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Volume 16, Number 14,
Issue of July 15, 1996
pp. 4411-4419
Copyright ©1996 Society for Neuroscience
Upregulation of BDNF mRNA Expression in the Barrel Cortex of
Adult Mice after Sensory Stimulation
Nativitat Rocamora1,
Egbert Welker2,
Marta Pascual1, and
Eduardo Soriano1
1 Department of Animal and Plant Cell Biology, Faculty
of Biology, University of Barcelona, 08028 Barcelona, Spain, and
2 Institute of Anatomy, University of Lausanne, 1005 Lausanne, Switzerland
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
FOOTNOTES
REFERENCES
ABSTRACT
Upregulation of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) mRNA
expression by neuronal activity has been reported in cultured
hippocampal cells and in different in vivo excitotoxic
paradigms. The aim of the present study was to determine whether
sensory stimulation of the whisker-to-barrel pathway alters BDNF mRNA
expression in the cortex and, if so, to evaluate the specificity of
this effect. To this end, a set of mystacial whiskers was unilaterally
stimulated by mechanical deflection, and the expression of BDNF mRNA
was analyzed in the barrel cortex by in situ hybridization
(ISH) using a 35S-labeled antisense BDNF
riboprobe and emulsion autoradiography. A clear-cut and specific
upregulation of the BDNF mRNA expression was found at the level of the
somatosensory cortex after the increased peripheral stimulation. In the
barrel cortex of control mice, BDNF mRNA was present in a few cells in
layers II/III and VI, whereas it was almost undetectable in layer IV.
After 6 hr of whisker stimulation, increased levels of BDNF mRNA were
found in layers II to VI of the contralateral barrel cortex. In layer
IV, BDNF upregulation was confined to the barrels corresponding to the
stimulated follicles. ISH combined with immunocytochemistry against the
three calcium-binding proteins parvalbumin, calretinin, and
calbindin-D28K revealed that BDNF mRNA-expressing
cells do not belong to the GABAergic cell population of the barrel
cortex. The present results support a role for BDNF in
activity-dependent modifications of the adult cerebral cortex.
Key words:
in situ hybridization;
immunocytochemistry;
neurotrophins;
GABAergic cells;
activity-dependent
plasticity;
habituation;
somatosensory cortex;
whisker stimulation
INTRODUCTION
Neurotrophic factors are involved in the survival,
differentiation, and maintenance of neuronal cells and their circuits
(for review, see Barde, 1989 ; Korsching, 1993 ; Davies, 1994 ). Although
for a long time nerve growth factor (NGF) was the only isolated
molecule to show neurotrophic activities (Levi-Montalcini, 1987 ), to
date three other molecules closely related to NGF have been identified:
brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) (Barde et al., 1982 , Leibrock
et al., 1989 ), neurotrophin-3 (NT3) (Ernfors et al., 1990 ; Hohn et al.,
1990 ; Maisonpierre et al., 1990 ; Rosenthal et al., 1990 ), and
neurotrophin-4/5 (NT4/5) (Berkemeier et al., 1991 ; Hallböök
et al., 1991 ; Ip et al., 1992 ), together forming the neurotrophin
family.
Much experimental evidence has proven a functional involvement of
neurotrophins in the development of the vertebrate nervous system (for
review, see Barde, 1989 ; Davies, 1994 ; Snider, 1994 ). Moreover, the
presence of neurotrophins in the adult brain, together with their
regulation by neuronal activity (Zafra et al., 1990 , 1991 , 1992 ; Lu et
al., 1991 ) and their local presynaptic effects (Lohof et al., 1993 ;
Knipper et al., 1994 ; Kang and Schuman, 1995 ), suggests that they could
be involved in the activity-dependent plasticity of the adult nervous
system.
