TY - JOUR
T1 - Electrophysiology of dentate granule cells after kainate-induced synaptic reorganization of the mossy fibers
AU - Cronin, James
AU - Obenaus, Andre
AU - Houser, Carolyn R.
AU - Edward Dudek, F.
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank Dr. R.S. Sloviter for advice on the kainate model, for sharing his unpublished data with us, and for comments on the manuscript. We are grateful to G. Allen for technical assistance and L. Auzins for word processing. We thank Drs. W. Dunlap, A. Gerall, C. Meier, G.J. Strecker, J.G. Tasker and J.-E Wuarin for comments on earlier versions of the paper. Supported by NIH Grants NS16683 (EE.D.) and NS21908 (C.R.H.).
PY - 1992/2/28
Y1 - 1992/2/28
N2 - Morphological data from humans with temporal lobe epilepsy and from animal models of epilepsy suggest that seizure-induced damage to dentate hilar neurons causes granule cells to sprout new axon collaterals that innervate other granule cells. This aberrant projection has been suggested to be an anatomical substrate for epileptogenesis. This hypothesis was tested in the present study with intra- and extracellular recordings from granule cells in hippocampal slices removed from rats 1-4 months after kainate treatment. In this animal model, hippocampal cell loss leads to sprouting of mossy fiber axons from the granule cells into the inner molecular layer of the dentate gyrus. Unexpectedly, when slices with mossy fiber sprouting were examined in normal medium, extracellular stimulation of the hilus or perforant path evoked relatively normal responses. However, in the presence of the GABAA-receptor antagonist, bicuculline, low-intensity hilar stimulation evoked delayed bursts of action potentials in about one-quarter of the slices. In one-third of the bicuculline-treated slices with mossy fiber sprouting, spontaneous bursts of synchronous spikes were superimposed on slow negative field potentials. Slices from normal rats or kainate- treated rats without mossy fiber sprouting never showed delayed bursts to weak hilar stimulation or spontaneous bursts in bicuculline. These data suggest that new local excitatory circuits may be suppressed normally, and then emerge functionally when synaptic inhibition is blocked. Therefore, after repeated seizures and excitotoxic damage in the hippocampus, synaptic reorganization of the mossy fibers is consistently associated with normal responses; however, in some preparations, the mossy fibers may form functional recurrent excitatory connections, but synaptic inhibition appears to mask these potentially epileptogenic alterations.
AB - Morphological data from humans with temporal lobe epilepsy and from animal models of epilepsy suggest that seizure-induced damage to dentate hilar neurons causes granule cells to sprout new axon collaterals that innervate other granule cells. This aberrant projection has been suggested to be an anatomical substrate for epileptogenesis. This hypothesis was tested in the present study with intra- and extracellular recordings from granule cells in hippocampal slices removed from rats 1-4 months after kainate treatment. In this animal model, hippocampal cell loss leads to sprouting of mossy fiber axons from the granule cells into the inner molecular layer of the dentate gyrus. Unexpectedly, when slices with mossy fiber sprouting were examined in normal medium, extracellular stimulation of the hilus or perforant path evoked relatively normal responses. However, in the presence of the GABAA-receptor antagonist, bicuculline, low-intensity hilar stimulation evoked delayed bursts of action potentials in about one-quarter of the slices. In one-third of the bicuculline-treated slices with mossy fiber sprouting, spontaneous bursts of synchronous spikes were superimposed on slow negative field potentials. Slices from normal rats or kainate- treated rats without mossy fiber sprouting never showed delayed bursts to weak hilar stimulation or spontaneous bursts in bicuculline. These data suggest that new local excitatory circuits may be suppressed normally, and then emerge functionally when synaptic inhibition is blocked. Therefore, after repeated seizures and excitotoxic damage in the hippocampus, synaptic reorganization of the mossy fibers is consistently associated with normal responses; however, in some preparations, the mossy fibers may form functional recurrent excitatory connections, but synaptic inhibition appears to mask these potentially epileptogenic alterations.
KW - Dentate gyrus
KW - Epilepsy
KW - Hippocampus
KW - Kainic acid
KW - Mossy fiber
KW - Recurrent excitation
KW - Seizure
KW - Sprouting
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U2 - 10.1016/0006-8993(92)90777-7
DO - 10.1016/0006-8993(92)90777-7
M3 - Article
C2 - 1504768
SN - 0006-8993
VL - 573
SP - 305
EP - 310
JO - Brain Research
JF - Brain Research
IS - 2
ER -