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The Journal of Neuroscience, December 15, 1999, 19(24):10993-11006
Effect of Enriched Environment Rearing on Impairments in Cortical
Excitability and Plasticity after Prenatal Alcohol Exposure
V.
Rema1, 3 and
Ford F.
Ebner1, 2, 4
1 Institute for Developmental Neuroscience, J. F. Kennedy Center for Research on Human Development, Departments of
2 Psychology, 3 Pharmacology, and
4 Cell Biology, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee
37203
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ABSTRACT |
The daily ingestion of alcohol by pregnant mammals exposes the
fetal brain to varying levels of alcohol through the placental circulation. Here we focus on the lingering impact on cortical function
of 6.5% alcohol administered in a liquid diet to pregnant rats
throughout gestation, followed by 3 alcohol-free months before brain
function was analyzed in the offspring. Both spontaneous activity of
the neurons in the barrel cortex and the level of response to test
stimuli applied to the whiskers remained reduced by >75% after
alcohol exposure. Whisker pairing, a type of cortical plasticity
induced by trimming all but two whiskers in adult rats, occurred in <1
d in controls, but required 14 d to reach significance after
alcohol exposure. These long-term neuronal deficits are present in all
layers of cortex and affect neurons with both fast and slow action
potentials. Plasticity is first seen in the total sample of neurons at
14 d; however, by 7 d, neurons in layer II/III already show
plasticity, with no change in layer IV neurons, and a reverse shift
occurs toward the inactive whisker in layer V neurons. Analysis of NMDA
receptor subunits shows a persistent, ~30-50% reduction of NR1,
NR2A, and NR2B subunits at postnatal day 90 in the barrel field cortex.
Exposing the prenatal alcohol-exposed rats to enriched rearing
conditions significantly improves all measured cortical functions but
does not restore normal values. The results predict that combinations
of interventions will be necessary to completely restore cortical
function after exposure of the fetal brain to alcohol.
Key words:
synaptic plasticity; FAS; somatosensory cortex; NMDA
receptors; barrel cortex; cortical reorganization; rat neocortex
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INTRODUCTION |
The first postnatal month is an
important period for the development of normal, dendritic spines,
synapses, and local circuits in rat sensory cortex (Miller, 1988 ). Most
cortical neurons are silent in rat cortex around postnatal day 7 (P7),
with only ~3% of the neurons showing stable spontaneous activity at
that age (Armstrong-James, 1975 ). Organized spontaneous activity in the form of burst-pause discharge and spindling first appear between the
first and second week after birth. In our experience the end result of
normal development in somatic sensory (barrel field) cortex of rats
leads to (1) spontaneously active neurons under urethane anesthesia
with ~1 spike/sec, (2) a short latency (<10 msec) response of ~1
spike/stimulus produced by controlled stimulation of the principal
whisker, (3) a robust longer latency response from the principal
whisker and 4-10 surrounding whiskers, and (4) inducible,
experience-dependent, cortical plasticity that occurs within hours
after whisker trimming (Diamond et al., 1993 , 1994 ; Armstrong-James et
al., 1994 ; Rema et al., 1998a ). The shortest latency responses (6-10
msec) are generated most frequently in layer IV neurons, including both
"fast" spike and "slow" or "regular" spiking neurons.
Given the immature state of rat cortex at the time of birth, any
residual postnatal effects of prenatal alcohol exposure (PAE) on
the development of normal functional properties in cortex must be
exerted through immediate and irreversible brain damage and/or through
effects on mechanisms that are needed for continued postnatal development. If there is no alcohol exposure after birth, but there are
persistent deficits in cortical function in the adult PAE animal, the
assumption has to be that alcohol-free rearing under typical laboratory
conditions is not sufficient to induce or rekindle the impaired
processes. A large literature documents residual deficits in brain
structure and function that persist after various periods of PAE
(Jones, 1988 ), with each deficit dependent on the time and duration of
exposure, the concentration of alcohol, and the period of alcohol-free
survival before the brain is analyzed (West et al., 1986 ).
