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The Journal of Neuroscience, November 1, 1998, 18(21):9055-9068
Anesthetics Eliminate Somatosensory-Evoked Discharges of Neurons
in the Somatotopically Organized Sensorimotor Striatum of the Rat
Mark O.
West
Department of Psychology, Rutgers University, New Brunswick,
New Jersey 08903
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ABSTRACT |
The somatotopic organization of the lateral striatum has been
demonstrated by anatomical studies of corticostriatal projections from
somatosensory and motor cortices and by single-cell recordings in awake
animals. The functional organization in the rat, characterized thus far
in the freely moving rat preparation, could be mapped more precisely if
a stereotaxic, and possibly an anesthetized, preparation could be used.
Because striatal discharges evoked by innocuous somatosensory
stimulation are used in mapping, this study tested whether such
discharges can be observed during anesthesia, encouraged by
responsiveness during anesthesia in somatosensory cortical layers
projecting to the striatum. Electrode tracks through lateral striatum
of anesthetized rats (pentobarbital or ketamine) revealed spontaneously
discharging neurons but no discharges evoked by somatosensory
examination (passive manipulation and cutaneous stimulation of
14 body parts). Similar tracks in chronically implanted rats
showed evoked firing at numerous sites during wakefulness but not
during anesthesia (pentobarbital or urethane). Comparisons of the
activity of individual neurons between wakefulness and anesthesia
showed that pentobarbital, ketamine, chloral hydrate, urethane, or
metofane eliminated evoked firing and suppressed spontaneous firing.
Recovery time was greater for neural than for behavioral measures.
Thus, mapping as proposed is ruled out, and more importantly, the data
show that somatotopically organized lateral striatal neurons stop
discharging in response to natural stimulation during anesthesia.
Available data indicate they do not reach threshold in response to
depolarizations produced by glutamatergic corticostriatal synaptic
transmission projected from the somatosensory cortex. These data and
demonstrations of anesthetic-induced imbalances in most striatal
neurotransmitters emphasize that many results regarding striatal
physiology and pharmacology during anesthesia cannot be extrapolated to
behavioral conditions, thus indicating the need for more empirical
testing in conscious animals.
Key words:
striatum; putamen; somatosensory; anesthesia; neurons; corticostriatal; neurophysiology
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INTRODUCTION |
The lateral striatum of primates
receives topographic projections from primary motor (MI) and
somatosensory (SI) cortices, creating a patchy somatotopy (Kunzle,
1975 , 1977 ; Selemon and Goldman-Rakic, 1985 ; Flaherty and Graybiel,
1993 , 1994 ). This has been corroborated by electrophysiological data
(Liles, 1979 ; Crutcher and DeLong, 1984a ; Alexander and DeLong, 1985 )
that correspond directly to the topography and patchiness of
corticostriatal inputs (Liles and Updyke, 1985 ). Likewise in rats, the
distribution and somatotopic organization of striatal neurons related
functionally to individual body parts (Carelli and West, 1991 ; Mittler
et al., 1994 ; Cho and West, 1997 ) correspond to topographies of SI and MI corticostriatal projections (McGeorge and Faull, 1989 ; Ebrahimi et
al., 1992 ; Kincaid and Wilson, 1996 ). Functional properties of striatal
neurons parallel those of SI and MI neurons (Evarts, 1974 ; Lemon and
Porter, 1976 ; Fetz et al., 1980 ; Soso and Fetz, 1980 ; Chapin and
Woodward, 1981 , 1986 ; Chapin and Lin, 1984 ; Tanji and Kurata, 1985 ;
Chapin, 1986 ; Favorov et al., 1988 ; Crutcher and Alexander, 1990 ;
Stern et al., 1997 ) and may reflect convergence of SI and MI
corticostriatal projections (West et al., 1990 ; Carelli and West, 1991 ;
Flaherty and Graybiel, 1993 ). Because other striatal afferents
show little correspondence to these striatal features (Peschanski et
al., 1981 ; Steinfels et al., 1981 ; DeLong et al., 1983 ; Schultz et al.,
1983 ; Schultz, 1986 ; Romo and Schultz, 1990 ; Ljungberg et al., 1992 ;
Chudler and Dong, 1995 ), the transmission of detailed somatosensory and
motor information to the somatotopically organized lateral striatum is
attributable to the corticostriatal system.
Detailed three-dimensional reconstructions of the lateral striatum,
based on locations of sensorimotor-activated neurons and their
clusters, were obtained for individual monkeys during head restraint
(Crutcher and DeLong, 1984a ; Alexander and DeLong, 1985 ) but have not
been readily obtainable with freely moving rats. In individual rats,
similar maps would be valuable for comparison with patch/matrix
compartmentalization (Donoghue and Herkenham, 1986 ; Gerfen, 1989 ;
Trytek et al., 1996 ) and for evaluating hypotheses based on the detail
of corticostriatal projections (Kincaid et al., 1998 ). Precise mapping
could be accomplished if a stereotaxic could be used, possibly with the
anesthetized rat preparation. But this would require that, during
anesthesia, striatal neurons discharge in response to innocuous
somatosensory stimulation, as they do during wakefulness (Carelli and
West, 1991 ). Indeed they might, given that SI has been accurately
mapped during anesthesia because of the responsiveness of SI neurons
(Welker, 1971 , 1976 ; Hall and Lindholm, 1974 ; Armstrong-James, 1975 ;
Waterhouse and Woodward, 1980 ; Lamour et al., 1983 ; Chapin, 1986 ;
Stryker et al., 1987 ; Simons et al., 1992 ), including those in layers
III and V from which SI corticostriatal projections arise (Kincaid and
Wilson, 1996 ). Previously, striatal neurons in anesthetized rats showed
far fewer discharges evoked by innocuous than by noxious somatosensory
stimuli (Richards and Taylor, 1982 ; Chudler et al., 1993 ), the latter
discharges apparently involving, instead, thalamostriatal afferents
(Chudler and Dong, 1995 ). Nonetheless, recent information regarding
somatotopic organization and sensitivity to innocuous somatosensory
stimuli (Carelli and West, 1991 ; Cho and West, 1997 ) could now guide
mapping studies during anesthesia by providing stereotaxic coordinates
for locating striatal neurons related to each body part and optimal
stimulus parameters. The present study tested whether innocuous
somatosensory stimulation evokes discharges of striatal neurons during
anesthesia. The negative results obtained militate against such mapping
and raise questions concerning the generality of many findings obtained
from the striatum of anesthetized animals.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Recording. Action potentials of single neurons were
recorded extracellularly with tungsten microelectrodes (10 M ; Haer,
Brunswick, ME) with a bandpass filter (500-8000 Hz).
