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Previous Article | Next Article 
The Journal of Neuroscience, May 15, 1998, 18(10):3897-3908
Nerve Gas-Induced Seizures: Role of Acetylcholine in the
Rapid Induction of Fos and Glial Fibrillary Acidic Protein in
Piriform Cortex
Lee A.
Zimmer1,
Matthew
Ennis1,
Ronald G.
Wiley2, and
Michael T.
Shipley1
1 Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology, University of
Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland 21201, and
2 Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Vanderbilt University,
Nashville, Tennessee 37232
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ABSTRACT |
Soman (pinacolymethylphosphonofluoridate), a highly potent
irreversible inhibitor of acetylcholinesterase (AChE), causes seizures and rapidly increases Fos and glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP)
staining in piriform cortex (PC). This suggests that the inhibition of
AChE by soman leads to increased acetylcholine (ACh) and neuronal
excitability in PC. The sole source of cholinergic input to PC is from
the nucleus of the diagonal band (NDB). To investigate the role of ACh
in soman-induced seizures, we lesioned cholinergic neurons in NDB
unilaterally with 192-IgG-saporin. By 10 d, saporin
eliminated staining for choline acetyltransferase (ChAT), the synthetic
enzyme for ACh, in NDB ipsilateral to the lesion. Staining for AChE,
the degradative enzyme for ACh, was eliminated in PC ipsilateral to the
lesioned NDB. By 45-60 min after soman, increased Fos and GFAP
staining in PC was evident only ipsilateral to the unlesioned NDB. By
90-120 min after soman, Fos and GFAP staining increased bilaterally in
PC.
In a second experiment, electrical stimulation electrodes were
implanted unilaterally in the NDB to activate focally the projections to PC in unanesthetized rats. Within 5 min of NDB stimulation, there
were clear behavioral and EEG signs of convulsions. After 45-60 min of
NDB stimulation, there was increased Fos and GFAP staining in layer II
of PC ipsilateral to the stimulation site. Pretreatment with the
selective muscarinic receptor antagonist scopolamine blocked the
convulsions and prevented increased Fos and GFAP staining in PC. These
results suggest that ACh release in PC triggers the initiation of
seizures and gliosis after soman administration, predominantly by the
activation of muscarinic receptors.
Key words:
soman; Fos; GFAP; muscarinic receptors; nucleus of the diagonal band (NDB); 192-IgG-saporin; choline acetyltransferase (ChAT)
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INTRODUCTION |
Soman is a "nerve gas." It is a
highly potent irreversible inhibitor of acetylcholinesterase (AChE),
the enzyme that hydrolyzes acetylcholine (ACh). Exposure to soman
causes intense convulsions, neuropathology, and, ultimately, death. We
recently reported that a single, systemic, convulsive dose of soman
causes a rapid (30-45 min) induction of the immediate early gene
protein product, Fos, in layer II of the piriform cortex (PC) (Zimmer
et al., 1997a ). PC is one of the first CNS regions to show intense
neuropathology after soman poisoning (Petras, 1990 ; Switzer et al.,
1990 ; Wall et al., 1990 ). Soman also causes rapid gliosis, including
hypertrophy of astrocytic cell bodies and processes concomitant with
increased glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) staining in the same
layers of PC exhibiting Fos staining (Zimmer et al., 1997b ).
Similar to soman, systemic injections of the potent muscarinic agonist
pilocarpine also induce seizures in PC (Millan et al., 1986 ).
Microinjections of muscarinic receptor agonists in PC trigger focal
seizures, which then spread throughout the brain (Turski et al., 1989 ).
PC receives cholinergic innervation that arises exclusively from basal
forebrain neurons in the nucleus of the diagonal band (NDB) (Rye et
al., 1984 ). Taken together, these findings suggest that soman, by
inhibiting acetylcholinesterase, causes increased levels of
endogenously released ACh in PC; this, in turn, activates muscarinic
receptors on PC neurons, leading to seizures. If this hypothesis is
correct, then unilateral lesions of NDB cholinergic neurons may prevent
seizures and attenuate increased Fos and GFAP staining in PC after
soman. Further, focal activation of NDB, the sole source of ACh input
to PC, should lead to seizures and elevated Fos and GFAP staining in PC
similar to those caused by soman. The goal of the present study was to test these two predictions.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
NDB lesion study
192-IgG-saporin injections. Adult male Sprague
Dawley rats (270-290 gm; Harlan Laboratories, Indianapolis, IN) were
housed in pairs with free access to food and water for at least 1 week before use. Rats were anesthetized deeply with chloral hydrate (400 mg/kg, i.p.) and placed in a stereotaxic apparatus; a hole was drilled
through the cranium at the coordinates for NDB ( 0.6-0.3 mm to
bregma, 1.4-2.2 mm lateral to midline). Microinjections of the
specific cholinergic toxin 192-IgG-saporin (50-100 nl each; 0.5 mg/ml) were made through glass pipettes (tip diameter, 40 µm)
with a hydraulic microinjection syringe. Because cholinergic neurons in
NDB are distributed over a considerable area, microinjections were made
at four sites in the NDB ( 0.4 mm bregma, 1.6 mm lateral, 8.8 mm
ventral; 0.4 mm bregma, 2.0 mm lateral, 8.6 mm ventral; 0.1 mm
bregma, 1.6 mm lateral, 8.8 mm ventral; 0.1 mm bregma, 2.0 mm lateral,
8.6 mm ventral).