To date, there has not been a detailed report on the impact of PAE on
receptive field properties and activity-dependent single-neuron response plasticity in the neocortex. We initiated studies on the
effect of PAE on the primary somatic sensory cortex of the rat after
several reports that alcohol blocks NMDA receptor function in adult
brain slices (Dildy and Leslie, 1989 ; Lovinger et al., 1989 , 1990 ; Yuen
et al., 1991 ; Morrisett and Swartzwelder, 1993 ). Chronic
ingestion of ethanol produces an upregulation of NMDAR1 subunit
expression in the adult (Trevisan et al., 1994 ), but in contrast,
alcohol decreases NMDA receptor binding levels for many weeks after
prenatal alcohol exposure (Morrisett et al., 1989 ; Savage et al.,
1992 ).
One of the most relevant questions for studies of cognitive
disabilities is how the normal mammalian brain develops the capacity for lifelong learning and memory. One current hypothesis is that an
animal's initial interactions with the extrauterine environment may
"set" or "fix" the threshold for plasticity throughout life. Prenatal alcohol produces changes that could interfere with the establishment of effective thresholds for plasticity. A substantial literature exists showing that early rearing experience has a powerful
influence on the development of anatomical and functional features of
the brain, such that enriched environmental stimulation increases total
brain weight and cortical thickness (Krech et al., 1960 ; Diamond,
1986 ). More detailed analysis at a cellular level evolved from these
experiments and cellular improvements have been documented that include
increased cortical synapse-to-neuron ratio and increased frequency of
dendritic branching, among others (for review, see Greenough,
1986 ; Beaulieu and Colonnier, 1987 ).
On the basis of these results, we used the enriched rearing conditions
as an intervention to reverse fetal ethanol effects. The deficits need
to be measured with sensitive quantitative methods that can detect
subtle improvements in cortical function. We provide evidence that
cortical function is impaired by specific criteria into adulthood after
PAE and that enriched rearing conditions do improve cortical function,
yet without restoring excitability and rates of synaptic modification
to control levels.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
All procedures used in these experiments were approved by the
Institutional Animal Use Committee and followed guidelines set by
National Institutes of Health and the Society for Neuroscience.
Animals
We used Long-Evan rats for this study. Data are included from
37 experimental (seven PAE litters) and 28 control (seven litters) animals. All animals were 3 months old when the brain analyses were performed.
Procedure for feeding alcohol to experimental animals using the
BioServ liquid diet
The method used to expose the fetal brain to alcohol throughout
gestation has been used in a number of previous studies (Lieber and
DeCarli, 1989 ; Miller, 1989 ; Lee et al., 1994 ; Spuhler-Phillips et al.,
1997 ) because it mimics the consumption of moderate levels of alcohol
each day during pregnancy [the calculation has been made that 6.5%
alcohol in a rat's diet is roughly equivalent to a woman drinking two
six-packs of 12 oz. bottles of beer per day throughout pregnancy
(Miller, 1986 )]. Starting with a nutritionally complete formula from
BioServe Corporation, pregnant Long-Evans rats were fed a diet with
increasing concentrations of ethanol until at the end of the first week
they were receiving 6.5% vol/vol alcohol in their daily diet, which
provided ~35% of their daily calories from the alcohol. The animals
were weighed and fed every day, and consumption of diet was recorded.
Experimental and control diets continued for 20 d after
conception. The blood alcohol concentration taken at 4 hr after the
daily diet was offered (diet was given during the dark period of the 12 hr light/dark cycle) averaged 133 mg/dl.
Pair-fed controls. Because alcohol exposure at this level is
expected to reduce food intake somewhat, a pair-fed group was run in
parallel to control for nutritional deficiencies. After mating, a
sperm-positive, pair-fed female rat was carefully weight-matched to its
alcohol-receiving counterpart. The pair-fed animal was one that was
found to be sperm positive 1 d after the alcohol-treated dam with
which it is paired, so that its duration of gestation is always 1 d behind. This allows the food consumption of the alcohol animal to be
determined on a given day so that a comparable amount can be given to
the pair-fed animal on the corresponding and equivalent day of
pregnancy for both animals. Pair-fed animals were treated in every way
like their alcohol-treated counterparts except that they did not
receive any alcohol. Chow-fed animals are our standard condition, and
we have a large database for comparison.
Litters. As the pregnant rats approached parturition, they
were monitored carefully several times a day. When the litter was delivered, the number and condition of pups was determined (litter size
ranged from 11 to 13). Birth weights were recorded. These data were
used for determining whether there are differences in litter size and
birth weight. The litters were then randomly culled to eight pups for
uniformity in nursing and care.
Analysis of cortical responses to sensory stimuli and
plasticity changes
The procedures used to induce plasticity and measure single-unit
responses have been described in detail in Armstrong-James et al.