Discrimination of waveforms used two window discriminators in series:
first a World Precision Instruments model 121, whose acceptance pulse
triggered a BAK Electronics Time Amplitude discriminator model
DIS-1, whose acceptance pulse entered the computer and was
time-stamped. These potentials were obtained from neurons intrinsic to
the striatum and not from fibers of passage. This was confirmed by
constructing a "depth profile" of neuronal activity as each
electrode was advanced through the neocortex and into the striatum.
Immediately ventral to a region containing large spikes characteristic
of neurons in deep cortical layers, a "quiet zone" (200-400 µm
in distance) was consistently observed in which no neuronal discharges
were recorded. Histological reconstruction verified that this quiet
zone corresponded to white matter of the corpus callosum or external
capsule. Hence, it was concluded that the present electrodes did not
detect axonal spikes, including those in axon bundles coursing through
the striatum.
Determination of neuronal activity related to individual body
parts. The body was divided into 14 regions or categories.
Ipsilateral and contralateral differentiations were made for forelimbs,
hindlimbs, vibrissae, shoulders, and trunk; the remaining four
categories were the head, neck, snout, and oral region (lip, chin, or
tongue). Determinations of neuronal discharge in relation to a
particular category or body part were accomplished by listening through
headphones to the audio record (amplified bandpass filter output) while
testing at each recording site during passive manipulation and/or
cutaneous stimulation of each of the 14 body parts. Each responsive
neuron discharged during stimulation of only one body part and thus was assigned unambiguously to a particular category. Cutaneous stimulation was delivered via a handheld probe (2 mm in diameter), calibrated to
deliver 1-2 g of force. Only non-noxious stimulation was
administered. The occurrence of spontaneous or evoked movements
contributed to the identification of neurons in certain categories
(limbs, neck, and oral). Further details of all procedures used for the somatosensory exam have been reported previously (Carelli and West,
1991 ; Cho and West, 1997 ). In experiments in chronically implanted
animals, care was taken to administer somatosensory stimulation in the
predrug condition in a manner that could be replicated in the
anesthetized condition. Consistent with this, trials containing any
visible active movement were excluded from analysis. Furthermore,
experiments in which the same single neuron was recorded across awake
and anesthetized conditions were performed only on neurons that fired
during cutaneous stimulation or passive manipulation and not on neurons
that fired exclusively during active movement.
Acute anesthetized preparations. Long-Evans male rats
(Charles River Laboratories, Wilmington, MA), >90 d of age (300-350 gm), were anesthetized by intraperitoneal injections of (1) sodium pentobarbital (n = 6; 35 mg/kg) supplemented with
chloral hydrate (175 mg/kg) or of (2) ketamine hydrochloride
(n = 1; 100 mg/kg). Body temperature was monitored via
a rectal probe (Yellow Springs Instruments model 43TA) and maintained
between 35 and 37°C with a heating pad (American Medical Systems
Aquamatic K-20). A hole was drilled unilaterally in the skull overlying
the lateral striatum, and the exposed cortex was covered with mineral
oil. Electrodes were lowered vertically, while delivering somatosensory
stimulation and searching for spontaneous or evoked neural
discharges.
Chronically implanted preparations. A separate group of
subjects (n = 12) was surgically prepared for recording
in the awake, unrestrained state by implantation of a miniature
microelectrode drive (microdrive) assembly (Josef Biela Engineering,
Anaheim, CA). Details of the surgical preparation, microdrive, and
behavioral chamber have been reported (Deadwyler et al., 1979 ;
West and Woodward, 1984 ; Carelli and West, 1991 ). The microdrive base
was attached to either side (level skull) and aimed at the lateral
striatum, either (1) at medial-lateral, 6.0 mm, and
anterior-posterior, 0 to 0.3 mm, at an angle of 30-45° toward the
midline; (2) at medial-lateral, 3.6 mm, and anterior-posterior, +0.5
mm, at an angle of 8° away from the midline; or (3) at
medial-lateral, 3.5 mm, and anterior-posterior, +0.5 mm, parallel to
the dorsoventral axis, i.e., perpendicular to the level skull.
Recording sessions began 1 week after surgery. The microdrive was
equipped daily with a tungsten microelectrode (10 M ; Haer).
Each complete, manual rotation of the outer cylinder of the microdrive
advanced the electrode 400 µm (without rotating the electrode).
Electrodes were advanced through the striatum in increments of 25-50
µm, each increment constituting a separate recording site that
underwent a complete somatosensory exam. All data are reported in terms
of 50 µm increments to maximize the number of sites tested and yet to
avoid sampling the same neuron twice. The information regarding
somatosensory-evoked discharges at all sites in a single electrode
track was used to construct a depth profile for that track.
For certain experiments, anesthetics were administered to chronically
implanted animals. Sodium pentobarbital (Abbott Labs, Irving, TX),
chloral hydrate (Sigma, St. Louis, MO), urethane (ethyl carbamate;
Sigma), and ketamine hydrochloride (Phoenix Scientific, St. Joseph, MO)
were administered by intraperitoneal injection. Metofane
(methoxyflurane; Mallinckrodt, Mundelein, IL) was administered via a
metofane-dampened paper towel inserted into the ventilated behavioral
chamber. Animals receiving chloral hydrate were killed for histology
(see below) within a week after injection to avoid the complication of
adynamic ileum (Fleischman et al., 1977 ). Animals receiving urethane
were killed for histology before regaining full consciousness (within
12 hr) to avoid carcinogenic effects [Flecknell (1987) , his pp
40, 67].
The anesthetic state and the recovery from it were assessed similarly
for all anesthetics by monitoring typical behavioral signs of
anesthesia, including loss of posture and muscle tone, loss of
orienting responses to somatosensory examination, and loss of reflex
tail movement in response to tail pinch. No attempt was made to
differentiate among anesthetics with respect to these measures (Field
et al., 1993 ). Also, no systematic attempt was made to characterize
different depths of anesthesia.
Poststimulus time histograms (PSTH) and raster displays were
constructed to show stimulus-evoked firing. Evoked firing rates were
calculated during the "evoked response epoch," defined for each
neuron by visual inspection of PSTHs. Baseline firing rates were
calculated from the same PSTH, during the period before stimulus onset
("baseline epoch"). Within the PSTH, this baseline epoch was the
most remote from any lingering influence of previous stimulus-evoked discharges (no such influence was evident). Stimuli were presented typically 3 sec apart, but at least 1.5 sec apart. Three methods were
used to generate a time-stamp (node) of the approximate onset of each
somatosensory stimulus; only one method was used for constructing any
given PSTH. These methods were (1) the experimenter's simultaneous key
press to trigger the computer, (2) frame-by-frame analysis of videotape
recordings in which each video frame was time-stamped by the computer
(Carelli and West, 1991 ), and (3) a DC pulse delivered to the computer
instantaneously on contact of a bipolar probe (1-4 g of
force) with the animal (Prokopenko et al., 1997 ). Probes used for
cutaneous stimulation were manually held and traveled a total distance
of ~3 cm in 0.15 sec (~20 cm/sec velocity).