Soman administration. Ten days after saporin injections,
rats were subjected to a convulsive dose (77.7 µg/kg, i.m.) of the irreversible AChE inhibitor, soman. Rats developed convulsions within
20 min of injection and maintained convulsions throughout the
designated survival period. Behavioral signs of convulsions were scored
as previously described (El-Etri et al., 1991 ; Zimmer et al., 1997a ).
Control animals were injected with proportional volumes of vehicle,
saline (0.9%).
Fos, choline acetyltransferase (ChAT), and GFAP
immunocytochemistry. At the end of the specified survival times,
animals were anesthetized deeply with sodium pentobarbital (80 mg/kg)
and perfused transcardially with 100-200 ml of 0.9% saline for 1 min,
followed by 900-1000 ml of 4.0% paraformaldehyde in 0.1 M
phosphate buffer (PB), pH 7.4, at 4°C for 20 min. Brains were removed
rapidly from the skull and post-fixed in the same solution (4°C) for
1.5 hr and then placed in 30% sucrose in 0.1 M PB for 24 hr. Serial 40-µm-thick frozen sections were cut in the coronal plane
and alternately placed in separate trays containing 0.1 M
PB for immunohistochemical visualization of Fos, GFAP, and ChAT. To
limit variability in staining intensity, we simultaneously processed
free-floating sections from experimental and control animals as
follows: (1) rinsed (for 30 min) in 0.1 M PBS; (2) placed
in 2.0% normal rabbit serum (NRS, Fos, and ChAT) or 2.0% normal goat
serum (NGS, GFAP) in PBS containing 0.2% Triton X-100 (TX) overnight;
(3) incubated in anti-sheep primary antibody to Fos (Cambridge
Biochemicals, Cambridge, MA) at 1:5000, anti-rat primary antibody to
ChAT (Boehringer Mannheim, Indianapolis, IN) at 1:5000, or anti-rabbit
primary antibody to GFAP (Dako, Carpinteria, CA) at 1:25,000 overnight in PBS-TX and 2% NRS for 24-48 hr at 4°C with gentle agitation; (4)
rinsed in PBS-TX (1 hr) and then incubated in biotinylated rabbit
anti-sheep IgG (Fos), rabbit anti-rat (ChAT), or goat anti-rabbit in
PBS-TX (for 1.5 hr at room temperature); (5) rinsed in PBS-TX (1 hr)
and incubated for 1 hr in avidin-biotin-peroxidase complex in 0.1 M PBS-TX and then rinsed in PBS-TX (30 min); (6) incubated in 0.05% diaminobenzidine (DAB) with 0.1% hydrogen peroxide in PBS-TX
for 10 min and rinsed in PB (30 min); (7) finally, sections were
mounted on subbed slides, air-dried, dehydrated in graded alcohol and
xylene, and coverslipped with DPX.
AChE histochemistry. Animals were perfused as above, and
tissue sections were processed according to a modification of the Koelle-Friedenwald (Van Ooteghem and Shipley, 1984 ) AChE histochemical reaction. Sections were rinsed (seven times for 1 min each) in distilled water to remove excess phosphates and then incubated with
gentle agitation for 2 hr (37°C) in the following solution containing
(in mM): 2 copper (II) sulfate, 10 glycine, 50 sodium acetate, 4.2 acetylthiolcholine iodide, and 0.21 ethopropazine; this
solution was freshly prepared and adjusted to a final pH of 5.25 with
glacial acetic acid. After incubation, sections were rinsed (seven
times for 1 min each) in distilled water and then reacted for 1 min
(with agitation) in a freshly prepared solution of 1.0% sodium
sulfide, adjusted to pH 7.8 with concentrated hydrochloric acid; this
was followed by water rinses (seven times for 1 min each). Then the
sections were reacted in a freshly prepared solution of 1.0% silver
nitrate (1 min, constant agitation), followed by water rinses (three
times for 1 min each).
NDB stimulation study
Surgery. Adult male Sprague Dawley rats (270-290 gm;
Harlan Laboratories, Indianapolis, IN) were housed in pairs with free access to food and water for at least 1 week before use. Animals were
anesthetized deeply with chloral hydrate (400 mg/kg, i.p.) and placed
in a stereotaxic apparatus. A hole was drilled at the coordinates for
NDB ( 0.5-0.5 mm to bregma, 1.9-2.1 mm lateral to midline; Paxinos
and Watson, 1986 ). Insulated bipolar microwire electrodes (125 µm),
exposed at the tips, were chronically implanted unilaterally in NDB
(8.4-8.6 mm ventral to the skull surface); electrodes were secured to
adjacent skull screws with dental cement. Four animals had epidural
skull screws implanted over the parietal cortex (2.0 mm posterior to
lambda, 2.0 mm lateral to midline) ipsilateral to the stimulation
electrode for EEG recordings throughout the experiment.
Animals were allowed 1 week to recover from surgery to eliminate Fos
staining in PC induced by surgical procedures (Dragunow and Robertson,
1988 ). Animals were placed in a transparent plastic receptacle 60 min
before stimulation, and flexible leads were connected to the EEG and
stimulation electrodes. Sham controls were treated in an identical
manner but received no stimulation. EEG recordings (Grass Instruments,
Polygraph, Quincy, MA) were sampled at 5 min intervals before, during,
and after focal stimulation of the NDB. Animals received 45 min of
focal stimulation (12 Hz, 5 sec on/3 sec off, 30-45 min, 400-500
µA). Animals were observed during the entire stimulation period for
behavioral signs of convulsions, including unilateral eye blinking,
head tremors, and occasional rearing with forepaw grasping. At the end
of specified survival times (between 45 and 60 min), rats were
anesthetized deeply (see above) and processed for Fos and GFAP
immunocytochemistry.
