and a change in their signaling early in development has been shown to alter behavior in mouse models that replicate MIA. We use microglial depletion as a therapy to counteract the potentially harmful pro-inflammatory response in the developing mouse brain. Four experimental groups - control, MIA, microglial depleted, and a therapy group (MIA plus microglial depletion)- were run through a comprehensive series of behavioral and electrophysiological assessments. Layer 5 pyramidal cells (L5PNs) were targeted for recording in medial frontal cortex – a mouse cortical area important for cognition and social behavior. L5PNs are a heterogeneous population with cortical and subcortical targeting. Subcortical targeting neurons are thick tufted morphologically, and have an intrinsically bursting spike pattern. Analysis of the intrinsically bursting neurons revealed significant differences between the maternal inflammation and the microglial depletion groups across multiple physiological properties. Therefore, the therapy group had electrophysiological characteristics more consistent with the microglial depleted model than the autism model.
4

Gene Expression Deficits in Pyramidal Neurons From the Anterior Cingulate Cortex in Males With Autism

Chandley, Michelle J., Crawford, Jessica D., Szebeni, Katalin, Szebeni, Attila, Crawford, Jessica D., Ordway, Gregory A. 17 May 2014 (has links)
Background: Altered brain morphology was one of the first pathobiological findings associated with autism spectrum disorder. These gross abnormalities, documented in both white and gray matter areas in autistic brains, are postulated to contribute to disrupted neuronal communication. For example, glutamatergic pyramidal neurons in the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) have decreased size and increased cell density in autism. Objectives: We sought to determine whether autism-related gene expression abnormalities exist in the ACC that might underlie previously observed cell morphological alterations found in this brain region. Specifically, levels of expression of genes associated with glutamatergic neurotransmission were measured in pyramidal neurons and surrounding astrocytes in the ACC of postmortem brain tissues from autism donors and matched developmentally normal control donors. Methods: Postmortem brain tissues were obtained from 6-8 age-matched pairs of male subjects who had autism and developmentally normal control males (age range 6-37). Laser-guided microdissection was used to capture pure populations of pyramidal neurons and astrocytes from layer III of the ACC. The expression of glutamate-related genes was measured in RNA isolates by reverse transcription followed by end-point PCR using three stable reference genes to normalize expression levels. Results: ACC pyramidal neurons from autism subjects demonstrated significantly reduced gene expressions of the obligatory glutamatergic NMDA receptor subunit NR1, a glutamate transporter SLC1A1, and the glutamate receptor anchoring protein GRIP1. There was also a robust reduction in the gene expression of the brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) receptor NTRK2 in autism pyramidal neurons, with gene expression levels of BDNF itself unaffected. No gene expression abnormalities were observed in ACC astrocytes surrounding the pyramidal neurons from autistic subjects. Conclusions: Autism spectrum disorder is associated with a reduction in the expression of genes associated with glutamatergic neurotransmission and downstream BDNF signaling in pyramidal neurons of the ACC. These findings suggest that glutamatergic signaling is compromised in these excitatory neurons in autism and raise hope that drugs or other treatments may be developed to overcome these pathobiological deficits.
5

NTRK2 Expression Levels Are Reduced in Laser Captured Pyramidal Neurons From the Anterior Cingulate Cortex in Males With Autism Spectrum Disorder

Chandley, Michelle J., Crawford, Jessica D., Szebeni, Attila, Szebeni, Katalin, Ordway, Gregory A. 16 May 2015 (has links)
Background: The anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) is a brain area involved in modulating behavior associated with social interaction, disruption of which is a core feature of autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Functional brain imaging studies demonstrate abnormalities of the ACC in ASD as compared to typically developing control patients. However, little is known regarding the cellular basis of these functional deficits in ASD. Pyramidal neurons in the ACC are excitatory glutamatergic neurons and key cellular mediators of the neural output of the ACC. This study was designed to investigate the potential role of ACC pyramidal neurons in ASD brain pathology. Methods: Postmortem ACC tissue from carefully matched ASD and typically developing control donors was obtained from two national brain collections. Pyramidal neurons and surrounding astrocytes were separately collected from layer III of the ACC by laser capture microdissection. Isolated RNA was subjected to reverse transcription and endpoint PCR to determine gene expression levels for 16 synaptic genes relevant to glutamatergic neurotransmission. Cells were also collected from the prefrontal cortex (Brodmann area 10) to examine those genes demonstrating differences in expression in the ACC comparing typically developing and ASD donors. Results: The level of NTRK2 expression was robustly and significantly lower in pyramidal neurons from ASD donors as compared to typically developing donors. Levels of expression of GRIN1, GRM8, SLC1A1, and GRIP1 were modestly lower in pyramidal neurons from ASD donors, but statistical significance for these latter genes did not survive correction for multiple comparisons. No significant expression differences of any genes were found in astrocytes laser captured from the same neocortical area. In addition, expression levels of NTRK2 and other synaptic genes were normal in pyramidal neurons laser captured from the prefrontal cortex. Conclusions: These studies demonstrate a unique pathology of neocortical pyramidal neurons of the ACC in ASD. NTRK2 encodes the tropomyosin receptor kinase B (TrkB), transmission through which neurotrophic factors modify differentiation, plasticity, and synaptic transmission. Reduced pyramidal neuron NTRK2 expression in the ACC could thereby contribute to abnormal neuronal activity and disrupt social behavior mediated by this brain region.
6