Upregulation of BDNF and NGF mRNA expression and downregulation of NT-3
were found in seizure-inducing paradigms (Gall and Isackson, 1989 ;
Ballarín et al., 1991 ; Isackson et al., 1991 ; Dugich-Djordjevic
et al., 1992 ; Rocamora et al., 1992 , 1994 ; Berzaghi et al., 1993 ) and
also after hypoglycemic coma and ischemia (Lindvall et al., 1992 ;
Takeda et al., 1993 ). A more physiological paradigm was used by
Castrén et al. (1992) in their study of neurotrophin expression
in the visual cortex of the rat. In contrast to this study, in which
the effect of a sensory deprivation was examined, we tested whether
BDNF mRNA expression in the sensory cortex could be modified by
increased levels of peripheral stimulation. To this end, we used the
whisker-to-barrel pathway of the mouse, in which a one-to-one
correspondence has been shown between a whisker follicle and its
corresponding barrel, i.e., a multineuronal cell assembly in layer IV
of the somatosensory cortex (Welker, 1976 ; Simons, 1978 ; Melzer et al.,
1985 ; Chmielowska et al., 1986 ; Armstrong-James and Fox, 1987 ). A set
of whiskers was stimulated in the Lausanne whisker stimulator (Melzer
et al., 1985 ) for various time periods, and ISH for the detection of
BDNF mRNA was performed. To characterize the cells expressing BDNF, ISH
for the detection of BDNF mRNA was combined with immunocytochemistry
against the three calcium-binding proteins parvalbumin, calretinin, and
calbindin-D28K, markers of three different,
nonoverlapping GABAergic cell populations, together accounting for a
great majority of the cortical GABAergic interneurons (Celio,
1990 ).
A part of this study has appeared in abstract form (Rocamora et al.,
1993 ).
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Whisker stimulation. Adult mice of the ICR-derived
NOR strain (Van der Loos et al., 1986 ) were anesthetized with 60 mg/kg
Nembutal, and small metal rods were glued onto whiskers B1-3 and C1-3
of the left whiskerpad; other whiskers were left intact (for
nomenclature, see Van der Loos and Woolsey, 1973 ). After recovery,
animals were placed in the Lausanne whisker stimulator (Melzer et al.,
1985 ) in which they moved freely while being exposed to magnetic field
bursts (frequency 9 Hz, intensity 7 × 103 A/m,
root mean square, burst duration 40 msec, during which the coil
was energized with AC, 50 Hz, from the mains) for different time
periods (4, 6, 24, and 72 hr). In another group of mice, a metal rod
was glued onto a single whisker (C2) under the same anesthetic
conditions, and animals were stimulated for 6 hr. Mice were placed in
the electromagnetic coil without it being switched on and were used as
controls, together with nontreated mice (Table 1).
During the stimulation period, animals were regularly checked for the
presence of metal rods and whiskers, and only the whiskers that had the
rods glued on all the time were considered stimulated. After the
stimulation period, animals were anesthetized with Nembutal and
transcardially perfused with 4% paraformaldehyde in phosphate buffer
(PB; 0.12 M, pH 7.4). Then, brains were removed,
post-fixed in the same fixative overnight, cryoprotected with 30%
sucrose, and frozen in dry ice. Coronal and tangential (to the pial
surface overlying the barrel cortex) sections (20 µm thick) were
obtained and stored in a cryoprotective solution (30% glycerol, 30%
ethylene glycol, 40% 0.1 M PB, pH 7.2), at
70°C until further processed. Table 1 further
defines the material used in the present study.
Table 1.
Animals and
treatments
| Stimulation
periods |
Whiskers
(left) |
Coronal |
Tangential |
|
| Control |
- |
2 |
- |
| 0
hr |
B1-3 and C1-3 |
1 |
1 |
| 4 hr |
B1-3 and
C1-3 |
1 |
1 |
|
B1-3 and C1-3 |
6 (3) |
5 (3) |
| 6 hr |
B3
and
C2-3 |
- |
1 |
|
C2 |
- |
3 (2) |
| 24
hr |
B1-3 and C1-3 |
1 |
1 |
| 72 hr |
B1-3 and
C1-3 |
- |
1 |
|
|
Animals (n = 24) used in the present study.
Attending to the stimulation periods, we defined five different groups
of mice (column 1). In column 2, we indicated on which whiskers metal
pieces were found to be present at the end of the stimulation period.