Pharmacological agents. Some animals were given vehicle
(0.9% saline, i.p.), the selective muscarinic receptor antagonist scopolamine (2 mg/kg, i.p.), or the selective nicotinic receptor antagonist mecamylamine (5 mg/kg, i.p.) 30 and 5 min before NDB stimulation.
Cell counts. Sections were visualized with a Leitz
microscope (Wetzlar, Germany), and the number of Fos-positive cells per section was counted independently by two lab personnel who used a
computer-based image analysis system (Neurolucida, MicroBrightfield, Baltimore, MD). To be considered Fos-positive, the nucleus of cells had
to have a brown stain characteristic of DAB. To examine Fos expression
along the rostral-caudal axis of PC, we made Fos counts at three
evenly spaced rostral-caudal levels of PC corresponding to +2.0, 0.0, and 2.0 mm with respect to bregma. Specific anatomical landmarks
(i.e., anterior commissure crossing at 0.0 mm bregma) were used to
match sections across experiments. At each level of PC, a 6 × 90 µm2 rectangular grid was superimposed on each
region to be counted. In each tissue section the Fos-positive cells
were counted in three separate dorsal/ventral regions of PC
perpendicular to the brain surface. Each grid included cells from
layers I, II, and III of PC. Identical methods were used to evaluate
Fos-positive neurons in other cortical regions (i.e., frontal cortex).
In each case the same procedures were performed on the contralateral
side of the brain to compare changes in Fos on stimulated/lesioned versus control hemispheres. The average number of Fos-positive cells in
each experiment did not differ significantly under any experimental
conditions on the ipsilateral rostral-caudal plane (p > 0.2); thus, these data were combined to
represent the average number of Fos-positive cells throughout PC.
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RESULTS |
Lesions of the nucleus of the diagonal band
The working hypothesis of this research is that soman-induced
inhibition of AChE leads to a buildup of unhydrolyzed ACh in PC, which
activates muscarinic receptors and causes seizures. If correct, then
elimination of the cholinergic innervation to PC should provide
protection from the seizurogenic actions of soman. To test this
prediction, we initially made electrolytic lesions of the basal
forebrain, including the NDB, and then investigated the ability of
soman to induce seizures and Fos. Large lesions that completely
destroyed the NDB significantly reduced the sequelae of soman in the
ipsilateral PC (data not shown). However, the large and neurochemically
indiscriminate nature of these lesions made the findings difficult to
interpret. To lesion NDB cholinergic neurons selectively, we made
unilateral injections of the immunotoxin 192-IgG-saporin
into the NDB (Wiley et al., 1991 ; Book et al., 1992 , 1994 ; Wenk et al.,
1994 ). Ten days after 192-IgG-saporin, ChAT-positive neurons
were eliminated from the NDB around the injection sites. However,
Nissl-stained cells were present around the injection site. ChAT
staining was still present in the intact contralateral NDB (Fig.
1). To confirm further that saporin
injections were located discretely in the NDB and to assess the degree
of cholinergic denervation of PC and other structures targeted by NDB
cholinergic axons, we stained alternate sections for histochemical detection of AChE. AChE staining was reduced markedly in the NDB, medial septum, PC, main olfactory bulb, and anterior cingulate cortex
ipsilateral to the injection site (Fig.
2). Moderate decreases in AChE were
present in the entorhinal cortex. Normal AChE staining was present in
all of these sites in the intact hemisphere.

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Figure 1.
Choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) staining in the
nucleus of the diagonal band (NDB). A,
ChAT staining in NDB 10 d after microinjections of
192-IgG-saporin unilaterally in NDB. Note the lack of
ChAT-positive cells in NDB ipsilateral to the saporin lesion.
B, ChAT staining in the contralateral control NDB. Scale
bar, 700 µm.
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Figure 2.
Acetylcholinesterase (AChE) staining in piriform
cortex. A, AChE staining in PC 10 d after
microinjections of 192-IgG-saporin unilaterally in NDB.
Note the lack of AChE staining in regions of PC corresponding to NDB
cholinergic terminals in PC, ipsilateral to the saporin lesion.
B, AChE staining in the contralateral control PC. Scale
bar, 750 µm. I, II, III, Layers of PC;
LOT, lateral olfactory tract.
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Fos staining
In the next set of experiments the animals received a convulsive
dose of soman 10 d after unilateral 192-IgG-saporin
injections in the NDB. Control animals that received unilateral
injections of saline in the NDB instead of 192-IgG-saporin
(n = 7) had robust Fos staining after soman
administration in PC ipsilateral (234.7 ± 70.6 cells/6 × 90 µm2) and contralateral to the injection site
(243.7 ± 68.7 cells/6 × 90 µm2) (Figs.
3A,B,
4, columns 1, 2).
Animals that received unilateral injections of
192-IgG-saporin had few Fos-positive neurons in PC
ipsilateral to the 192-IgG-saporin injection site (6.7 ± 1.6 cells/6 × 90 µm2) (Figs. 4,
column 3, 5A). This
number did not differ significantly from the contralateral PC (8.3 ± 2.4 cells/6 × 90 µm2) (Figs. 4,
column 4, 5B). By 45 min after soman
administration, Fos-positive neurons were present in layer II and some
layer III neurons throughout the rostral-caudal extent of PC
contralateral to the lesioned NDB (115.3 ± 23.0 cells/6 × 90 µm2) (Figs. 4, column 6,
5D; n = 7). In striking contrast, there were
far fewer Fos-positive cells in PC ipsilateral to the lesioned NDB
(15.3 ± 6.1 cells/6 × 90 µm2) (Figs.