NTRK2 Expression Levels Are Reduced in Laser Captured Pyramidal Neurons From the Anterior Cingulate Cortex in Males With Autism Spectrum Disorder

Chandley, Michelle J., Crawford, Jessica D., Szebeni, Attila, Szebeni, Katalin, Ordway, Gregory A. 16 May 2015 (has links)
Background: The anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) is a brain area involved in modulating behavior associated with social interaction, disruption of which is a core feature of autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Functional brain imaging studies demonstrate abnormalities of the ACC in ASD as compared to typically developing control patients. However, little is known regarding the cellular basis of these functional deficits in ASD. Pyramidal neurons in the ACC are excitatory glutamatergic neurons and key cellular mediators of the neural output of the ACC. This study was designed to investigate the potential role of ACC pyramidal neurons in ASD brain pathology. Methods: Postmortem ACC tissue from carefully matched ASD and typically developing control donors was obtained from two national brain collections. Pyramidal neurons and surrounding astrocytes were separately collected from layer III of the ACC by laser capture microdissection. Isolated RNA was subjected to reverse transcription and endpoint PCR to determine gene expression levels for 16 synaptic genes relevant to glutamatergic neurotransmission. Cells were also collected from the prefrontal cortex (Brodmann area 10) to examine those genes demonstrating differences in expression in the ACC comparing typically developing and ASD donors. Results: The level of NTRK2 expression was robustly and significantly lower in pyramidal neurons from ASD donors as compared to typically developing donors. Levels of expression of GRIN1, GRM8, SLC1A1, and GRIP1 were modestly lower in pyramidal neurons from ASD donors, but statistical significance for these latter genes did not survive correction for multiple comparisons. No significant expression differences of any genes were found in astrocytes laser captured from the same neocortical area. In addition, expression levels of NTRK2 and other synaptic genes were normal in pyramidal neurons laser captured from the prefrontal cortex. Conclusions: These studies demonstrate a unique pathology of neocortical pyramidal neurons of the ACC in ASD. NTRK2 encodes the tropomyosin receptor kinase B (TrkB), transmission through which neurotrophic factors modify differentiation, plasticity, and synaptic transmission. Reduced pyramidal neuron NTRK2 expression in the ACC could thereby contribute to abnormal neuronal activity and disrupt social behavior mediated by this brain region.
7

Spike-Timing-Dependent Plasticity at Excitatory Synapses on the Rat Subicular Pyramidal Neurons