Histological reconstruction of electrode positions. After
completion of the last recording track in each chronically implanted animal (n = 10, after excluding one animal injected
with pentobarbital and one with urethane), a low-impedance insulated
wire (200 µm in diameter) was placed in the same location as that at
which a particular neuron had been studied before and after anesthetic or, in other cases, at which a particular neuronal recording had been
obtained. The subject was deeply anesthetized with sodium pentobarbital
(150 mg/kg), and an electrolytic lesion (0.03 mA; 10-30 sec) was made
at the tip of the wire. Animals were then intracardially perfused with
10% formalin, and coronal sections were sliced (50 µm thick) and
stained with cresyl violet. The location of the lesion was used to
verify the locations of all neurons recorded from the animal. This was
achieved by accounting for (1) the dorsoventral distance between the
lesion site and each recording site, (2) the coordinate and angle of
the recording track, and (3) the measured eccentricity of the electrode
within the microdrive. The position of any given electrode track was plotted on an enlarged coronal diagram (Paxinos and Watson, 1996 ) corresponding most closely to its anterior-posterior coordinate.
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RESULTS |
General description of the sample
Depth profiles constructed from 126 electrode tracks contained a
total of 3285 sites in the striatum from which electrophysiological recordings were obtained under awake or anesthetized conditions (Table
1). The extracellular action potentials
of nearly all recorded neurons (e.g., see Figs. 3-6, waveforms) showed
an initial, fast negativity (duration, 0.2 msec) followed by a slower
positive-negative wave (total duration of waveform, 1.5-2.0 msec).
Spontaneous firing rates were very low and increased phasically during
sensorimotor activity. These characteristics are consistent with those
of type II, spiny projection neurons (Kimura, 1990 ; Gerfen and Wilson, 1996 ).
Of 2662 sites in 82 tracks through the lateral striatum tested in the
awake, unrestrained state, 1924 sites (72%) exhibited neuronal firing.
Of this neuronal sample, 1068 neurons (56%) fired specifically in
relation to sensorimotor activity of an individual body part. Of these
1068 body part neurons, 821 were appropriately tested for
responsiveness to somatosensory stimulation (passive manipulation or
cutaneous stimulation) of that same body part. The majority, i.e., 595 body part neurons (72%), showed somatosensory-evoked firing, equaling
27% of the 2246 sites appropriately tested. The remaining 226 body
part neurons did not fire during sensory stimulation but fired only
during active movement of the related body part. These 226 "active-only" neurons were not considered further, because they
could not be compared equitably between awake and anesthetized conditions. The remaining 44% of the whole neuronal sample (856 neurons) exhibited firing but did not fire in relation to sensorimotor activity of individual body parts; these also were not considered further. These categories and proportions are in general agreement with
those of two separate striatal samples (Carelli and West, 1991 ;
Cho and West, 1997 ).
Acute anesthetized preparations
Twenty-nine electrode tracks were made in six animals anesthetized
with pentobarbital (35-45 mg/kg; supplemented with chloral hydrate at
175 mg/kg), and eight tracks were made in one animal anesthetized with
ketamine (100 mg/kg). This sample consisted of 326 striatal recording
sites at which somatosensory probing of all body parts was performed;
173 of these sites exhibited spontaneously discharging neurons. Figure
1 demonstrates that these electrode
tracks traversed the lateral striatum, which is the location of the
somatotopically organized neurons responsive to somatosensory
stimulation of individual body parts in awake rats (e.g., Carelli and
West, 1991 ; Cho and West, 1997 ). However, under anesthesia, not a
single case was observed in which a striatal neuron showed
somatosensory-evoked firing. In contrast, during the advancing of these
electrodes through the somatosensory cortex (toward the striatum),
cortical neurons fired during somatosensory stimulation of individual
body parts, as documented extensively for SI cortex of
pentobarbital-anesthetized rats (Welker, 1971 , 1976 ; Hall and Lindholm,
1974 ; Chapin and Lin, 1984 ; Chapin, 1986 ).

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Figure 1.
Locations of all 37 electrode tracks through
the lateral striatum of seven acute anesthetized animals. (In 8 cases,
2 tracks were located within 0.1 mm of each other and are shown as
one.) Bold numbers indicate the anterior-posterior
coordinate (millimeters from bregma) of each coronal diagram (Paxinos
and Watson, 1996 ). Of 326 recording sites tested, 173 neurons were
recorded; not one showed evoked firing in response to somatosensory
stimulation. Line lengths indicate the dorsoventral
distance of penetration into the striatum of pentobarbital-
(solid lines) or ketamine- (dashed lines)
anesthetized animals. The calibration for all diagrams is shown in the
coronal diagram at the lower right; each of
the three tracks at 0.80 anterior-posterior is 2.0 mm in
dorsoventral length. In each diagram, medial is to the
left, and lateral is to the right.
Acb, Nucleus accumbens septi; cc, corpus
callosum; CPu, caudate-putamen; GP,
globus pallidus.
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Chronic preparations: effect of pentobarbital on electrode
track profiles
The absence of striatal somatosensory-evoked discharges in
anesthetized rats (Fig. 1) thus seems to differ both from the presence of these discharges in unanesthetized rats and the presence of such
discharges of SI cortical neurons in anesthetized rats. Although these
differences appear to reflect the effects of anesthesia on striatal
neurons, it is possible that electrode tracks (Fig. 1) failed in some
way to sample responsive striatal neurons. Therefore, a direct
comparison of electrode track depth profiles between anesthetized versus awake conditions was made in five chronically implanted rats (four with pentobarbital; one with urethane described later, see Fig. 6). After first making a complete penetration through
the lateral striatum in the awake condition, the electrode was
retracted, and the animal was given a general anesthetic dose of
pentobarbital (50 mg/kg). After allowing the tissue to settle for 20 min, the penetration was repeated.
All profiles in the awake (Pre) condition revealed, at particular
depths, clusters of single neurons that fired in relation to
somatosensory stimulation of a particular part of the body (Fig.