Columns 3 and 4 indicate the orientation in which the brains were cut:
in a coronal plane or in a plane tangential to the pial surface
overlying the barrel cortex. In the first group, two mice did not
receive any treatment (control), two other mice were anesthetized and
metal rods were glued onto whiskers C1-3 and B1-3, but were not
stimulated (0 hr). All the animals were processed for ISH to detect
BDNF mRNA. On some animals of the third group (6 hr), indicated in
parentheses, the combined ISH for BDNF and ICC against calcium-binding
proteins (parvalbumin, calretinin, or calbindin) was performed. When
its brain was cut coronally, each animal indicated in parentheses was
used for the combined ISH-ICC with each of the three antibodies
(parvalbumin, calretinin, and calbindin); when cut tangentially, only
one antibody was used per animal. In mice stimulated on a single
whisker (C2), only parvalbumin and calbindin were used for the combined
ISH-ICC.
|
|
In situ hybridization histochemistry. In
situ hybridization (ISH) on free-floating tissue sections was
performed with 35S-labeled antisense BDNF
riboprobe. A PCR II plasmid containing a PCR-amplified fragment
corresponding to nucleotides 444-827 of the mouse BDNF cDNA sequence
(Hofer et al., 1990 ) was used to transcribe antisense and sense
riboprobes. For the antisense riboprobe, plasmid was linearized with
the restriction enzyme XbaI and transcription was performed
with SP6; for the sense probe, linearization was done with
HindIII and transcription was done with T7. The
transcription protocol of the Promega Riboprobe kit was followed.
Free-floating sections were processed for ISH essentially as described
by Isackson et al. (1991) . Briefly, sections were rinsed twice in PBS
(0.1 M PB, 150 mM NaCl, pH
7.6), treated for 10 with 0.2N HCl, acetylated for 10 in 0.1 M triethanolamine, pH 8.0, with 0.25% acetic
anhydride, and prehybridized for 3 hr at 55°C in a solution
containing 50% formamide, 0.62 M NaCl, 20 mM PIPES, pH 6.8, 10% dextran sulfate, 0.2% sodium
dodecyl sulfate, 10 mM EDTA, 50 mM dithiothreitol, 5× Denhardt's, and 250 mg/ml
sheared salmon sperm DNA. Prehybridization solution was replaced by a
fresh one, to which 250 mg/ml yeast tRNA and the BDNF
35S-labeled riboprobe (10-20 × 106 cpm/ml) were added. After overnight
hybridization at 55°C, sections were washed at room temperature (RT)
in 2× SSC, incubated with 10 mg/ml RNase A in 10 mM Tris, pH 7.5, 5 mM EDTA,
0.5 M NaCl for 1 hr at 37°C, and washed in 50% formamide
0.5× SSC for 3 hr at 55°C, and in 0.1× SSC 0.5% sarkosyl for 1 hr
at 60°C (10 mM -mercaptoethanol was present
in all the washing solutions). Thereafter, sections were mounted onto
gelatinized slides, air-dried, dehydrated through a graded ethanol
series containing 0.3 M ammonium acetate, and
dipped in autoradiographic emulsion (NTB-2, Kodak). After 5-6 weeks
exposure, emulsion was developed with Kodak D19, and sections were
counterstained with Nissl-staining procedure. Slides were finally
dehydrated and coverslipped with dextropropoxyphene.
Specificity of the ISH signal was confirmed by comparison of the
hybridization patterns obtained with previously published ones and by
the lack of signal when 35S-labeled sense BDNF
riboprobe was used (described above).
Quantitative analysis of the autoradiographic signal was performed in
coronal sections from four animals stimulated for 6 hr. BDNF mRNA
hybridization level for each animal was determined by using the average
of the observations made in at least four different coronal sections.
Both the number of BDNF mRNA-positive cells per layer and the intensity
of autoradiographic signal per single cell (cells with 10-19, 20-29,
30-39, and 40 silver grains) were determined for the different
layers of the barrel cortex (II/III, IV, and V/VI). The number of
silver grains over Nissl-stained cell bodies was counted through a
cortical column (250 µm wide, centered on the stimulated area of the
barrel cortex) extending from layers II to VI of the somatosensory
cortex using a 40× objective. Because the autoradiographic background
was found to be ~2-4 silver grains/cell body, only cells displaying
>10 silver grains were considered as BDNF mRNA-positive cells.
Increased levels of BDNF mRNA were estimated by comparing quantitative
data from the stimulated barrelfield with respect to the unstimulated
(control) side. The statistical significance of the obtained
differences was tested by one-way ANOVA. The barrel cortex of
unstimulated animals placed or not placed in the electromagnetic coil
(without it being switched on) was also used as control.