4, column 5, 5C; p < 0.02), and
the number did not differ from control animals
(p > 0.07). The number of Fos-positive cells bilaterally in the frontal cortex (data not shown) did not differ between control and soman cases (p > 0.3).

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Figure 3.
Fos staining in the piriform cortex. Sections were
stained for Fos immunohistochemistry 45 min after an intramuscular
injection of soman 10 d after unilateral injections of vehicle,
saline ipsilaterally in the NDB. A, Fos staining in PC
ipsilateral to the saline-injected NDB. B, Fos staining
in the contralateral control PC. Scale bar, 750 µm. I, II,
III, Layers of PC; LOT, lateral olfactory
tract.
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Figure 4.
Fos-positive cell counts in PC. All NDB injections
were made into the left hemisphere. Animals receiving unilateral
injections of vehicle, saline in NDB (left hemisphere) had large
increases in Fos-positive cells bilaterally in PC 45 min after an
intramuscular injection of soman (columns 1, 2). Animals
receiving a unilateral injection of 192-IgG-saporin in
the NDB (left hemisphere) had few Fos-positive cells 45 min after an
intramuscular injection of vehicle, saline (columns 3, 4). Unilateral injections of
192-IgG-saporin in NDB (left hemisphere) inhibited the
large increases in Fos-positive cells in PC 45 min after soman
administration (column 5). Note that the number of
Fos-positive cells in PC ipsilateral to the lesioned NDB 45 min after
soman (column 5) was not significantly different from
animals receiving 192-IgG-saporin and no soman
(columns 3, 4). Also, the number of Fos-positive
cells in PC ipsilateral to the unlesioned NDB (column
6) was significantly fewer than in control animals 45 min after soman administration (columns 1, 2). By 90 min
after soman the number of Fos-positive cells in PC ipsilateral to the
lesioned NDB (column 7) was significantly fewer
than the number of Fos-positive cells 45 min after soman administration
in animals receiving vehicle, saline (columns 1, 2). The
number of Fos-positive cells in PC ipsilateral to the unlesioned NDB
(column 8) was similar to the number in control animals
45 min after soman administration (columns 1, 2).
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Figure 5.
Fos staining in the piriform cortex. Sections were
stained for Fos immunohistochemistry 10 d after unilateral lesions
with 192-IgG-saporin ipsilaterally in the NDB. Fos
staining in control (no soman) animals is absent in the PC ipsilateral
(A) and contralateral (B)
to the lesion site. By 45 min after an intramuscular injection of
soman, Fos staining is absent in the PC ipsilateral to the lesion
injection site (C). However, robust Fos
staining is present in the contralateral PC (D).
By 90 min after soman, increased Fos staining is observed in the PC
ipsilateral to the lesioned NDB (E).
Further increases in Fos staining are observed in the contralateral PC
(F). Scale bar, 750 µm. I, II,
III, Layers of PC; LOT, lateral olfactory
tract.
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The number of Fos-positive neurons increased significantly in PC
contralateral to the lesioned NDB 90 min after soman administration (279.5 ± 36.4 cells/6 × 90 µm2) (Figs.
4, column 8, 5F). Significantly fewer
Fos-positive neurons were evident in PC ipsilateral to the lesioned NDB
(95.7 ± 22.5 cells/6 × 90 µm2) (Figs.
4, column 7, 5E; p < 0.002), but
the number had increased dramatically over controls. In addition, Fos
staining was present bilaterally in the hippocampus, entorhinal cortex,
and the anterior cingulate cortex. Fos also was evident bilaterally in
layers IV, V, and VI of other cortical regions. Fos staining was absent
in all CNS regions examined in control animals receiving vehicle (0.9%
saline, i.p.).
GFAP staining
By 1 hr after soman, GFAP staining in PC ipsilateral to the
lesioned NDB was similar to staining in control animals receiving vehicle, saline (0.9%) (Fig. 6;
n = 5). By contrast, GFAP staining was increased
markedly in layer II of the contralateral PC by 1 hr. By 2 hr after
soman, increased GFAP staining was present bilaterally in layer II of
PC. Elevated GFAP staining also was evident in the hippocampus and
layers I, IV, and VI of the neocortex bilaterally.

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Figure 6.
Glial fibrillary acidic acid (GFAP) staining
in the piriform cortex. Sections were stained for GFAP histochemistry
10 d after unilateral lesions with 192-IgG-saporin
ipsilaterally in the NDB. Low levels of GFAP staining in control (no
soman) animals are present in the PC ipsilateral
(A) and contralateral (B)
to the lesion site. By 45 min after an intramuscular injection of
soman, GFAP staining is indistinguishable from controls in the PC
ipsilateral to the lesion injection site
(C). However, discrete layer-specific GFAP
staining is present in layer II of the contralateral PC
(D). By 90 min after soman, increased
layer-specific increases in GFAP staining are observed in the PC
ipsilateral to the lesioned NDB (E).
Further increases in GFAP staining in layer II are
observed in the contralateral PC (F).
Scale bar, 750 µm. I, II, III, Layers of PC;
LOT, lateral olfactory tract.
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Taken together, the results of these experiments showed that lesions of
NDB cholinergic neurons caused a significant delay in soman-induced Fos
and GFAP staining in PC ipsilateral to the lesion. The finding that
these seizure-associated changes were only delayed and not prevented
altogether is probably attributable to the spread of seizures from
other parts of the brain, including the contralateral PC (see
below).