2, uppercase letters). In
contrast to the Pre condition, repetition of the electrode track 20 min
after pentobarbital injection showed not a single neuron that fired in
response to somatosensory stimulation in any of the four tracks
studied. Two representative profiles are illustrated in Figure 2
(left, middle). This lack of evoked firing was
observed in spite of the advantage gained from the first penetration
(Pre) of knowing how and where to apply the stimulation at each
particular depth. Unlike in the awake state, recordings from neurons in
the same track (potentially some of the same neurons) during anesthesia
were characterized by a lack of both evoked and, in many cases,
spontaneous firing (Fig. 2, blank spaces). Neural
activity under anesthesia, sometimes encountered at depths identical to
depths at which neurons were recorded in the first track, typically
consisted only of a burst of discharges for 1-2 sec immediately after
the electrode was advanced, followed by a cessation of all firing.

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Figure 2.
Three pairs of depth profiles through the lateral
striatum. For each pair, penetrations were made along the same track
before (Pre) and after injection of pentobarbital
(Pentobarb.) or saline (Saline).
Below each pair is a coronal diagram (Paxinos and
Watson, 1996 ) nearest to the histologically verified location of the
track. Tracks are marked in 1 mm divisions corresponding to the
vertical scale at the far left (0 mm = point of entry into the striatum). Diagrams are labeled in
millimeters anterior-posterior from bregma: 0.48 (left
pair), 0.26, (middle pair), and 0.40
(right pair). A complete somatosensory exam was
conducted every 50 µm. Uppercase letters indicate
neurons responsive to somatosensory stimulation of individual body
parts (F, forelimb; H, hindlimb;
N, neck; V, vibrissae). Lowercase
letters indicate neurons related only to active movement of a
body part (n, neck); active-only firing was excluded
from all analyses because it could not be compared between awake and
anesthetized conditions. Slash, Neuron related to
general movement; hyphen, neuron showing no evoked
firing; blank space, no neuron recorded. Profiles were
obtained from animals C39 (middle) and C44
(left and right).
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Two additional experiments were performed in awake animals to test
whether this absence of evoked firing on the second penetration may
have been caused simply by some adverse effect of repeating the
penetration through the same tissue. In these experiments, the second
penetration followed a saline (0.2 ml) rather than a pentobarbital
injection. In both cases, the second depth profile closely matched the
first, particularly in the important respect that the same body parts
were represented at approximately the same depths. The pair of profiles
for one such experiment is shown in Figure 2 (right).
(Between penetrations, variation in the vertical length measured for a
given cluster could be explained by a combination of technical
variables, such as (1) tissue dimpling, (2) slight variation in the
dorsoventral, mediolateral, or anteroposterior dimensions because of
manipulation of the microdrive between penetrations, or (3)
between-test variability in the firing of neurons with weak
responsiveness to sensory stimulation of a body part.) These results
demonstrate the ability of the second penetration to sample the same or
similar neurons and homogeneous clusters of neurons which had been
sampled in the first penetration. Thus, the lack of sensory-evoked
firing during anesthesia (always assessed in the second penetration)
cannot be attributed to having compromised the tissue or the electrode
during the first penetration.
Chronic preparations: effects of anesthetics on
individual neurons
Results of the above, initial attempts at mapping (by constructing
electrode track profiles) in acute anesthetized or chronically implanted rats indicated that such mapping would not be possible under
anesthesia induced by pentobarbital/chloral hydrate, ketamine, or
urethane (see Fig. 6). To verify that the loss of somatosensory-evoked firing under anesthesia was demonstrable for the same striatal neuron
across conditions, additional testing was conducted in nine chronically
implanted animals. A single electrode location was maintained to record
from one neuron throughout the time course of awake (pre),
anesthetized, and awake (recovery) conditions. After first lowering the
electrode into the striatum and then allowing it to settle for at least
1 hr, we located a single neuron firing in response to a specific
somatosensory stimulus that could be repeated reliably under each
condition.
Elimination by pentobarbital of individual neuron
evoked firing
Figure 3 shows the effects of
pentobarbital at relatively low doses, i.e., 33 mg/kg (left)
and 27 mg/kg (right), on the firing of two neurons. For one
neuron that fired in response to passive manipulation of the
contralateral forelimb, pentobarbital reduced evoked firing by 99%,
from 17 to 0.17 discharges per stimulus. The baseline mean firing rate
was reduced from 2.9 to 0.35 Hz. For another neuron that fired
specifically in response to cutaneous stimulation on the contralateral
trunk, pentobarbital reduced evoked firing by 96%, from 4.7 to 0.17 discharges per stimulus. The baseline mean firing rate was reduced from
2.1 to 0.16 Hz. In both cases, the mean firing rate during the evoked
response epoch showed little or no difference from the baseline mean
firing rate under anesthesia, so that no evoked firing could be
discerned from background firing. These effects coincided with typical
behavioral signs of anesthesia (see Materials and Methods). The low
anesthetic level was reflected in the short latency with which animals
resumed conscious behaviors: drinking at 30 min (right) and
60 min (left) and first locomotion at 45 min
(right) and 70 min (left) after injection. Both
neurons showed gradual recovery of evoked and baseline firing
after the animals had recovered behaviorally (Fig. 3).

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Figure 3.
Effects of pentobarbital (left, 33 mg/kg; right, 27.4 mg/kg) on somatosensory evoked firing
of two striatal neurons in chronically implanted animals. In each
column, the raster and PSTH below it
display firing of one neuron before (top), during
(middle), and after partial or complete recovery
(bottom) from pentobarbital anesthesia.
Arrows at time 0 indicate the approximate stimulus
onset. Left, Neuron responsive to passive manipulation
of the contralateral forelimb in rat C44. Evoked discharges per
stimulus were 17 (Pre), 0.17 (Pentobarb.), and 29 (Recovery). The
evoked response epoch was time 0 to 1.0 sec; the baseline epoch was
0.6 to 0.1 sec. The stimulus duration ranged between 0.5 and 1.0 sec. The pentobarbital PSTH was taken 40 min after injection. The
number of sweeps in each condition was 53. Right, Neuron
with receptive field on the contralateral, dorsal trunk between the
forelimb and hindlimb in rat C45. Evoked discharges per stimulus were
4.7 (Pre), 0.17 (Pentobarb.), and 1.8 (Recovery). The pentobarbital PSTH was taken 20 min
after injection. The evoked response epoch was time 0 to 0.35 sec; the
baseline epoch was 0.4 to 0.1 sec. The stimulus duration ranged
between 0.1 and 0.3 sec. The number of sweeps in each condition was
150. Inset, Representative neural waveform in this and
subsequent figures was maintained throughout the experiment, indicating
no change in electrode position. Waveform calibration: 0.2 mV, 1.0 msec. Location of each neuron: 0.8-1.0 mm (left) and
0.4-0.5 mm (right) inside the dorsolateral edge of the
striatum, as in the electrode tracks at the bottom of
Figure 2.