Double ISH-immunocytochemistry procedure. Immunoperoxidase
detection of the calcium-binding proteins parvalbumin, calretinin, and
calbindin-D28K was performed on tissue sections
previously hybridized with 35S-labeled antisense
BDNF riboprobe. After the last ISH wash (0.1× SSC, 60°C), sections
were kept at RT, thoroughly rinsed in PBS, and incubated in a blocking
solution containing 10% normal goat serum and 4% bovine serum albumin
(BSA) in PBST (0.2% Triton X-100 in PBS) for 1 hr at RT. After
rinsing, sections were incubated overnight at 4°C with one of the
following primary antibodies in PBST containing 5% normal serum and
0.5% BSA: rabbit anti-parvalbumin (PARV, 1:1000), rabbit
anti-calbindin-D28K (CALB, 1:1500), and rabbit
anti-calretinin (CALR, 1:1000). Thereafter, sections were sequentially
incubated with biotinylated goat anti-rabbit antibodies (1:200) and
with the avidin-biotin-peroxidase complex (ABC, 1:200). Peroxidase
was developed with 0.05% diaminobenzidine in 0.1 M PB and 0.005% hydrogen peroxide. Thereafter,
immunoreacted sections were mounted onto gelatinized slides, dipped in
autoradiographic emulsion, and processed as described above.
RESULTS
Upregulation of BDNF mRNA expression in the barrel cortex after
whisker stimulation
The BDNF mRNA hybridization pattern in the cortex of control mice
showed a nonhomogeneous distribution, both among the different cortical
areas and in different layers. In general, levels of this mRNA were
higher in ventrolateral than in dorsomedial cortex. However, the barrel
cortex had lower levels of BDNF mRNA than its neighboring areas,
including cingulate and retrosplenial cortices (not shown). In the
cerebral cortex, BDNF mRNA was preferentially expressed in cells in
layers II/III and V/VI. This distribution was also found in the barrel
cortex, although fewer cells in layers II/III and V/VI expressed BDNF.
In control mice, BDNF mRNA was almost undetectable in layer IV, which,
in contrast, contains the highest density of cells (Fig.
1). Comparison of the distribution of silver grains and
the underlying Nissl-stained image showed no evidence for the
accumulation of silver grains above glial cells.
Fig. 1.
BDNF mRNA expression in the barrel cortex after
unilateral stimulation of the contralateral whiskerpad. Whiskers B1-3
and C1-3 were unilaterally stimulated for different time periods, and
BDNF mRNA expression was analyzed on coronal sections through the
contralateral barrel cortex. A, C, and
D are dark-field photomicrographs of control (A)
and stimulated barrel cortex for different time periods: 6 hr
(C) and 24 hr (D). B is a bright-field
photomicrograph of the Nissl-stained section shown in C.
Roman numbers I, II/III, IV, and V/VI in B and D
indicate layers in the barrel cortex. Note higher BDNF mRNA levels in
C (6 hr stimulation) than in D (24 hr
stimulation). E and F are higher-magnification
bright-field photomicrographs showing BDNF mRNA hybridization signal
(black silver grains) in layer IV of control (E)
and 6 hr stimulated (F) barrel cortices. Arrows
in F indicate a wall of a barrel. Note the clear
upregulation of BDNF mRNA expression in cells in F compared
with E. Scale bar (shown in B) is 150 µm and
pertains to A-D; scale bar (shown in E) is
25 µm and pertains also to F.
[View Larger Version of this Image (155K GIF file)]
Unilateral stimulation of a set of whiskers for different time periods
(4-72 hr) induced increased levels of BDNF mRNA through layers II to
VI of the contralateral barrel cortex. The ipsilateral, unstimulated
barrel cortex showed a pattern and levels of BDNF mRNA expression
similar to that in barrel cortex of control animals. The upregulation
of BDNF mRNA expression was maximal after 6 hr stimulation. Both longer
(24-72 hr) and shorter (4 hr) stimulation periods resulted in lower
levels of this mRNA (Fig. 1). We therefore decided to use the 6 hr
stimulation period for more detailed analysis.
Quantitative analysis of the autoradiographic signal (through a
cortical column 250 µm wide) showed an average of 33.1 ± 7.3 cells
expressing BDNF in layer IV of the stimulated barrel cortex compared
with the near absence of labeled cells (average 1.9 ± 0.8) in the
corresponding area of the unstimulated side and in control animals. The
number of BDNF-expressing cells increased approximately twofold (19.4 ± 4.68, respect to control level 11.2 ± 3.47) in layer II/III and one
and a half-fold (13 ± 1.47 respect to control 8.5 ± 1.2) in layers
V/VI (Fig. 2A). Not only the number of BDNF
mRNA-expressing cells (as cells with >10 silver grains over the soma)
but also the average intensity of BDNF mRNA autoradiographic signal per
labeled cell increased (Fig. 2B).