Stimulation of the nucleus of the diagonal band
The preceding experiments demonstrated that removal of the
cholinergic innervation to PC provides significant attenuation of the
seizurogenic actions of soman. This is consistent with the hypothesis
that the persistence of unhydrolyzed ACh in PC after soman plays a
causal role in the generation of seizures. To assess further this
hypothesis, we next performed a set of experiments to determine whether
focal activation of NDB projections to PC was sufficient to trigger
seizures, induce Fos expression, and increase reactive gliosis.
Within 10 min of intermittent NDB stimulation (see Materials and
Methods), the rats displayed behavioral signs of convulsions, including
unilateral eye blinking, head tremors, and occasional rearing with
forepaw grasping. All four animals with EEG records had large amplitude
spike and wave EEG activity within 10-20 min of electrical stimulation
(Fig. 7). This EEG activation and
behavioral convulsions persisted for at least 20 min after the
termination of stimulation.

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Figure 7.
Cortical EEG recordings before
(Baseline, top panel), during NDB
stimulation (middle panel), and 20 min after the
termination of NDB stimulation (bottom panel).
Note that focal NDB stimulation increases EEG spike and wave activity
resembling cortical seizures. This increased activity persists as long
as 20-40 min after the termination of NDB stimulation.
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Fos staining
Sections from control (implanted, but not stimulated) and
stimulated animals were paired and processed simultaneously to compare Fos staining before and after stimulation of NDB (Fig.
8). Control animals that did not receive
stimulation lacked Fos-positive cells [9.7 ± 1.2 cells/6 × 90 µm2 ipsilateral (Fig.
9, column 1) and 8.2 ± 1.4 cells/6 × 90 µm2 contralateral (Fig. 9,
column 2) to the NDB electrode (see Fig. 8A,B)]. Stimulated animals displaying convulsions
(12 of 13) had an increased number of Fos-positive cells (see Fig.
8D) by 45 min throughout the entire rostral-caudal
extent of PC ipsilateral to the stimulation site (222.6 ± 31.8 cells/6 × 90 µm2) (Fig. 9, column
4). There were significantly fewer Fos-positive cells in
the contralateral PC (56.2 ± 15.4 cells/6 × 90 µm2) (Figs. 8C, 9, column 3;
p < 0.0001). The number of Fos-positive cells in the
frontal cortex did not differ between control and stimulation cases
(p > 0.2). In the one animal lacking behavioral responses to NDB stimulation, there was no Fos staining in PC or other
CNS regions.

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Figure 8.
Fos staining in the piriform cortex. Sections were
stained for Fos immunohistochemistry after focal ipsilateral
stimulation of the NDB. Fos staining in control (no stimulation)
animals is absent in the PC contralateral (A) and
ipsilateral (B) to the stimulation electrode. By
45 min after focal stimulation of the NDB, Fos staining is similar to
that in controls in the PC contralateral to the stimulation site
(C). However, robust Fos staining is
present in the PC ipsilateral to the NDB stimulation site
(D). Pretreatment with the selective muscarinic
receptor antagonist scopolamine inhibits increased Fos staining in the
PC after 45 min of NDB stimulation (ipsilateral, in E;
contralateral, in F). Scale bar, 750 µm.
I, II, III, Layers of PC; LOT, lateral
olfactory tract.
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Figure 9.
Fos-positive cell counts in PC. Stimulation
electrodes were targeted to the right NDB in all cases. By 45 min after
an intraperitoneal injection of vehicle, saline, few Fos-positive cells
were present in PC bilaterally in the absence of NDB stimulation
(columns 1, 2). A significant increase in Fos-positive
cells was observed in PC (column 4) after 45 min
of NDB stimulation, as compared with controls. Note that the increase
in Fos-positive cells in the unstimulated contralateral PC
(column 3), however, was significantly less than in PC
ipsilateral to the stimulated NDB. Pretreatment with the selective
muscarinic receptor antagonist scopolamine before NDB stimulation
significantly decreased the number of Fos-positive cells bilaterally in
PC (columns 5, 6), as compared with stimulated
animals lacking scopolamine pretreatment (columns 3, 4).
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GFAP staining
To determine whether astrocytes were activated after unilateral
stimulation of NDB, we stained sections from control and stimulated animals for GFAP (Fig. 10). By 1 hr
after electrical stimulation of NDB (n = 7), GFAP
staining was increased in PC layers I, II, and III ipsilateral to the
stimulation site. GFAP staining in PC caudal to the NDB was limited to
PC layer II. In a few cases, light GFAP staining was evident
bilaterally throughout the hippocampus, layer II of entorhinal cortex,
and in layers I, IV, and VI of other cortical regions. Fos staining was
not evident in astrocytes in any studies (data not shown).

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Figure 10.
GFAP staining in the piriform cortex. Sections
were stained for GFAP histochemistry after focal ipsilateral
stimulation of the NDB. GFAP staining in control (no stimulation)
animals is absent in the PC contralateral (A) and
ipsilateral (B) to the stimulation electrode. By
45 min after focal stimulation of the NDB, GFAP staining is similar to
that of controls in the PC contralateral to the stimulation site
(C). However, robust GFAP staining is
present in the PC ipsilateral to the NDB stimulation site
(D). Pretreatment with the selective muscarinic
receptor antagonist scopolamine inhibits increased GFAP staining in PC
after 45 min of NDB stimulation (contralateral, in E;
ipsilateral, in F). Scale bar, 750 µm.
I, II, III, Layers of PC; LOT, lateral
olfactory tract.