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Similar results (data not shown) were obtained once more in each
animal, with at least 1 week intervening between injections. In one
animal, the firing of a neuron specifically in response to light
tapping of the snout decreased by 90% (from 8.2 to 0.8 evoked
discharges per stimulus) under anesthesia 20 min after injection of a
low dose of pentobarbital (26 mg/kg). Again (as in Fig. 3), the firing
rate during the response epoch was no different from the baseline
firing rate. This loss of evoked firing was followed by partial
recovery, to 34% of the response, 3 hr after injection. In contrast,
behavioral recovery from anesthesia began with drinking 35 min after
injection, followed by full recovery of all measures at 1.7 hr.
In the other animal (departing from the above procedure), the firing of
a neuron evoked by passive manipulation of the contralateral hindlimb
was recorded during wakefulness at a depth of 900 µm into the
striatum. When the track was repeated 20 min after injection of
pentobarbital (35 mg/kg), no trace of evoked firing was recorded at
this depth. This absence of evoked firing did not appear to be
attributable to spurious testing at depths that did not match those
before injection; whereas a cluster of hindlimb neurons was recorded
before injection at three consecutive 25 µm intervals (875, 900, and
925 µm), neurons recorded at these same depths after injection
exhibited low spontaneous firing rates and no evoked firing.
Elimination by ketamine of individual neuron evoked firing
Figure 4 shows the effects of
increasing doses of ketamine on the firing of a neuron that discharged
in response to cutaneous stimulation specifically of the upper lip. Ten
minutes after injection of a subanesthetic dose of 40 mg/kg, the animal
was not anesthetized and frequently attempted to move from the
experimenter's manual restraint. Nonetheless, evoked firing had been
reduced rapidly by 97%, from 11.4 to 0.39 discharges per stimulus
(Fig. 4, top vs second panel). Two
additional injections of 40 mg/kg each (cumulative dose = 120 mg/kg injected over 35 min) were required to eliminate all voluntary
movement. At this point (Fig. 4, third panel),
evoked firing had ceased, leaving only spontaneous firing (baseline
mean of 3.0 Hz compared with 7.3 Hz for Pre). Two hours after the first injection, the animal had recovered enough to locomote continuously and
to sniff in the corners of the chamber. However, somatosensory-evoked firing of the neuron did not begin to recover until 5 hr after the
first injection (Fig. 4, bottom panel).

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Figure 4.
Elimination by ketamine of the evoked firing of a
striatal neuron in response to light cutaneous stimulation in
chronically implanted animal. The upper lip was near the center of the
receptive field, which included the perioral area and snout. Each of
four panels shows the raster, PSTH, and representative
waveform of the neuron at different stages ofthe experiment. Top panel
(Pre), Control response during the alert state before
injection. Second panel, Ten minutes after injection of
a subanesthetic dose of ketamine (40 mg/kg, i.p.). Third
panel, After two additional injections of ketamine, 40 mg/kg
each. Bottom panel, Partial recovery of evoked firing 5 hr after the initial injection. The number of sweeps in each condition
was 100. The average stimulus duration (determined from videotape) was
100 msec. The evoked response epoch was time 0 to 0.35 sec; the
baseline epoch was 0.3 to 0.05 sec. Each tick on the
x-axis = 50 msec; each bin = 6 msec.
Arrows at time 0 indicate the approximate stimulus
onset. Waveform calibration (bottom right):
vertical bar, 0.2 mV; duration of each
trace, 2.0 msec.
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Elimination by chloral hydrate of individual neuron
evoked firing
Figure 5 shows the effects of
chloral hydrate anesthesia (and one subanesthetic dose) on
somatosensory-evoked firing of two striatal neurons (left,
right). One neuron related specifically to the contralateral
forepaw fired in response to a discrete, light tap (1-2 g
of force) on the last digit. Evoked (mean = 5.8 discharges per
stimulus) and baseline (mean = 5.5 Hz) firing rates were reduced
by >80% 20 min after injection of a low dose of chloral hydrate (175 mg/kg). The animal was not deeply anesthetized and occasionally made
spontaneous body and limb movements. An additional 175 mg/kg dose,
administered 45 min after the first injection (cumulative dose = 350 mg/kg), produced anesthesia. Firing evoked by forepaw stimulation
ceased under anesthesia but partially recovered 2.7 hr after the
initial injection. The baseline firing rate was similarly affected. At
2.5 hr after the initial injection, the animal was upright and alert,
having recovered behaviorally.

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Figure 5.
Elimination of cutaneous evoked discharges of two
striatal neurons (left and right) in
chronically implanted animals during chloral hydrate anesthesia. The
raster, PSTH, and representative waveform of each neuron are shown for
control (PRE) and for each dose and time period after
injection. Left, The receptive field of the neuron
included the whole contralateral forepaw up to the elbow in rat
C100. The evoked response epoch was time 0 to 0.2 sec; the
baseline epoch was 0.2 to 0 sec. The duration of the tap ranged
between 0.1 and 0.2 sec; 75 sweeps were in each condition.
Right, The neuron responded to soft brushing of the
contralateral shoulder (brush tip, 5 mm × 10 mm; bristle length,
20 mm) in rat C98. The evoked response epoch was time 0 to 0.35 sec;
the baseline epoch was 0.2 to 0 sec. The duration of the brush stroke
was ~0.3 sec; 90 sweeps were in each condition. Histological analysis
verified that both neurons were located in the striatum, within 0.5 mm
of its dorsolateral edge, as in the electrode track at the
bottom left of Figure 2 (4.0 mm lateral to the midline;
0.5 mm anterior to bregma). Bin width = 6 msec. Each
tick on the x-axis = 50 msec.
Arrows at time 0 indicate the approximate stimulus
onset. Calibration (bars at right): for
PSTHs, vertical bar, 20 discharges per bin; for
waveforms, horizontal bar, 2.0 msec, and vertical
bar, 0.15 mV (left) and 0.12 mV
(right).
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In the other animal, a neuron related specifically to activity of the
contralateral shoulder fired in response to light stroking of the fur
on the shoulder with a soft brush. Evoked firing (mean = 9.9 discharges per stimulus) ceased, and the baseline firing rate (mean = 1.0 Hz) was virtually eliminated after a single
injection of an anesthetic dose (400 mg/kg) of chloral hydrate (Fig. 5, right, 20 min after injection). Both neural measures showed
partial recovery by the end of the experiment, 5 hr after injection. At that time the animal had recovered upright posture and was orienting to
various somatosensory stimuli, having begun to locomote at 2.8 hr after
injection.
In both animals, during general anesthesia, the spontaneous firing rate
was near zero, except for rare, isolated discharges (Fig. 5,
inset waveforms).