Fig. 2.
Quantification of the BDNF mRNA hybridization
signal through the different layers of the barrel cortex. BDNF mRNA
levels were measured in a cortical column 250 µm wide. Levels in
contralateral (stimulated) and ipsilateral (control) barrel cortex are
compared. In A, results are expressed as the mean of the
medians of the number of cells expressing BDNF mRNA (with 10 silver
grains over soma) in the different cortical layers (II/III, IV, and
V/VI) of ipsilateral and contralateral barrel cortices ± the SD.
Numbers represent the averaged levels of four different
animals in which whiskers B1-3 and C1-3 were stimulated for a period
of 6 hr. Asterisks denote statistically significant
differences between contralateral and ipsilateral barrel cortex by the
ANOVA test (*p 0.05, **p 0.001). In B, not only the number of labeled cells but also
the levels of BDNF mRNA hybridization signal (BDNF mRNA-expressing
cells were classified as cells with 10-19, 20-29, 30-39, and 40
grains/cell) were represented in the different cortical layers for a 6 hr stimulated animal.
[View Larger Version of this Image (17K GIF file)]
Increased levels of BDNF mRNA in layer IV are restricted to the
stimulated barrels
Because individual barrels cannot be easily identified in coronal
sections, we used tangential sections to determine whether BDNF mRNA
upregulation was restricted to the barrel area corresponding to the
stimulated whisker. Tangentially cut sections were from animals in
which either a single whisker (C2) or several whiskers (C2, C3, B3)
were stimulated. In both cases, the intensity of BDNF mRNA upregulation
was similar (Fig. 3). Reconstruction of the ensemble of
barrels from serial sections through layer IV revealed that the
increased levels of BDNF mRNA were restricted to the barrels that
correspond to the stimulated whiskers. The increased levels of BDNF
mRNA were observed in neurons with their soma in the walls or in the
hollows. However, not all the neurons in a stimulated barrel expressed
BDNF.
Fig. 3.
One-to-one relationship between the stimulated
whiskers and the corresponding contralateral, stimulated barrels.
A and B are dark-field photomicrographs showing
BDNF mRNA hybridization signal in tangential sections through
stimulated barrel cortices of 6 hr stimulated animals. In A,
several whiskers (C2, C3, and B3) were stimulated; in B,
only one whisker (C2) was stimulated. C and D
show the Nissl-stained sections of A and B,
respectively. Arrowheads in A-D indicate blood
vessels in the tissue to show correspondence between dark- and
bright-field photomicrographs. Note that stimulation of whiskers
results in BDNF mRNA upregulation that is restricted to the stimulated
barrels. Scale bar (shown in D), 200 µm.
[View Larger Version of this Image (141K GIF file)]
Immunocytochemical characterization of cells expressing BDNF mRNA
in control and stimulated barrel cortex
ISH for the detection of BDNF mRNA and immunocytochemistry
against one of the three calcium-binding proteins PARV, CALR, or CALB
were sequentially performed in the same tissue sections. The specific
patterns of both BDNF mRNA-hybridization signal and calcium-binding
protein-immunoreactivity were preserved after the combined procedure
(Fig. 4).
Fig. 4.
BDNF mRNA is not expressed in GABAergic cells of
the barrel cortex. Bright-field photomicrographs of double-processed
tissue: ISH for BDNF and immunocytochemistry (ICC) for each of the
three different calcium-binding proteins parvalbumin (A),
calretinin (B), and calbindin (C). In
B, calretinin-immunoreacted section was also Nissl-stained.
Note that the ISH result could not be seen in A-C because
of the low magnification. D and E are
higher-magnification views of coronal sections showing the combined
ISH-ICC in the stimulated barrel cortex at layer IV level. In
D, ICC was against CALB, and in E against PARV.
Note that the BDNF mRNA hybridization signal is not present in
PARV-immunoreactive cells (arrowheads in E), and
that it is present in weak but not in heavy
calbindin-immunoreactive neurons (D). F is a
camera lucida drawing of a stimulated barrel C3 from a tangential
section hybridized with BDNF and immunoreacted against PARV;
bv is a blood vessel. Hatched area represents the
wall of the barrel, where the density of cells made it difficult to
individualize them; thus, only cells with a very high level of labeling
were indicated as BDNF-expressing cells. Symbols in
F indicate various classes of cells (see key to the
left) formed by those that are positive for BDNF mRNA, or
not, in combination with being immunoreactive for parvalbumin, or not.