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Muscarinic receptors
Focal stimulation of NDB activates cholinergic as well
as noncholinergic neurons. Thus, although behavioral seizures and
patterns of Fos and GFAP mimicked those caused by soman and thus might be attributable to excess ACh release, it is possible that these responses potentially are mediated by the release of other
neurotransmitters. To investigate this possibility, we performed
another series of experiments in which NDB was stimulated as before,
but the animals received systemic administration of the muscarinic
receptor antagonist scopolamine (see Materials and Methods) before the
onset of NDB stimulation (see Fig. 8E,F).
Scopolamine completely blocked or significantly attenuated NDB
stimulation-induced convulsions and Fos-positive cells (14.0 ± 1.8 cells/6 × 90 µm2 ipsilateral and
4.8 ± 0.8 cells/6 × 90 µm2
contralateral to the stimulation site; p < 0.001;
n = 10) (see Fig. 9, columns 5, 6) in
PC and throughout the CNS, as compared with animals lacking scopolamine
pretreatment. By contrast, pretreatment with the nicotinic receptor
antagonist mecamylamine (n = 4) failed to attenuate
NDB-evoked Fos staining in PC ipsilateral to the stimulation site.
Scopolamine pretreatment (6 of 7) prevented increased GFAP (Fig. 10)
staining in PC and other CNS regions after NDB stimulation, whereas
pretreatment with mecamylamine did not attenuate NDB-evoked increases
in GFAP staining.
 |
DISCUSSION |
The results of this study demonstrate the following. (1) Selective
chemolytic lesions of cholinergic neurons in NDB prevented or delayed
soman-induced Fos induction and increased GFAP in PC. (2) Focal
unilateral activation of NDB produced a pattern of effects similar to
those caused by soman: convulsions, robust induction of Fos, and
increased staining for GFAP in PC. (3) The anatomical distribution and
intensity of Fos and GFAP staining elicited by focal stimulation
exhibited a consistent spatiotemporal pattern, as previously reported
(Zimmer et al., 1997a ,b ). Fos staining was always observed in PC before
the neocortex and hippocampus. (4) The selective muscarinic cholinergic
receptor antagonist scopolamine prevented NDB-evoked seizures, Fos
expression, and increased GFAP staining. Taken together with our recent
findings (Zimmer et al., 1997a ,b ), the present results support the
hypothesis that the "nerve" gas soman causes increased ACh buildup
from NDB cholinergic terminals and protracted muscarinic receptor
activation of PC neurons. This, in turn, triggers increased neuronal
activity, seizures, and reactive gliosis in PC.
Extent and specificity of NDB lesions
PC receives a dense cholinergic input from the NDB in the basal
forebrain (Rye et al., 1984 ; Woolf et al., 1986 ). The accumulation of
endogenously released ACh in PC after soman may increase PC neuronal
activity and lead to seizures. To determine whether cholinergic NDB
terminals in PC play a role in the rapid induction of Fos after soman,
we destroyed NDB cholinergic neurons with the selective neurotoxin
192-IgG-saporin. 192-IgG-saporin binds to the
low-affinity NGF receptor, is internalized by the cell, and inhibits
protein synthesis, resulting in cell death (Wiley et al., 1991 ).
Because only cholinergic neurons in NDB contain the low-affinity NGF
receptor (Fisher et al., 1988 ; Gritti et al., 1993 ), microinjections of 192-IgG-saporin into the NDB selectively destroy these
neurons. In the present experiment the specificity of the
192-IgG-saporin lesions was evaluated in two ways: (1)
immunohistochemical staining for ChAT showed that cholinergic neurons
were eliminated from the region of NDB, and (2) noncholinergic cells,
as revealed by Nissl staining, were present throughout the lesion site.
192-IgG-saporin lesions eliminated AChE staining in the NDB
and in ipsilateral cortical regions receiving ACh input from the NDB,
including PC, the olfactory bulb, and the anterior cingulate cortex
(Lamour et al., 1984 ; Rye et al., 1984 ). Taken together, these findings indicate that there was a selective elimination of NDB-derived cholinergic terminals ipsilateral to the 192-IgG-saporin
lesion.
NDB lesions markedly attenuate soman-induced Fos staining
in PC
If soman-induced Fos in PC is caused by increased ACh, then Fos
expression in PC should be attenuated or delayed on the side of the
brain in animals with unilateral NDB lesions. Large increases in Fos
were present only in PC contralateral to the lesioned NDB by
45 min after soman. This indicates that intact cholinergic terminals in
PC are necessary for "rapid" increases in neuronal activity and Fos
staining after soman. By 90 min, Fos staining was present in PC
ipsilateral to the lesion. Thus, the effect of removing the cholinergic
input to PC is mainly to delay the onset of Fos expression. The most
reasonable explanation for this is that cholinergic input is required
for the initiation of seizures, but, in their absence, seizures
initiated in other brain structures may spread secondarily into PC. In
our previous study of the time course of expression of Fos after soman
(Zimmer et al., 1997a ), it was found that PC is the earliest cortical
area to express Fos, but with time, nearly all cortical areas will have
increased Fos. In the present experiments, Fos was expressed rapidly
(<45 min) in PC in the hemisphere where the cholinergic innervation was intact. Association neurons in PC project extensively to other cortical regions. There is a strong projection, via the anterior commissure, to the contralateral PC (Haberly and Price, 1978 ). Thus,
seizures initiated in PC of the intact hemisphere could spread to the
contralateral PC. In agreement with this, seizures triggered
unilaterally in PC have been shown to spread throughout the brain
bilaterally (Piredda and Gale, 1985 , 1986 ; Halonen et al., 1994 ). In
this regard, it would be interesting to determine whether transection
of the anterior commissure would prevent or further delay the induction
of Fos in the hemisphere ipsilateral to the NDB lesion.