(1994) and Rema et al. (1998a) . The following is a brief synopsis of
these methods.
Whisker pairing. "Whisker pairing" (WP) is a
procedure used to measure the status of plasticity in adult rat
somatosensory cortex. In experimental and control animals, whiskers on
the left side of the face were left intact, whereas all but two
whiskers on the right side of the face were clipped to the level of the fur for periods of 1-30 d. Such animals are defined as
"whisker-paired animals for x days"; e.g., trim on day 0 and record 72 hr later would be a 3 d whisker-paired animal. For
these studies two whiskers, D2 and D1, in the same row were left
intact. The whiskers were cut daily up to 2 d before recording. At
the start of the recording session all whiskers were trimmed to the
same length (3-5 mm) for applying test stimuli. Typically experimental
animals were caged in plastic rat cages with at least one normal
littermate during the intervals between the initial whisker clipping
and the start of the experimental recording session. They appear to use
the intact, paired whiskers to palpate, explore, and "whisk" in the
normal manner.
Electrophysiology. All animals were anesthetized with
intraperitoneal injection of urethane, 1.5 gm/kg body weight (30%
solution in water) for recording. The animals were placed in a
stereotaxic apparatus, and their body temperature was maintained at
36-37°C using a rectal thermistor coupled to an electronically
controlled heating pad. Barrel cortex (typically ~0-4 mm caudal to
Bregma and ~4-7 mm lateral to midsagittal) was exposed on the left hemisphere.
Action potentials were recorded using carbon-fiber microelectrodes
(Armstrong-James and Millar, 1979 ). A three-dimensional microdrive was
used to control the x-y position of the
penetrations and the z-axis depth from the cortical surface.
Single units were isolated with a time-amplitude window discriminator
(Bak Electronics), and each accepted action-potential waveform was
compared with the original waveform template on a digital storage
oscilloscope (Nicolet). Presumptive localization of the D2 barrel was
made by finding neurons in layer IV that generated a response to
stimulation of the D2 (principal) whisker at <10 msec latency.
Confirmation that those neurons were in penetrations through the D2
barrel was performed histologically before they were included in this study.
Whiskers were stimulated by deflecting individual whiskers 300 µm
upward for 3 msec duration with a computer-controlled piezoelectric "bimorph" stimulator positioned with a micromanipulator just
beneath the whisker. Each block of trials consisted of 50 stimuli
delivered at 1 Hz. For all the neurons analyzed, one block of stimulus
trials was presented to the principal whisker D2 and to each of its
immediate surround whiskers (D1, D3, C2, E2). For the sake of brevity,
in many figures only the D-row whiskers D2, D1, and D3 are shown because they define the rate of cortical synaptic plasticity.
Data analysis. Poststimulus time histograms (PSTHs) at 1 msec bin resolution were generated on-line using a CED 1401 plus processor (Cambridge Electronic Design) and PC computer (Compaq), and
all data on the timing of action potentials were stored on a hard disk
for off-line analysis. The magnitude of responses evoked from each
whisker was the mean ± SE of 50 trials delivered at 1 Hz. For all
forms of PSTH analysis, the counts in each bin were adjusted for
spontaneous activity by subtracting the spikes generated 50 msec before
the stimulus. For determining the significance of responses,
nonparametric statistical analysis of the data were performed using
Wilcoxon matched-pair sign rank test (Wilcoxon) and Mann-Whitney
U (MWU) test.
Locating the recording sites. At the end of every experiment
a DC current of 2 µA for 5-10 sec (electrode tip positive) was passed to produce an easily identifiable lesion roughly 50 µm in
diameter to mark the recording site. In most cases the lesions were
made at two or three depths along the penetration to determine the
electrode path along the column. If penetrations were 100 µm apart
the alternate penetrations were marked with a lesion, and unmarked
penetrations were determined by geometric interpolation. At the end of
the recording session the animals were perfused with 4%
paraformaldehyde, and the brains were cryoprotected in 20% sucrose.
The cortex was separated from the rest of the brain and flattened.
Cytochrome oxidase staining was performed on tangential sections of the
flattened cortex to locate the position of the electrode penetrations.
Only neurons located within the D2 barrel column were included in the
data for this study.
