Journal of Neuroscience, Vol 2, 1608-1613, Copyright © 1982 by Society for Neuroscience
"Increased" sensory stimulation leads to changes in energy-related enzymes in the brain
WD Dietrich, D Durham, OH Lowry and TA Woolsey
The facial whiskers of mice project through several synapses to
anatomically distinct structures called barrels in the contralateral
cerebral cortex. With appropriate illumination, individual barrels can be
recognized and dissected from unfixed, freeze-dried tissue sections taken
parallel to the plane of layer IV. The tissue then can be analyzed using
quantitative microhistochemical techniques to determine the level of
various substances of biological importance (W.D. Dietrich, D. Durham, O.
H. Lowry, and T. A. Woolsey (1981) J. Neurosci. 1: 929-935). The present
paper describes results obtained in this way from adult mice subjected to a
chronic "sensory deprivation" by repeatedly clipping all of the whisker
hairs on one side of the face and during the recovery from this deprivation
in which the whisker hairs were allowed to grow back. Sensory deprivation
for 60 days leads to significant changes in the levels of the three
energy-related enzymes studied--citrate synthase, malate dehydrogenase, and
glycogen phosphorylase. surprisingly, during clipping, the enzyme levels in
the barrels of the contralateral cortex are essentially normal, whereas
enzyme levels in the barrels of the ipsilateral cortex are increased
significantly. Specifically, activities expressed as a percentage of levels
in normal animals were: citrate synthase, 135%; malate dehydrogenase, 130%;
and glycogen phosphorylase, 170%. Forty-five days after the deprivation is
reversed, the levels return to normal. These significant changes occurred
in adult mice several synapses away from the sensory periphery. The data
are in contrast to our earlier results in which damage to the primary
afferents reduced the levels of the enzymes citrate synthase and malate
dehydrogenase contralateral to the manipulation. A possible explanation for
the enzymatic changes observed in the cortex ipsilateral to the clipped
whiskers is an increased utilization of the intact sensory periphery by the
animals; this has some behavioral support.