Elimination by urethane of individual neuron evoked firing
Somatosensory-evoked firing was studied in four additional
animals before and after intraperitoneal injection of urethane. Three
animals received a single dose of 1.3 gm/kg. One animal (N4) was not
anesthetized by this dose (perhaps because of accumulation of drug in
the adipose tissue of this animal, which weighed 0.5 kg and was >6
months of age) and therefore received subsequent injections so that the
cumulative dose was 2.2 gm/kg. In all four animals, urethane eliminated
evoked firing.
Figure 6 (top) shows the
effects of urethane in two animals that were fully anesthetized at the
1.3 gm/kg dose. In rat N3, the firing of a neuron evoked by passive
extension of the contralateral forelimb was eliminated, decreasing from
4.4 to 0.11 discharges per stimulus 2 hr after injection. At this time,
the firing rate during the response epoch was no different from the
baseline firing rate. The baseline mean firing rate was reduced from
1.2 to 0.27 Hz. At 3 hr after injection, a small evoked discharge
(2.5% of control) corresponded to transient variations in the depth of anesthesia (see below). Depth profiles (48 sites tested before and 4 hr
after injection) in this animal showed somatosensory-evoked firing at
19 sites before injection but at only one site 4 hr after
injection.

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Figure 6.
Elimination of somatosensory-evoked discharges of
striatal neurons by urethane in four chronically implanted animals.
Far left, Two electrode track profiles through the
striatum (50 µm increments) obtained from rat N3 before
(Pre) and 4 hr after injection of urethane (1.3 gm/kg).
Pre profile (left) was obtained first;
then the electrode was raised to the dorsalmost position to record the
activity of the forelimb neuron (shown in top PSTH of
top left quadrant). Then urethane was injected, and the
activity of the same forelimb neuron was recorded for the next 4 hr,
after which the second profile (4 hr) was obtained.
Below the profiles, a coronal diagram (Paxinos and Watson, 1996 ) shows
their approximate location, 0.26 mm (anterior-posterior) and 4.0 mm
(medial-lateral); hash marks are at each millimeter.
Uppercase O, Neuron responsive to perioral stimulation;
lowercase o, neuron correlated with licking;
hyphen, neuron showing no discharges evoked by
somatosensory stimulation. Details are described in the Figure 2
legend. Four quadrants, Histograms (and rasters
above each) displaying the discharges of four neurons
evoked by somatosensory stimulation in the four animals injected with
urethane. Top panel in each quadrant,
Awake state before injection. Lower panels in
each quadrant, Specific times after injection. Each
tick on the x-axis = 50 msec; bin
width = 10 msec. Arrows indicate the approximate
stimulus onset. For each of the four neurons, a representative waveform
is shown from each time period for which a PSTH is displayed. Waveform
calibration (bottom left): 0.2 mV; 1.0 sec. Top
left quadrant (Figure legend continues),Forelimb neuron recorded at top location of
profiles at far left in rat N3. (The neuron showed no
evoked firing at 4 hr after injection but showed some evoked discharges
in PSTH at 3 hr.) The evoked response epoch was 0 to 0.35 sec; the
baseline epoch was 0.35 to 0.05 sec. Stimulus duration was ~200
msec; 150 sweeps were in each condition. Top right
quadrant, Neuron responsive to perioral stimulation recorded in
rat C117. The evoked response epoch was 0 to 0.3 sec; the baseline
epoch was 0.35 to 0.05 sec. Stimulus duration was ~150 msec; 200 sweeps were in each condition. Lower left quadrant,
Neuron responsive to cutaneous stimulation of the trunk in rat N4. The
evoked response epoch was 0 to 0.3 sec; the baseline epoch was 0.35
to 0 sec. Stimulus duration was ~100 msec; 200 sweeps were in each
condition. Lower right quadrant, Neuron responsive to
cutaneous stimulation of the perioral area in rat N2. The evoked
response epoch was 0 to 0.25 sec; the baseline epoch was 0.35 to 0 sec. Stimulus duration was ~150 msec; 100 sweeps were in each
condition.
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In rat C117, firing evoked specifically by cutaneous stimulation of the
contralateral perioral area ceased, decreasing from 1.1 to 0 discharges
per stimulus 2 hr after injection of urethane. The spontaneous firing
rate, compared with a mean of 1.1 Hz before injection, consisted only
of rare, isolated discharges (Fig. 6, inset
waveform).
Similar elimination of evoked firing was observed in the other two
animals (Fig. 6, bottom). In rat N4, the firing of a neuron in response specifically to cutaneous stimulation of the contralateral trunk was reduced by 88%, from 2.4 to 0.3 discharges per stimulus, 45 min after the last injection of urethane (cumulative dose = 2.2 gm/kg). The baseline mean firing rate was slightly increased from 0.65 to 0.85 Hz, so that the baseline (0.85 Hz) differed little from the
firing rate in the response epoch (0.99 Hz) during anesthesia. In rat
N2, firing evoked specifically by cutaneous stimulation of the
contralateral perioral area ceased, decreasing from 4.8 to 0.03 discharges per stimulus 20 min after injection of urethane (1.3 mg/kg).
The baseline mean firing rate was reduced from 5.5 to 0.36 Hz.
In all four animals, a low level of evoked firing returned later (Fig.
6, e.g., rat N3, PSTH at 3 hr and depth profile, one forelimb neuron at
4 hr; Rat C117, PSTH at 4 hr). This corresponded, in every case, to
signs of the weakening effects of urethane, i.e., chewing or movements
of the head or limbs. These episodes were transient, brief
interruptions of otherwise prolonged periods of anesthesia. No
assessment was made of recovery from urethane anesthesia, which can
exceed 24 hr (Field et al., 1993 ).
Elimination by metofane of individual neuron evoked firing
Similar results were obtained during metofane anesthesia. Figure
7 shows the firing of a "neck" neuron
that discharged during passive vertical head movement (achieved by
gently manipulating the headstage of the animal's harness). Evoked
firing was greatest in the Pre condition (data not shown because
of a technical problem) but ceased in the anesthetized condition. The
neuron exhibited 0.19 evoked discharges per stimulus under anesthesia.
This was 12% of the 1.6 evoked discharges per stimulus observed 2 hr
later, at which time evoked firing had partially recovered and
behavioral measures of anesthesia had fully recovered. In the
anesthetized condition, it is likely that most discharges during the
evoked response epoch were spontaneous rather than evoked given that the mean firing rate during this epoch was 0.37 Hz, compared with 0.33 Hz in the baseline epoch under anesthesia. These
results are representative of our observations (unpublished) that, when animals in other studies occasionally require brief metofane anesthesia during installation of the recording apparatus, somatosensory-evoked discharges of striatal neurons are not observed until after behavioral recovery.