Enriched environment rearing
Our "enriched" rearing environment for a rat consisted of a
large (36 × 36 × 30 inch) cage made of one-half inch wire
mesh with a pan underneath to catch droppings and urine. Ladders to three platforms with food available on the top level made the environment highly three-dimensional. The bottom of the large cage was
covered with toys of various sizes, shapes, and chewability. The rat
pups were sexed, and different cages were used for each sex. Equal
numbers of PAE (typically six) and control animals (typically six) were
placed into the enriched environment chamber from P21 to P90 to permit
social as well as spatial challenges. The animals were introduced into
the environment each day at the beginning of a 12 hr dark cycle, during
which time the room was illuminated with a dim red light bulb just
bright enough to allow videotaping of behavior to determine that the
animals were using the environment and not, for example, huddling in
the corner. During the 12 hr light cycle, animals were housed two to a
cage in standard plastic cages. Sets of toys were changed in the
chambers before each day to provide maximum novelty. An easily
accessible dish of food was placed on the floor of the chamber until
the animals were 1 month old. Daily weighing and observation confirmed that by P30 the animals were able to feed from an overhead hopper placed at the top of the chamber.
Analysis of glutamate receptors
Immunocytochemistry. Immunocytochemical analysis was
performed on four brains after the physiological analysis using the
methods described in Rema and Ebner (1996) , with slight modifications. Rats were anesthetized with sodium pentobarbital and then perfused transcardially with PBS for 1-2 min to clear the blood,
followed by 4% paraformaldehyde for 20-30 min to fix the tissues.
Brains were removed and cryoprotected sequentially with 10, 20, and
30% sucrose. Coronal sections, 30 µm thick, were cut on a sliding microtome. The sections were washed four times (15 min for each wash)
with Tris-buffered saline (TBS), then incubated in 3% normal serum for
2 hr at room temperature for blocking the nonspecific reaction. Primary
antibody to NR1 (AB59) that recognizes all NR1 splice variants was
added to the sections in blocking solution and incubated at 4°C for
48-72 hr. The sections were washed in TBS (four washes, each for 10 min) and then incubated with biotinylated secondary antibody for 1-2
hr at room temperature. After another four washes in TBS, the sections
were incubated in ABC reagent (Vector Laboratories, Burlingame, CA) for
90 min at room temperature and washed again. The sections were finally
rinsed in 25 mM Tris buffer and reacted for chromogenic
detection of peroxidase, with diaminobenzidine and
H2O2 as substrates.
Western blot analysis. Western blot analyses of proteins
from membrane-enriched particulate fractions of somatic sensory
cortices of control and PAE rats were performed with antibodies to NR1 (AB59) (Rema and Ebner, 1996 ), NR2A, and NR2B (PharMingen, San Diego,
CA) using the method described in Rema and Ebner (1996) . Iodinated
secondary antibodies were used to detect bands and to aid in
quantitation. The bands from the immunoblot were quantified using a
phosphorimager and the Imagequant system. The density of bands was
converted to percentage values where the counts of the band from
control was set at 100%. The values of bands from the PAE animals were
percentage of control value.
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RESULTS |
Effect of PAE on cortical neuron responsiveness
Recording from single neurons in adult cortex after PAE is a
silent process compared with controls. The audiomonitor silence reflects a ~70% reduction in the mean spontaneous activity of all
cells recorded in PAE cortex compared with controls (control = 0.94 ± 0.12 vs PAE = 0.28 ± 0.05) even after 90 d
of recovery (Fig. 1B).
This overall reduction in spontaneous activity is produced by a lower
percentage of spontaneously active cells in PAE cortex (control = 76% vs PAE = 38%) as well as a lower discharge rate of the cells
that do show spontaneous activity (control = 1.26 ± 0.06 Hz
vs PAE = 0.27 ± 0.05 Hz). As the electrode is advanced through PAE cortex, very few neurons can be isolated by their spontaneous discharge under urethane anesthesia. Whisker pairing elevated the level of spontaneous discharge by 14 d in PAE animals with a significant increase (p = 0.0001 MWU)
compared with PAE animals with no whisker pairing. At this time the
layer V neurons showed a higher level of spontaneous activity than
neurons in the other cortical layers (layer V = 1.10 ± 0.3 Hz, layer IV = 0.22 ± 0.05 Hz, layer II/III = 0.19 ± 0.06 Hz). Responsive neurons could be identified in most
penetrations by advancing the electrode in 100 µm increments and
manually stimulating the whiskers to evoke responses from neurons near
the electrode. Examples of single D2 barrel neuron PSTHs generated by
stimulation of the principal whisker (D2) and one in-row surround
whisker (D1) before any whisker trimming in PAE and control animals are
shown in Figure 1C.