Pandey, Anurag January 2014 (has links) (PDF)
The subiculum is a structure that forms a bridge between the hippocampus and the entorhinal cortex (EC) in the brain, and plays a major role in the memory consolidation process. It consists of different types of pyramidal neurons. Based on their firing behavior, these excitatory neurons are classified into strong burst firing (SBF), weak burst firing (WBF) and regular firing (RF) neurons. In the first part of the work, morphological differences in the different neuronal subtypes was explored by biocytin staining after classifying the neurons based on the differences in electrophysiological properties. Detailed morphological properties of these three neuronal subtypes were analyzed using Neurolucida neuron reconstruction method. Unlike the differences in their electrophysiological properties, no difference was found in the morphometric properties of these neuronal subtypes. In the second part of the thesis, experimental results on spike- timing- dependent plasticity (STDP) at the proximal excitatory inputs on the subicular pyramidal neurons of the juvenile (P15-P19) rat are described. The STDP was studied in the WBF and RF neurons. Causal pairing of a single EPSP with a single back propagating action potential (bAP) at a time interval of 10 ms failed to induce plasticity. However, increasing the number of bAPs in such EPSP-bAP pair to three at 50 Hz (bAP burst) induced LTD in both, the RF, as well as the WBF neurons. Increasing the frequency of action potentials to 150 Hz in the bAP burst during causal pairing also induced LTD in both the neuronal subtypes. However, all other STDP related experiments were performed only with the bAP bursts consisting of 3 bAPs evoked at 50 Hz. Amplitude of the causal pairing induced LTD decreased with increasing time interval between EPSP and the bAP burst. Reversing the order of the EPSP and the bAP burst in the pair induced LTP only with a short time interval of 10 ms. This finding is in contrast to most of the reports on excitatory synapses, wherein the pre-before post (causal) pairing induced LTP and vice-versa. The results of causal and anti-causal pairing were used to plot the STDP curve for the WBF neurons. In the STDP curve observed in these synapses, LTD was observed upto a causal time interval of 30 ms, while LTP was limited to 10 ms time interval. Hence, the STDP curve was biased towards LTD. These results reaffirm the earlier observations that the relative timing of the pre- and postsynaptic activities can lead to multiple types of STDP curves. Next, the mechanism of non-Hebbian LTD was studied in both, the RF and WBF neurons. The involvement of calcium in the postsynaptic neuron in plasticity induction was studied by chelating intracellular calcium with BAPTA. The results indicate that the LTD induction in WBF neurons required postsynaptic calcium, while LTD induction in the RF neurons was independent of postsynaptic calcium. Paired pulse ratio (PPR) experiments suggested the involvement of a presynaptic mechanism in the induction of LTD in the RF neurons, and not in the WBF neurons since the PPR was unaffected by the induction protocol only in the WBF neurons. LTD induction in the WBF neurons required activity of the NMDA receptors since LTD was not observed in the presence of the NMDA receptor blocker in the WBF neurons, while it was unaffected in the RF neurons. However, the RF neurons required the activity of L-type calcium channels for plasticity induction, since LTD was affected in the presence of the L-type calcium channel blockers, although the WBF neurons did not require the L-type calcium channel activity for plasticity induction. Hence, in addition to a non-Hebbian STDP curve, a novel mechanism of LTD induction has been reported, where L-type calcium channels are involved in a synaptic plasticity that is expressed via change in the release probability. The findings on the STDP in subicular pyramidal neurons may have strong implications in the memory consolidation process owing to the central role of the subiculum and LTD in it.
8

Physiological Interactions between Neuronal Active Conductances And Inositol Trisphosphate Receptors in Neurons and Astrocytes