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Figure 7.
Elimination of the evoked firing of a striatal
neuron in response to passive vertical head movement under metofane
anesthesia in rat C44. Right, PSTH was taken with the
rat fully anesthetized, 40 min after insertion of a metofane-dampened
towel into the behavioral chamber. (Onset of anesthesia was slow
because of ventilation present in the chamber.) Then the metofane towel
was removed. Left, PSTH was taken 1.3 hr later, 30 min
after recovery of all behavioral measures of anesthesia. Dashed
vertical line at time 0 indicates the approximate stimulus
onset. Stimulus duration was ~0.8 sec. The evoked response epoch was
0.1 to 0.8 sec; the baseline epoch was 1.0 to 0 sec. Each
tick on the x-axis = 150 msec; 84 trials were in each condition.
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Histology
All recordings were verified to have been obtained from the
lateral striatum as follows. Experiments were performed only when the
electrode track profile through the cortex and striatum exhibited the
clear electrophysiological characteristics we have established in the
awake rat; as confirmed here in 10 chronically implanted rats, under
conditions that meet these electrophysiological criteria, histological
sections verified the electrode position to be in the striatum (West et
al., 1990 ; Carelli and West, 1991 ; Mittler et al., 1994 ; Cho and West,
1997 ).
 |
DISCUSSION |
Recording the activity of functionally identified lateral striatal
neurons during sensorimotor processing serves as a model for studying
naturally evoked corticostriatal transmission to striatal projection
neurons. The model was used here to study evoked discharges while
administering somatosensory stimuli equitably under awake versus
anesthetized conditions but showed only profound loss of evoked firing
with each anesthetic tested.
The absence of evoked firing in acutely anesthetized animals
(pentobarbital/chloral hydrate or ketamine, Fig. 1) was similarly observed in chronically implanted animals; electrode track profiles showed somatosensory-evoked firing during wakefulness (Crutcher and
DeLong, 1984a ; Cho and West, 1997 ) but not during anesthesia (pentobarbital or urethane; Figs. 2, 6).
When one neuron was recorded across conditions (n = 12), somatosensory-evoked firing, observed during wakefulness, was
eliminated by pentobarbital, ketamine, chloral hydrate, urethane, or
metofane (Figs. 3-7), despite the knowledge of appropriate stimulus
parameters for each neuron. Subsequent recovery of evoked firing and
stability of neural waveforms demonstrated that the elimination of
evoked firing was not a spurious result of compromised ability to
record discharges of the neuron (e.g., because of electrode movement). Similarly, the absence of evoked discharges in acute preparations was
likely caused by their elimination by anesthetics rather than by
failure to sample from somatosensory-responsive neurons.
Those 12 neurons appear to be representative of
somatosensory-responsive striatal neurons, based on the uniformity and
magnitude of effects during peak levels of anesthesia. First, evoked
firing of every neuron was reduced by an amount approaching 100%.
Second, the more extensive sample of 620 sites tested under
pentobarbital, ketamine, or urethane anesthesia was expected to show
evoked firing at ~167 sites [based on 2246 sites tested during
wakefulness, of which 595 (27%) showed evoked firing]. However, no
amount of evoked firing, not even in reduced numbers of discharges, was observed at any site (except for one site 4 hr after urethane injection). Therefore, it is likely that more recordings of the evoked
firing of one neuron throughout wakefulness versus anesthesia would
show similar effects, at least qualitatively. This would support the
main conclusion that these anesthetics reduce the likelihood of
striatal firing in response to corticostriatal transmission. That these
effects are representative of effects on striatum in general is
supported indirectly by similar suppressions of spontaneous firing of
somatosensory-responsive neurons (present study) and the general
population of striatal neurons (Bloom et al., 1965 ; Wilson and Groves,
1981 ; Gonon, 1997 ) by anesthetics.
Data were not collected to allow systematic comparisons among
anesthetics regarding dose-effect or duration. Rather, each anesthetic
was used independently to test evoked firing at doses suitable for
acute electrophysiology. Even at lower doses that did not produce
general anesthesia, evoked firing was strongly reduced. Consistent with
this, in accord with drug half-lives, in no case did neural measures
exhibit even partial recovery until after behavioral measures had
exhibited full recovery from general anesthetic doses.
Some striatal neurons respond to noxious somatosensory stimulation.
However, their distribution, unlike the present sample, does not
conform to corticostriatal topography. Instead, such responses seem to
involve intralaminar thalamic inputs (Chudler and Dong, 1995 ) and are
observed under urethane (Richards and Taylor, 1982 ; Abercrombie and
Jacobs, 1985 ) or pentobarbital/chloral hydrate (Chudler et al., 1993 )
anesthesia. The few discharges evoked by innocuous stimulation
(Richards and Taylor, 1982 ) may correspond to the transient occurrence
of evoked discharges observed here after 3-4 hr of being eliminated by
urethane (Fig. 6), during brief interruptions of anesthetic depth.
Demonstrating the loss of evoked firing required controlling for active
movement. Although the possibility of active movements during
stimulation was selective for wakefulness, such movements did not
account for evoked firing. All animals acclimated to somatosensory examination, showing little active movement during manipulations. Furthermore, responsiveness of striatal neurons to passive manipulation is dissociable from active movement (Crutcher and DeLong, 1984b ; Liles,
1985 ). More definitively, when movement did occur during cutaneous
stimulation, the trial was discarded, most effectively in videotaped
experiments (e.g., Fig. 4). Therefore, the absence of firing evoked by
cutaneous stimulation under anesthesia is not attributable to an
absence of active movement-related firing selective for this
condition.
If not for these necessary controls, somatosensory-evoked striatal
firing would be of most interest during sensorimotor integration or
voluntary movement (Lidsky et al., 1985 ). Perhaps the most important
aspect of striatal cell function-processing related to volitional
movement-is absent in the anesthetized preparation. Indeed, that
absence may partially underlie the absence of evoked firing, if such
firing is strictly correlated with behavior. Furthermore, these
findings show that some striatal neurons spontaneously fire during
anesthesia but fail to exhibit properties fundamental to their normal
functioning, without which they cannot be categorized (Crutcher and
DeLong, 1984a ; Kimura, 1990 , 1992 ; Kimura et al., 1990 , 1992 ; Carelli
and West, 1991 ; Gardiner and Nelson, 1992 ; Romo et al., 1992 ; Carelli
et al., 1997 ; Merchant et al., 1997 ).