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Figure 1.
A, Diagram of the
recording paradigm that involves stimulation of the whiskers in the
periphery, transmission through synapses in the brainstem and thalamus,
and recording the responses of single neurons in the D2 barrel column.
B, Bar graph shows the significant
(p = 0.001) 70% reduction in level of
spontaneous activity in prenatal alcohol-exposed (PAE)
neurons (black bar, n = 60 cells) as
compared with pair-fed control animals (stippled bar,
n = 51 cells) after 90 d of standard rearing.
C, Poststimulus time histograms of typical layer IV
barrel neuron responses from control and PAE animals before any whisker
trimming. The response to the principal D2 whisker shows the
characteristic short latency excitation followed by an inhibitory
trough, and then a longer latency component of the response. Note that
the long latency response is almost eliminated in the histograms from
the PAE animal after stimulation of both the principal D2 whisker and
the surround D1 whisker. Other surround whiskers produced PSTH profiles
qualitatively similar to this sample response to stimulation of the D1
whisker.
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Even evoked responses are reduced by a significant 80% after PAE, and
the PSTHs illustrate that the effect is exerted almost exclusively by
absence of the longer latency components of the response after
stimulation of either the principal D2 or the in-row surround D1 and D3
whiskers (Fig. 1C).
The magnitude of the PAE deficits are clearly demonstrated in the mean
response levels of all of the neurons studied from PAE and control
animals. The data for Figure 2 are
derived from several animals from different litters after test stimuli
were applied to the principal whisker and four surround whiskers. In both PAE and control animals the principal whisker always produces a
response with the highest magnitude and the shortest latency (Fig.
2).

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Figure 2.
Bar graph showing mean responses of
D2 barrel column neurons from control and PAE animals to 50 test
stimuli sequentially applied to each of five whiskers at 1 Hz
(recording at P90). D2 is the principal whisker and D1, D3, C2, and E2
are four surround whiskers in the receptive field of the cortical
neurons. Different shading indicates different poststimulus latency
epochs, as identified in the inset. Prenatal alcohol
exposure reduces the responses of cortical neurons to all whiskers
tested by >80%. Note that the response to the D2 whisker remains
greater than the surround whiskers after alcohol exposure caused by the
3-10 msec short latency response of the D2 whisker, which is not
reduced by prenatal ethanol exposure. The neurons are pooled
(n = 60 for PAE and
n = 51 for Control) from
several animals and litters, and the standard errors are small (average
SE for E = ±1, and average SE for
C = ±2.4), but for simplicity the SE is not
indicated on the bars.
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The striking reduction in response to stimulation after PAE is
seen at all latencies, except the shortest poststimulus epoch of 3-10
msec. Typically, only the principal whisker (in these studies, the D2
whisker) generates the shortest latency responses. Evidence is
discussed below showing that the shortest latency response of cortical
neurons reflects activity mainly in thalamocortical synapses, and this
component of the cortical response remains intact in PAE animals when
at the same time the longer latency responses are severely depressed.
The response to the D-row surround whiskers, D1 and D3, nearly
"bottomed out" in every epoch represented, because the surround
whiskers produce little or no short latency activity in the cortical response.
Effect of PAE on cortical plasticity
Trimming all but the D2 and D1 whiskers induces a predictable
modification of responses in the D2 barrel neurons to test stimuli delivered to D-row and other whiskers: a type of response modification we call whisker-pairing plasticity. In control animals, within 3 d
the responses to the principal D2 whisker remain unaltered, but
responses to the intact surround D1 whisker significantly increase,
whereas those to the cut D3 whisker remain unaltered or are slightly
reduced in magnitude (compare Figs. 2 and
3A).

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Figure 3.
Comparison of responses to three D-row
whiskers in control and PAE animals after 3 d
(A), 7 d (B), 14 d (C), and 30 d (D) of
WP. WP plasticity (D1/D3 ratio changed from 1:1 before WP to >2:1
after WP) is highly significant after <3 d in control animals but is
extremely delayed in the alcohol-exposed animals to 14 d. The mean
response magnitude (spikes/50 stimuli) of D2 barrel column neurons to
stimulation of the D2 whisker increased significantly after 7 d of
whisker pairing in the control animals, and after 30 d in the PAE
animals.