Note that there are no PARV+/BDNF+ cells. Scale bar (shown in
B) is 150 µm and pertains to A-C; scale bar
(shown in D) is 25 µm and also pertains to
E.
[View Larger Version of this Image (92K GIF file)]
PARV-immunoreactive cells were present in barrel cortex from layers II
to VI, with the highest density in layer IV. In a tangential section
(20 µm) at medial layer IV, we counted 20-25 PARV-positive cells per
individual barrel (B1-3 or C1-3, see Fig. 4F). CALR
immunocytochemistry labeled fewer cells, most of which located in layer
II/III. There were very few CALR-positive cells in layer IV (an average
of 1-2 per barrel per section). Both in control and stimulated barrel
cortex, the combined ISH-immunocytochemistry protocol showed no
colocalization between BDNF mRNA and any of the calcium-binding
proteins parvalbumin or calretinin.
CALB immunocytochemistry revealed different populations of
CALB-immunoreactive cells in the barrel cortex. Both weak and heavy
CALB-immunoreactive neurons were found. Neurons that displayed weak
CALB immunoreactivity, in agreement with previous studies, included
stellate cells in layer IV and pyramidal neurons in layer II/III. Only
a few heavy CALB-immunoreactive neurons, GABAergic interneurons, were
found (Hendry et al., 1989 ; Celio, 1990 ; Van Brederode et al., 1991 ).
Combined ISH BDNF and immunocytochemistry for CALB showed that heavy
CALB-immunoreactive neurons (i.e., GABAergic) did not express BDNF
either in control or after stimulation. In addition, only some of the
weak CALB-immunoreactive neurons in layers II/III, but not those in
layer IV, were found to express BDNF in basal conditions. After
peripheral stimulation, increased levels of BDNF mRNA were found in an
important proportion of the weak CALB-immunoreactive neurons of layer
IV and also in layers II/III and V/VI (Fig. 4).
We thus conclude that the several classes of GABAergic neurons as
identified by PARV, CALR, or heavy CALB immunoreactivity do not express
BDNF mRNA either in control conditions or after stimulation. It is
therefore likely that the spiny stellate cells in layer IV and some
pyramidal neurons in layers II/III and V/VI are responsible for the
BDNF upregulation after sensory stimulation.
DISCUSSION
The main findings of the present study can be summarized as
follows: (1) unilateral peripheral stimulation of the whisker-to-barrel
pathway in adult mice increased levels of BDNF mRNA in cells of layers
II to VI in the contralateral, stimulated barrel cortex; (2) BDNF
upregulation in barrels of layer IV followed a one-to-one relation with
the corresponding stimulated whiskers; and (3) most of the cells
expressing BDNF in the barrel cortex, both after stimulation and in
control conditions, were pyramidal or spiny stellate, but not GABAergic
neurons.
Upregulation of BDNF mRNA expression and its correlation with
modified neuronal activity
The activity-dependent modulation of the expression of BDNF has
been extensively documented. Depolarization of cultured hippocampal
neurons with high potassium or with glutamate receptor agonists
increases levels of BDNF mRNA, whereas GABAergic transmission reduces
this mRNA level (Lu et al., 1991 ; Zafra et al., 1991 ). In addition to
these analyses ``in vitro,'' several ``in
vivo'' seizure-inducing paradigms also resulted in a clear-cut
upregulation of BDNF, mainly affecting the hippocampal formation and
cortex (Ernfors et al., 1991 ; Isackson et al., 1991 ; Dugich-Djordjevic
et al., 1992 ; Rocamora et al., 1992 , 1994 ). In a more physiological
paradigm, decreased sensory stimulation has been shown to modify BDNF
mRNA expression in the cerebral cortex. Visual deprivation (by dark
rearing) for 1 week results in decreased levels of BDNF mRNA in the
visual cortex, and subsequent exposure to light re-establishes normal
levels of this mRNA (Castrén et al., 1992 ).