Electrical stimulation of the NDB causes seizures and rapid Fos
staining in PC
The NDB lesion experiments are consistent with the hypothesis that
the NDB-PC cholinergic circuit is necessary for rapid increases in
neuronal activity and seizures after soman. If this is true, then it is
reasonable to predict that unilateral focal stimulation of NDB neurons
would lead to seizures and increased Fos expression, as does soman.
This prediction was supported by the finding that unilateral NDB
stimulation caused increased Fos staining in layer II neurons in the
ipsilateral PC by 45 min.
There are several potential limitations to these results, however.
Stimulation of the NDB may activate neurons and/or fiber tracts in the
NDB that are not cholinergic. Thus, noncholinergic inputs to PC could
cause seizures and/or Fos induction (Haberly and Price, 1978 ; Bobillier
et al., 1979 ; Fisher et al., 1988 ; Vertes, 1988 ; Gritti et al., 1993 ).
Also, activated cholinergic neurons may release other neurotransmitters
or neuropeptides colocalized with ACh, and these transmitters could
excite PC neurons and trigger seizures. Neither of these possibilities
appeared to play a significant role in the present experiments,
however, because muscarinic receptor antagonism prevented behavioral
convulsion, changes in EEG activity, and increased Fos and GFAP
staining caused by NDB stimulation. This indicates that increased
transmitter release from cholinergic terminals in PC activates layer II
neurons. Although both muscarinic (mAChR) and nicotinic (nAChR)
cholinergic receptors are present in PC (Wamsley et al., 1980 ; Buckley
et al., 1988 ; van der Zee et al., 1992 ; Hill et al., 1993 ), the nAChR
antagonist mecamylamine did not prevent seizures or increased Fos and
GFAP staining.
The cellular mechanism by which muscarinic receptor stimulation in PC
triggers seizures and Fos expression is not known. ACh and muscarinic
receptor agonists are known to increase the excitability of neurons
throughout the brain (Dodd et al., 1981 ; Halliwell and Adams, 1982 ;
Cole and Nicoll, 1984 ; McCormick and Prince, 1985 ; Nicoll, 1988 ).
Furthermore, muscarinic receptor activation may inhibit GABA release
from GABAergic interneurons, causing disinhibition of excitatory
neurons (Ben-Ari et al., 1981 Krnjevic, 1981 ; Krnjevic and Ropert,
1981 ). Taken together, these results support the hypothesis that rapid
increases in ACh release cause increased neuronal excitability via the
activation of muscarinic receptors in PC.
Seizures persist in the absence of electrical stimulation
After electrical stimulation of NDB, behavioral convulsions and
EEG spike wave activity persisted for the duration of the experiment.
Thus, seizures can persist in the absence of continued electrical
stimulation of the NDB. This suggests that neurons in PC that are
activated by continuous cholinergic muscarinic stimulation can maintain
high levels of activity after the cessation of cholinergic stimulation.
Muscarinic receptor activation dramatically increases the level and
duration of hippocampal pyramidal neuron responses to coactivation of
excitatory amino acid (EAA) inputs (Biscoe and Straughan, 1966 ; Dodd et
al., 1981 ; Benardo and Prince, 1982 ; Cole and Nicoll, 1984 ; McCormick
and Prince, 1985 ; Madison et al., 1987 ; Nieto-Sampedro and Berman,
1987 ; Nicoll, 1988 ) by reducing a slow afterhyperpolarization (AHP)
(Biscoe and Straughan, 1966 ; Dodd et al., 1981 ; Benardo and Prince,
1982 ; Halliwell and Adams, 1982 ; Cole and Nicoll, 1984 ; McCormick and
Prince, 1985 ; Nicoll, 1988 ). Reduction of the AHP leaves cortical
neurons susceptible to overexcitation by EAAs. Furthermore, it is known
that EAA activation of NMDA receptors is involved in the spread and
maintenance of seizures in the PC and the hippocampus (Millan et al.,
1986 ; Braitman and Sparenborg, 1989 ). In the present study, increased
synaptic ACh release during NDB stimulation may activate muscarinic
receptors in PC and attenuate AHPs that normally limit the excitability of PC neurons to EAAs. These neurons would become progressively more
excited by EAA inputs from the main olfactory bulb and associational synapses from other parts of the PC and, as a result, release more EAAs
from their own synaptic terminals in the PC and other cortical regions.
This would increase the intensity of neural activity in the PC and, via
associational PC axons, cause the spread of seizures to the cerebral
cortex. Intense neuronal activity in PC could activate NMDA receptors
located in PC. It is known that EAA activation of NMDA receptors is
involved in the spread and maintenance of seizures in PC and the
hippocampus (Millan et al., 1986 ; Braitman and Sparenborg, 1989 ). Thus,
NMDA receptor activation may maintain seizure activity after the
cessation of electrical stimulation of ACh inputs to PC.
An alternate hypothesis is that muscarinic activation initiates
long-lasting excitation of pyramidal cells in layer II/III of PC
because of slow depolarization after potentials (sADP). Bath
application of the muscarinic receptor agonist oxotremorine-M induces a
strong and persistent membrane depolarization, an increase in input
resistance, and a sustained neuronal discharge (>30 min) of pyramidal
cells in PC in vitro (Constanti et al., 1993 ). The sADP-responsive neurons are located in deep layer II/III of PC (Libri
et al., 1994 ). Muscarinic activation of sADP in layer II/III neurons
after ACh release from NDB terminals in PC could trigger sustained
neuronal activity and long-lasting seizure discharges that persist
after the cessation of ACh release.