Ashhad, Sufyan January 2015 (has links) (PDF)
Intricate interactions among constituent components are defining hallmarks of biological systems and sculpt physiology across different scales spanning gene networks to behavioural repertoires. Whereas interactions among channels and receptors define neuronal physiology, interactions among different cells specify the characteristic features of network physiology. From a single-neuron perspective, it is now evident that the somato-dendritic plasma membrane of hippocampus pyramidal neurons is endowed with several voltage-gated ion channels (VGICs) with varying biophysical properties and sub cellular expression profiles. Structural and physiological interactions among these channels define generation and propagation of electrical signals, thereby transforming neuronal dendrites to actively excitable membrane endowed with complex computational capabilities. In parallel to this complex network of plasma membrane channels is an elegantly placed continuous intraneuronal membrane of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) that runs throughout the neuronal morphology. Akin to the plasma membrane, the ER is also endowed with a variety of channels and receptors, prominent among them being the inositol trisphosphate (InsP3) receptors (InsP3Rs) and ryanodine receptors (RyR), both of which are calcium release channels. Physiological interactions among these receptors transform the ER into a calcium excitable membrane, capable of active propagation of calcium waves and of spatiotemporal integration of neuronal signals. Thus, a neuron is endowed with two continuously parallel excitable membranes that actively participate in the bidirectional flow of intraneuronal information, through interactions among different channels and receptors on either membrane. Although the interactions among sets of channels and receptors present individually on either membrane are very well characterized, our understanding of cross-membrane interactions among channels and receptors across these two membranes has been very limited. Recent literature has emphasized the critical nature of such cross-membrane interactions and the several physiological roles played by such interactions. Such cross-channel interactions include ER depletion-induced signaling involving store-operated calcium channels, generation and propagation of calcium waves through interactions between plasma membrane and ER membrane receptors, and the plasticity of plasma membrane VGICs and receptors induced by ER Ca2+. Such tight interactions between these two membranes have highlighted several roles of the ER in the integration of intraneuronal information, in regulating signalling microdomains and in regulating the downstream signaling pathways that are regulated by these Ca2+ signals. Yet, our understanding about the functional interactions between the ion channels and receptors present on either of these membranes is very limited from the perspective of the combinatorial possibilities that encompass the span of channels and receptors across these two membranes. In this context, the first part of this thesis deals with two specific instances of such cross-membrane functional interactions, presented as two subparts with each probing different direction of impact. Specifically, whereas the first of these subparts deals with the impact of plasma membrane VGICs on the physiology of ER receptors, the second subpart presents an instance of the effect of ER receptor activation on plasma membrane VGIC. In the first subpart of the thesis, we establish a novel role for the A-type potassium current in regulating the release of calcium through inositol triphosphate receptors (InsP3R) that reside on the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) of hippocampus pyramidal neurons. Specifically, the A-type potassium current has been implicated in the regulation of several physiological processes including the regulation of calcium influx through voltage-gated calcium channels (VGCCs). Given the dependence of InsP3R open probability on cytosolic calcium concentration ([Ca2+]c) we asked if this regulation of calcium influx by A-type potassium current could translate into the regulation of release of calcium through InsP3Rs by the A-type potassium current. To answer this, we constructed morphologically realistic, conductance-based neuronal models equipped with kinetic schemes that govern several calcium signalling modules and pathways, and constrained the distributions and properties of constitutive components by experimental measurements from these neurons. Employing these models, we establish a bell-shaped dependence of calcium release through InsP3Rs on the density of A-type potassium current, during the propagation of an intraneuronal calcium wave initiated through established protocols. Exploring the sensitivities of calcium wave initiation and propagation to several underlying parameters, we found that ER calcium release critically depends on dendrite diameter and wave initiation occurred at branch points as a consequence of high surface area to volume ratio of oblique dendrites. Further, analogous to the role of A-type potassium channels in regulating spike latency, we found that an increase in the density of A-type potassium channels led to increases in the latency and the temporal spread of a propagating calcium wave. Next, we incorporated kinetic models for the metabotropic glutamate receptor (miler) signalling components and a calcium-controlled plasticity rule into our model and demonstrate that the presence of mGluRs induced a leftward shift in a BCM-like synaptic plasticity profile. Finally, we show that the A-type potassium current could regulate the relative contribution of ER calcium to synaptic plasticity induced either through 900 pulses of various stimulus frequencies or through theta burst stimulation. These results establish a novel form of interaction between active dendrites and the ER membrane and suggest that A-type K+ channels are ideally placed for inhibiting the suppression of InsP3Rs in thin-caliber dendrites. Furthermore, they uncover a powerful mechanism that could regulate biophysical/biochemical signal integration and steer the spatiotemporal spread of signalling micro domains through changes in dendritic excitability. In the second subpart, we turned our focus to the role of calcium released through InsP3Rs in regulating the properties of VGICs present on the plasma membrane, thereby altering neuronal intrinsic properties that are dependent on these VGICs. Specifically, the synaptic plasticity literature has focused on establishing necessity and sufficiency as two essential and distinct features in causally relating a signalling molecule to plasticity induction, an approach that has been