BDNF mRNA hybridization signal in the adult cortex of control mice
showed that this mRNA was distributed in two main regions corresponding
to layers II/III and VI, forming continuous bands along the different
cortical areas (Isackson et al., 1991 ; Castrén et al., 1992 ;
present results). It is worth noting that the barrel cortex had a lower
level of BDNF mRNA than its adjacent cortical areas. Only a few cells
in layer IV were found to express BDNF mRNA in control conditions.
These low levels of BDNF mRNA could be attributable to a very efficient
inhibitory control of layer IV cells, which in physiological conditions
prevented BDNF mRNA expression. Interestingly, upregulation of BDNF
mRNA expression in layer IV was described after intraperitoneal
injection of the NMDA receptor antagonist MK-801 in rats, and this
effect was abolished by the GABA agonist pentobarbital (Castrén
et al., 1993 ).
In the present study, activity of cortical neurons was increased by
mechanical stimulation of a set of mystacial whiskers. The stimulation
was continuous and forms an exaggeration of sensory input to which the
animal is forcefully exposed. Using the deoxyglucose (DG) method, it
has been shown that such stimulation for a period of 45 min results in
a local increase in DG uptake in the barrel cortex that forms, in a
coronal plane, a column (Melzer et al., 1985 ). This radially oriented
column extends through all cortical layers with its highest level in
layer IV, where it is confined to the barrel that corresponds to the
stimulated whisker. Evidence has been reported that an increase in DG
uptake in the nervous system is related to spiking activity in the
presynaptic element (Schwartz et al., 1979 ; Kadekaro et al., 1985 ). It
is therefore likely that our stimulation method induces the highest
increase in spiking frequency in neurons of layer IV. Analyses of
single-unit activity in the barrel cortex of anesthetized mice and rats
also showed layer IV cells to be the most responsive cortical neurons
to whisker deflection (Simons, 1985 ; Armstrong-James and Fox, 1987 ;
Welker et al., 1993 ).
Whisker stimulation results in an increase in BDNF mRNA expression by
neurons that form a radial column from layer II to VI of the stimulated
barrel cortex, comprising at the level of layer IV the barrel(s)
corresponding to the stimulated whisker(s). This distribution pattern
correlates well with the column of stimulus-dependent DG uptake
described above. Maximal increase in BDNF expression was found after 6 hr of stimulation. It was shown that continuous whisker stimulation for
24 hr results in a decrease in the metabolic activity in the stimulated
barrel compared with the DG levels in nonprestimulated barrels (Welker
et al., 1992 ). This effect of continuous whisker stimulation has the
characteristics of cortical habituation. We suggest that BDNF mRNA
upregulation after 4 and 6 hr stimulation is the result of an increased
activity of cortical neurons induced by peripheral stimulation, and
that lower BDNF mRNA levels after longer stimulation periods, such as
24 hr, could be the result of lower levels of neuronal activity
attributable to habituation of the cortical neurons.
Comparison of BDNF mRNA levels among the different cortical layers in
control and after stimulation showed that upregulation of BDNF
expression in layer IV is the most pronounced. This is not surprising
because of the very low basal levels of BDNF mRNA in layer IV, together
with the fact that layer IV is the cortical layer receiving the densest
input from the thalamic relay nucleus (i.e., nucleus ventrobasalis of
the thalamus) (Killackey, 1973 ; Keller et al., 1985 ; Chmielowska et
al., 1989 ) and is therefore most likely to be exposed to the most
``direct'' effect of the increase in sensory stimulation. Thus, we
conclude that cells in layer IV may have a threshold of excitation
above which BDNF mRNA is upregulated. This threshold may have been
established in such a way that it is not exceeded in natural
conditions.
GABAergic cells do not express BDNF mRNA either in control
conditions or after stimulation
To determine whether GABAergic neurons are among the cells
expressing BDNF, we used the ISH for BDNF in combination with the
immunocytochemical characterization of three different, nonoverlapping
populations of GABAergic cells (PARV-, CALR-, and heavy
CALB-immunoreactive cells). We found BDNF mRNA in control mice not to
be expressed in any of these populations, which together constitute
most of the GABAergic cell population. Interestingly, the same result
was found in the hippocampus (Rocamora et al., unpublished data) and,
for PARV-immunoreactive cells, in the adult rat visual cortex
(Cellerino et al., 1995 ). As mentioned above, there is a broad
correlation between neuronal activity and BDNF mRNA expression.