ACh release from cholinergic nerve terminals in PC also may increase
pyramidal cell excitability in PC by suppressing inhibitory synaptic
input. Pyramidal cells in the hippocampus, when depolarized by a brief
train of action potentials, demonstrate decreased inhibitory (GABA-mediated) synaptic input (Pitler and Alger, 1992a , 1994 ). This
phenomenon is known as depolarization-induced suppression of inhibition
(DSI). Cholinergic receptor activation enhances DSI in the hippocampus
(Pitler and Alger, 1992b ; Martin and Alger, 1996 ). Although DSI has not
been demonstrated in PC, increased ACh release in PC in the present
experiments could suppress GABA-mediated inhibition in PC and increase
pyramidal cell activity. Increased pyramidal cell activity with
concomitant decreases in GABAergic activity may predispose pyramidal
cells in PC toward seizure-like activity.
In the present study, ACh release in PC triggers the initiation of
seizures after both NDB stimulation and soman administration, predominantly by the activation of muscarinic receptors. It is known
that repeated activation of neural pathways (kindling) can induce
seizures and an epileptic state. It has been demonstrated that kindling
induces synaptic reorganization (plasticity) and axonal sprouting in
limbic pathways (Sutula et al., 1988 ). Sutula and colleagues suggest
that alterations in limbic connectivity may make hippocampal pathways
more susceptible to epileptiform events. Increased neuronal activity as
observed in PC after soman administration may lead to permanent
alterations in PC connectivity. Changes in PC connectivity may make
neurons more susceptible to epileptic events and generalized seizures.
Exposure to anticholinesterases, such as soman, may lead to
dysfunctional plasticity in the CNS and permanent neurological
deficits. Changes in CNS connectivity may help to explain the
neurological complications of soldiers (Gulf War Syndrome) potentially
exposed to neurotoxins, such as soman, during the Gulf War.
Glia
Reactive gliosis occurs in response to injury, including
soman-induced seizures, in the mature CNS (Zimmer et al., 1997a ,b ). A
salient manifestation of reactive gliosis is an increase in GFAP, a
protein subunit of glial intermediate filaments found exclusively in
astrocytes in the CNS (Eng et al., 1971 ; Amaducci et al., 1981 ; Eng and
Shiurba, 1987 ). By 1 hr after soman, increased GFAP is present in
astrocytes in precisely the same layers of PC that contain neurons that
express Fos (Zimmer et al., 1997a ,b ). We previously suggested that this
rapid increase in GFAP is associated with increased neuronal activity
in neighboring PC neurons. If this is correct, then destruction of NDB
cholinergic neurons, which prevents or delays increased excitability of
PC neurons, should prevent or delay increased GFAP staining in PC.
Consistent with this hypothesis, 192-IgG-saporin lesions of
the NDB prevented increased GFAP staining in layer II astrocytes of the
ipsilateral PC within 1 hr after soman. GFAP staining in the
contralateral intact PC increased similarly to control intact animals.
This indicates that an intact cholinergic input is also necessary for
rapid reactivity of PC astrocytes after soman and supports the idea
that astrocytes respond to increased activity in neighboring neurons.
Consistent with this, by 2 hr after soman, increased GFAP staining was
observed bilaterally in PC and the hippocampus, consistent with the
observation that Fos expression is delayed from 45 to 90 min in the
NDB-lesioned animals.
NDB stimulation induced GFAP staining primarily in layer II of PC
ipsilateral to the stimulation site. Pretreatment with scopolamine, but
not mecamylamine, prevented increased GFAP staining after NDB
stimulation. Astrocytes have receptors for and physiologically respond
to ACh in culture (Murphy et al., 1986 ; Hosli et al., 1988 ; Salm and
McCarthy, 1989 , 1992 ; Cornell-Bell et al., 1990 ; Van Der Zee et al.,
1993 ). Thus, ACh could have a direct action on PC astrocytes via
muscarinic receptor activation. However, glial reactivity lags Fos
expression by approximately the same amount of time either when the
cholinergic input is intact or when it is destroyed and Fos expression
in PC neurons is delayed. This suggests that PC astrocytes respond to
signals from highly active adjacent neurons and not from direct
cholinergic stimulation. Neuronal activation, such as occurs during
seizures, increases extracellular levels of lactate and decreases
extracellular pH (Meric et al., 1994 ). A reduction in extracellular pH
in serum-free astrocyte cultures increased levels of GFAP staining with
a time course similar to that seen in the present experiments (Oh et al., 1995 ). Thus, during seizures, hyperactive neurons may produce excess lactate, causing local decreases in pH. This could activate adjacent astrocytes, leading to increased GFAP expression.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Sept. 29, 1997; revised Feb. 10, 1998; accepted March 3, 1998.
This work was supported by the U.S. Army Medical Research and
Development under contracts DAMD-17-91-C-1071 and DAMD-17-95-C-5031. The opinions and assertions contained herein are the private views of
the authors and are not to be construed as official or as reflecting the views of the U.S. Army or the Department of Defense.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Michael T. Shipley,
Department of Anatomy, University of Maryland School of Medicine, 685 West Baltimore Street, Baltimore, MD 21201.
 |
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Anatomical localization and time course of Fos expression following soman-induced seizures.
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Zimmer LA,
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(1997b)
Soman-induced seizures rapidly activate astrocytes and microglia in discrete brain regions.
J Comp Neurol
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Copyright © 1998 Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474/98/18103897-12$05.00/0
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