surprisingly lacking in the intrinsic plasticity literature. Here, we complemented the recently established necessity of inositol trisphosphate (InsP3) receptors (InsP3R) in a form of intrinsic plasticity by asking if ER InsP3R activation was sufficient to induce plasticity in intrinsic properties of hippocampus neurons. To do this, we employed whole-cell patch-clamp recordings to infuse D-myo-InsP3, the endogenous ligand for InsP3Rs, into hippocampus pyramidal neurons and assessed the impact of InsP3R activation on neuronal intrinsic properties. We found that such activation reduced input resistance, maximal impedance amplitude and temporal summation, but increased resonance frequency, resonance strength, sag ratio, and impedance phase lead of hippocampus pyramidal neurons. Strikingly, the magnitude of plasticity in all these measurements was dependent upon [InsP3], emphasizing the graded dependence of such plasticity on InsP3R activation. Mechanistically, we found that this InsP3-induced plasticity depended on hyperpolarization-activated cyclic-nucleotide gated (HCN) channels. Moreover, this calcium-dependent form of plasticity was critically reliant on the release of calcium through InsP3Rs, the influx of calcium through N-methyl-D -aspartate receptors and voltage-gated calcium channels, and on the protein kinase A pathway. These results delineate a causal role for InsP3Rs in graded adaptation of neuronal response dynamics through changes in plasma membrane ion channels, thereby revealing novel regulatory roles for the endoplasmic reticulum in neural coding and homeostasis. Whereas the first part of the thesis dealt with bidirectional interactions between ER membrane and plasma membrane channels/receptors within a neuron, second part focuses on cross-cellular interactions, specifically between ER membrane on astrocytes and dendritic plasma membrane of neurons. Specifically, the universality of ER-dependent calcium signalling ensures that its critical influence extends to regulating the physiology of astrocytes, an abundant form of glial cells in the hippocampus. Due to the presence of calcium release channels on ER membrane, astrocytes are calcium excitable, whereby they respond to neuronal activity by increase in their cytosolic calcium levels. Specifically, astrocytes respond to the release of neurotransmitters from neuronal presynaptic terminals through activation of metabotropic receptors expressed on their plasma membrane. Such activation results in the mobilization of cytosolic InsP3 and subsequent release of calcium through InsP3 on the astrocytes ER membrane. These ER-dependent [Ca2+]c elevations in astrocytes then result in the release of gliotransmitters from astrocytes, which bind to corresponding receptors located on neuronal plasma membrane resulting in voltage-deflections and/or activation of signaling pathways in the neuron. Although it is well established that gliotransmission constitutes an important communication channel between astrocytes and neurons, the impact of gliotransmission on neurons have largely been centered at the cell body of the neurons. Consequently, the impact of the activation of astrocytic InsP3R on neuronal dendrites, and the role of dendritic active conductances in regulating this impact have been lacking. This lacuna in mapping the spatial spread of gliotransmission in neurons is especially striking because most afferent synapses impinge on neuronal dendrites, and a significant proportion of information processing in neurons is performed in their dendritic arborization. Additionally, given that active dendritic conductances play a pivotal role in regulating the impact of fast synaptic neurotransmission on neurons, we hypothesized that such active-dendritic regulation should extend to the impact of slower extrasynaptic gliotransmission on neurons. The second part of the thesis is devoted to testing this hypothesis using dendritic and paired astrocyte-neuron electrophysiological recordings, where we also investigate the specific roles of active dendritic conductances in regulating the impact of gliotransmission initiated through activation of astrocytic InsP3Rs. In testing this hypothesis, in the second part of the thesis, we first demonstrate a significantly large increase in the amplitude of astrocytically originating spontaneous slow excitatory potentials (SEP) in distal dendrites compared to their perisomatic counterparts. Employing specific neuronal infusion of pharmacological agents, we show that blocking HCN channels increased the frequency, rise-time and width of dendritically-recorded spontaneous SEPs, whereas blockade of A-type potassium channels enhanced their amplitude. Next, through paired neuron-astrocytes recordings, we show that our conclusions on the differential roles of HCN and A-type potassium channels in modulating spontaneous SEPs also extended to SEPs induced through infusion of InsP3 in a nearby astrocyte. Additionally, employing subtype-specific receptor blockers during paired neuron-astrocyte recordings, we provide evidence that GluN2B-and GluN2D-containing NMDARs predominantly mediate perisomatic and dendritic SEPs, respectively. Finally, using morphologically realistic conductance-based computational models, we quantitatively demonstrate that dendritic conductances play an active role in mediating compartmentalization of the neuronal impact of gliotransmission. These results unveil an important role for active dendrites in regulating the impact of gliotransmission on neurons, and suggest astrocytes as a source of dendritic plateau potentials that have been implicated in localized plasticity and place cell formation. This thesis is organized into six chapters as follows: Chapter 1 lays the motivations for the questions addressed in the thesis apart from providing the highlights of the results presented here. Chapter 2 provides the background literature for the thesis, introducing facts and concepts that forms the foundation on which the rest of the chapters are built upon. In chapter 3, we present quantitative analyses of the physiological interactions between A-type potassium conductances and InsP3Rs in CA1 pyramidal neurons. In chapter 4, using electrophysiological recordings, we investigate the role of calcium released through InsP3Rs in induction of plasticity of intrinsic response dynamics, and demonstrate that this form of plasticity is consequent to changes in neuronal HCN channels. In chapter 5, we systematically map the spatial dynamics of the impact of gliotransmission on neurons across the somato-apical trunk, also unveiling the role of neuronal HCN and A-type potassium channels in compartmentalizing such impact. Finally, chapter 6 concludes the thesis highlighting its major contributions and discussing directions of future research.
9