However, PARV-immunoreactive cells, which are among the most active
cells in the hippocampus (Kawaguchi et al., 1987 ), do not express BDNF
(Rocamora et al., unpublished data). A similar discordance was found in
the present study, where GABAergic (fast-spiking) cells of the barrel
cortex, also among the most active cells (Armstrong-James et al., 1993 ;
Welker et al., 1993 ), did not express BDNF either. This situation holds
not only for basal activity (unstimulated) conditions but also after
the increase in cortical activity. Upon peripheral stimulation,
thalamic afferents activate both nonspiny (GABAergic) and spiny
stellate cells in layer IV. However, BDNF mRNA expression was found
upregulated only in non-GABAergic cells. Thus, other aspects apart from
the neuronal activity may be involved in the differential regulation of
BDNF mRNA expression in GABAergic and non-GABAergic cell
populations.
Upregulation of BDNF mRNA expression was reported to be mediated mainly
by activation of non-NMDA receptors in excitotoxic paradigms (Zafra et
al., 1990 ; Ernfors et al., 1991 ). However, a major involvement of the
NMDA receptors was found in more physiological conditions (Zafra et
al., 1991 ). Interestingly, recordings made in the barrel cortex of
urethane-anesthetized rats showed that the initial activation of
fast-spiking (smooth inhibitory) cells by the thalamocortical afferents
is almost exclusively mediated by the activation of non-NMDA receptors,
whereas such activation of slow-spiking (spiny stellate) cells is
partially mediated by NMDA receptors (Armstrong et al., 1993). Thus,
this difference in the participation of the NMDA receptor in the
initial activation of layer IV cells may account for the specific
upregulation of BDNF mRNA in the non-GABAergic cells. Future
experiments combining whisker stimulation and the use of specific
antagonist to the different glutamate receptors could shed light on
this hypothesis.
Other mechanisms for the specific regulation of BDNF mRNA expression in
the several cell populations could involve differences in the signal
transduction pathways, differential exposure of regulatory sequences to
the transcriptional machinery, and/or the availability of various
transcription factors.
How could BDNF be involved in activity-dependent plasticity in the
adult barrel cortex? A proposal
Specific dependence of sensory neurons on different target-derived
neurotrophins has been shown by the classical tests for neurotrophic
activity and more recently confirmed by the analysis of null-mutated
mice (for review, see Barde, 1989 ; Davies, 1994 ; Snider, 1994 ).
However, it is still unclear whether and how these molecules are
involved in survival and/or differentiation of the CNS neurons. BDNF
has recently been found to be involved in the reshaping of developing
thalamocortical connections in the rat visual cortex (Cabelli et al.,
1995 ) and in the ingrowth and branching of the retinal fibers in the
Xenopus laevis optic tectum (Cohen-Cory and Fraser, 1995 ).
Analysis of null-mutated mice showed that the differentiation of
parvalbumin- and calbindin-immunoreactive neurons of the somatosensory
cortex is dependent on BDNF (Jones et al., 1994 ). Interestingly, BDNF
was shown to induce increased glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD)
immunoreactivity and GABA uptake in striatal GABAergic neurons during
development (Mizuno et al., 1994 ). This could be of relevance in
relation to the fact that chronic stimulation of the whisker-to-barrel
pathway in adult mice induces increased GAD immunoreactivity in the
corresponding barrels (Welker et al., 1989 ). BDNF may therefore be
required for this aspect of adult plasticity which, in behavioral
terms, results in habituation of neuronal activity to the peripheral
stimulus (Welker et al., 1992 ). We therefore propose that BDNF,
produced by non-GABAergic cells, could potentiate the role of GABAergic
cells in cortical processing of sensory information and thus be
involved in activity-dependent modifications of cortical circuitry.
FOOTNOTES
Received Feb. 23, 1996; revised April 22, 1996; accepted April 24, 1996.
This work was supported by grants from the Ministry of Science and
Education (SAF 94/743), the Spanish Ministry of Health (FIS 93/369),
and Swiss National Science Foundation 31-39184.93. N.R. was supported
by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Education. We dedicate this
paper to Hendrik Van der Loos, whose enthusiasm for whisker stimulation
was sadly missed in the final part of this study. We thank N. Trapp for
help in the histology.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Nativitat Rocamora,
Department of Animal and Plant Cell Biology, Faculty of Biology,
University of Barcelona, Diagonal 645, 08028-Barcelona,
Spain.
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