Inputs from SI likely mediate these evoked striatal discharges (see
introductory remarks). SI was mapped in pentobarbital-anesthetized rats
(Welker, 1971 , 1976 ; Hall and Lindholm, 1974 ; Sanderson et al., 1984 ),
and many similarities to the awake state, as well as certain
differences during anesthesia, have been documented (Harding et al.,
1979 ; Duncan et al., 1982 ; McKenna et al., 1982 ; Chapin and Lin, 1984 ;
Chapin, 1986 ; Stryker et al., 1987 ; Armstrong-James and George, 1988 ;
Bassant et al., 1990 ; Patel and Chapin, 1990 ; Simons et al., 1992 ).
Unlike SI, striatal neurons stop firing in response to innocuous
somatosensory stimulation during anesthesia, despite the fact that the
same stimulation during urethane, pentobarbital, or ketamine anesthesia
evokes discharges in SI neurons of layers III and V (Armstrong-James,
1975 ; Duncan et al., 1982 ; Lamour et al., 1983 ; Chapin and Lin, 1984 ;
Chapin, 1986 ; Stryker et al., 1987 ; Dykes and Lamour, 1988a ,b ;
Metherate et al., 1988 ; Simons et al., 1992 ), the latter being the main
source of somatosensory input to the matrix of the lateral striatum
where the present neurons were recorded (Flaherty and Graybiel, 1993 ;
Kincaid and Wilson, 1996 ). These SI discharges could supply the
coordinated, excitatory synaptic input (Cowan and Wilson, 1994 )
required by striatal neurons to shift their membrane potentials to the
depolarized up state. Indeed, such shifts occur frequently in
anesthetized (Wilson and Kawaguchi, 1996 ; Stern et al., 1997 ) and
unanesthetized rats (Wilson and Groves, 1981 ). Therefore during
anesthesia, evoked firing in cortical layers projecting to the striatum
and the presence of depolarizing shifts to the up state, together with
the present data, suggest that striatal neurons do receive depolarizing
corticostriatal synaptic input produced by natural somatosensory
stimulation but stop discharging in response to it. Anesthetics may
alter certain striatal mechanisms [e.g., enhance potassium currents or
GABAergic chloride currents (Nicoll and Madison, 1982 )] that could
interact with voltage-dependent potassium currents during the up state to reduce the likelihood of reaching the threshold for action potentials (Calabresi et al., 1987 ; Cherubini and Lanfumey, 1987 ; Rutherford et al., 1988 ; Galarraga et al., 1994 ; Nisenbaum and Wilson,
1995 ; Wilson and Kawaguchi, 1996 ; Stern et al., 1997 ). Absence of
evoked firing may involve a lack of interaction among afferents
[cortical, thalamic, or nigral (e.g., Adams et al., 1991 ; Boix et al.,
1993 )]. Regardless, using striatal discharges to map during anesthesia
does not seem possible, although intracellular recordings could
determine whether natural somatosensory stimulation produces shifts to
the up state.
During anesthesia, without normal sensorimotor processing in the cortex
(e.g., Lemon and Porter, 1976 ), not only are patterns of
corticostriatal glutamatergic synaptic transmission (Spencer, 1976 )
altered, but also naturally evoked striatal firing that, by all
evidence, involves this input ceases. Furthermore, synaptic interactions between striatal and dopamine neurons (Freund et al.,
1984 ; Bolam and Smith, 1990 ; Yoshida et al., 1993 ; Miller and
Abercrombie, 1996 ) are altered by depressant anesthetics, e.g.,
pentobarbital, urethane, chloral hydrate, and metofane (Corrodi et al.,
1966 ; Anden et al., 1974 ; Bergstrom et al., 1984 ; Ford and Marsden,
1986 ; Chapman et al., 1990 ; Hamilton et al., 1992 ; Boix et al., 1993 ;
Henriksen and Giachino, 1993 ). During anesthesia, altered dopamine
neuron activity (Freeman et al., 1985 ; Kelland et al., 1990 ) and
transmission to striatal neurons will be compounded by altered
glutamatergic activity, because glutamate influences dopamine release
(Shimizu et al., 1990 ; Moghaddam and Bolinao, 1994 ; Verma and
Moghaddam, 1998 ). Ketamine anesthesia did not alter basal firing rates
of dopamine or striatal neurons (Kelland et al., 1990 , 1991 ) or alter
striatal ACh release (Sato et al., 1996 ). Nonetheless, changes in SI
(Duncan et al., 1982 ; Patel and Chapin, 1990 ) and the present data show
that the pattern of natural corticostriatal transmission and its
ability to produce striatal discharges are altered by ketamine
[possibly by altering thalamocortical mechanisms (Miyasaka and Domino,
1968 )]. Ketamine, chloral hydrate, or pentobarbital anesthesia altered
basal and opiate-induced release of striatal serotonin (Tao and
Auerbach, 1994 ). In other studies, anesthetics altered measures of
serotonin (e.g., Heym et al., 1984 ; Dringenberg and Vanderwolf, 1995 )
and acetylcholine (Bloom et al., 1965 ; Kewitz and Pleul, 1977 ;
Bertorelli et al., 1990 ; Damsma and Fibiger, 1991 ; Sato et al.,
1996 ).
Imbalances in striatal neurotransmitters under anesthesia are potent,
abnormal influences on pre- and postsynaptic receptors, firing rates,
and pharmacological responses. Firing rate itself, which is depressed
by these anesthetics, is an important determinant of the effects of
stimulant drugs (Pederson et al., 1997 ) and of glutamate (Kiyatkin and
Rebec, 1996 ) on striatal firing rates in freely moving rats.
Together these alterations emphasize limitations in extrapolating from
anesthetized preparations. Indeed, recent studies (Mereu et al., 1995 ;
Shi et al., 1997 ) have questioned results from chloral
hydrate-anesthetized rats regarding dopamine receptor-mediated effects
on striatal and dopamine cell firing (see also Kelland et al.,
1989 , 1990 , 1991 ). Whereas the present study demonstrated that
certain, normal processes are eliminated during anesthesia, it is
imperative to perform the opposite test. Do results of striatal studies
in anesthetized preparations obtain during conscious behavior? This has
scarcely been tested, despite the knowledge that results differ among
preparations (Hernandez-Lopez et al., 1997 ) and the documentation of
over thirty years of anesthetic-induced alterations in striatal
transmitters (e.g., Corrodi et al., 1966 ).
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received March 18, 1998; revised Aug. 6, 1998; accepted Aug. 13, 1998.
This work was supported by National Science Foundation Grant
BNS-8708523, National Institute on Drug Abuse Grant DA 04551, and
Public Health Service Grant RR 07058. Discussions of this work with
Taliah Mittler and Laura Peoples and the technical assistance of
Karamarie Fecho, Anthony Pawlak, Dawn Duke, Fred Gee, and Linda King
are gratefully acknowledged.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Mark West, Department of
Psychology, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ 08903.
 |
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