Comparison of Pyramidal and Magnocellular Neuroendocrine Cell Volume Responses to Osmotic Stress and Stroke - Like Stress

Ranepura, Nipuni 14 February 2011 (has links)
Acute brain cell swelling (cytotoxic edema) can occur in the first minutes of stroke, presumably as a result of brain cells taking up water. In extreme hypo-osmotic situations such as excessive water-loading by patients, uptake by brain cells can expand the brain, causing seizures. But is ischemic brain cell swelling the same as hypo-osmotic swelling? Water can passively diffuse across the plasma membrane. However the presence of water channels termed aquaporins (AQP) facilitates passive water diffusion by 10-100 times. Unlike astrocytes, there is no evidence of water channels on neuronal plasma membrane. However, there is still much debate about which cells (neurons or astrocytes) swell during over-hydration or during stroke and if neurons and astrocytes can volume-regulate during osmotic stress. The purpose of this study was to examine and compare the volume responses of PyNs and magnocellular neuroendocrine cells (MNCs) to acute osmotic challenge and to OGD. We examined MNCs because they are intrinsically osmosensitive to small changes (2-3 mOsm) of plasma osmolality. We also examined if the same neurons behave similarly in brain slices or when dissociated and if they respond differently to acute osmotic stress and stroke-like stress. Our results indicate that during acute osmotic stress (±40 mOsm) half of dissociated PyNs and MNCs tended to show appropriate responses. MNCs in brain slices showed similar responses to when they were dissociated, while brain slice PyNs were less responsive than when dissociated. Exposure to OGD resulted in obvious differences between the two types of in vitro preparations. Dissociated PyNs and MNCs showed no consistency in their volume responses to 10 minutes of OGD. Dissociated neurons swelled, shrunk or were unchanged in about equal numbers. In contrast, brain slice PyNs underwent profound swelling whereas, brain slice MNCs showed minor volume decreases. We conclude that about half of our dissociated neurons were too variable and unpredictable in their osmotic volume responses to be useful for osmotic studies. They also were too resistant to stroke-like stress to be good models for ischemia. Brain slice neurons were similar in their osmotic responses to dissociated neurons but proved to have consistent and predictable responses to stroke-like stress. / Thesis (Master, Neuroscience Studies) -- Queen's University, 2011-02-07 17:55:08.333
10

ATP indirectly stimulates hippocampal CA1 and CA3 pyramidal neurons via the activation of neighboring P2X7 receptor-bearing astrocytes and NG2 glial cells, respectively

Zhang, Ying, Yin, Hai-Yan, Rubini, Patrizia, Illes, Peter, Tang, Yong 09 November 2023 (has links)
There is ongoing dispute on the question whether CNS neurons possess ATP-sensitive P2X7 receptors (Rs) or whether only non-neuronal cells bear this receptor-type and indirectly signal to the neighboring neurons. We genetically deleted P2X7Rs specifically in astrocytes, oligodendrocytes and microglia, and then recorded current responses in neurons to the prototypic agonist of this receptor, dibenzoyl-ATP (Bz-ATP). These experiments were made in brain slice preparations taken from the indicated variants of the P2X7R KO animals. In hippocampal CA3, but not CA1 pyramidal neurons, the deletion of oligodendrocytic (NG2 glial) P2X7Rs abolished the Bz-ATP-induced current responses. In contrast to the Bz-ATP-induced currents in CA3 pyramidal neurons, current amplitudes evoked by the ionotropic glutamate/GABAAR agonists AMPA/muscimol were not inhibited at all. Whereas in the CA3 area NG2 glia appeared to mediate the P2X7R-mediated stimulation of pyramidal neurons, in the CA1 area, astrocytic P2X7Rs had a somewhat similar effect. This was shown by recording the frequencies and amplitudes of spontaneous excitatory currents (sPSCs) in brain slice preparations. Bz-ATP increased the sPSC frequency in CA1, but not CA3 pyramidal neurons without altering the amplitude, indicating a P2X7R-mediated increase of the neuronal input. Micro-injection of the selective astrocytic toxin L-α-aminoadipate into both hippocampi, or the in vitro application of the GABAAR antagonistic gabazine, completely blocked the frequency increases of sPSCs. Hence, CA1 and CA3 pyramidal neurons of the mouse did not possess P2X7Rs, but were indirectly modulated by astrocytic and oligodendrocytic P2X7Rs, respectively.

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