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Magnitude of response to the principal D2 whisker increases
significantly (peaks) by 7 d after trimming in control animals and
then returns to near initial levels after 14 and 30 d. In contrast, the low level of cortical responses to the D2 whisker in
non-whisker-paired PAE animals decreases even further after 3 d of
whisker pairing (Figs. 2, 3, 4) and slowly recovers at 7-14 d to show
significant increase by 30 d (p = 0.012)
(Figs. 3, 4). Overall in PAE animals the
responses to the D1, D2, and D3 whiskers remain severely reduced from 3 to 30 d after whisker pairing (note that 30 d whisker-paired
animals are 4 months old at the time of recording) (Fig. 3). D2
responses of PEA animals never attain more than ~50% of control
levels. In the PAE animals the paired D1 whisker responses fail to show
the expected increase after 3 and even 7 d of whisker pairing, but
finally, by 14 d of whisker pairing the D1 whisker musters a
greater response than the D3 (cut) whisker, so that the D-paired/D-cut
surround whisker ratio is changed significantly
(p = 0.0001, Wilcoxon), as shown in Figures
3C and 4B. Responses to the cut D-3
whisker stay depressed for the entire 30 d period of whisker
pairing (Fig. 4C). Subtracting the average spikes generated
by the cut D3 whisker from those produced by the intact D1 whisker
highlights the negative effect of alcohol over time on this type of
cortical plasticity (Fig. 4D).

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Figure 4.
Evolution of changes in the responses of
D2 barrel neurons to stimulation of the principal D2 whisker
(A), the paired D1 whiskers
(B), and the cut D3 surround whiskers
(C). After 3 d of WP, the change in response
levels to D2 stimulation is reversed in PAE animals
(A) such that the WP reduces the D2 whisker
response significantly (p = 0.0142, MWU)
followed by a gradual rise to show significant increase in response at
30 d (p = 0.0122, MWU). In the
controls, the maximum response is reached at 7 d of WP and by
14 d attains a new steady state at a lower level.
B, Responses to the paired D1 whisker in PAE animals
show a significant increase (p = 0.0001, MWU) after 14 d (asterisks). C,
Responses to cut D3 stimulation remain consistently low and do not
change significantly over time. D, Difference in the
mean response magnitudes (spikes/50 stimuli) of D2 column neurons to
stimulation of paired D1 and cut D3 whisker (D1-D3) is another way to
visualize the delay in surround whisker plasticity.
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Effects of PAE on latency epochs of response
Examination of the latency epochs in the overall response
magnitudes generated by the D-row whiskers in D2 barrel cortex neurons showed another dimension of how the challenge of whisker pairing alters
cortical neuron responses over time (Fig. 3, shading on bar
graph). After 3 d of whisker pairing the response to the D2 whisker decreased by 25% in the alcohol-exposed brains (compare Figs.
3, 4). This lower response magnitude was the result of a lower response
in the 3-10 and the 20-50 msec epochs (Fig. 3A) compared
with the non-whisker-paired condition (Fig. 2). In 3 d controls,
the expected 100% response increase to the intact D1 whisker reflected
an increase in all latency components over the response generated by
the cut D3 surround whisker. This activity-dependent plasticity did not
occur in the PAE cortex after 3 d (Fig. 3A). There was
even a trend for the response to the cut D3 whisker to be greater than
the response to the active, intact whisker (p < 0.05, Wilcoxon). This profile of response was not grossly different
after 7 d of whisker pairing (Fig. 3B). It took ~14 d
of the activity imbalance produced by whisker trimming for the alcohol-exposed neurons to first show plasticity, to the level of >2:1
ratio in the D1 (paired)/D3 (cut) response, the level seen within
3 d of whisker pairing in normal animals (i.e., surround whisker
plasticity only occurred after 14 d). The significant increase in
D2 response, which occurs by 7 d of WP in normal animals, took
30 d in PAE animals. The spikes in the increased response to the
D1 and D2 whiskers all occur in the long (10-100 msec) latency epochs
(Fig. 3, A vs C). The responses that the
alcohol-exposed brains were able to produce after 14 d were
maintained for 30 d, the duration of these experiments (Fig.
3D).
Effect of PAE on fast- and slow-spiking neurons
The effects of prenatal alcohol exposure on cortical activity
could be exerted on excitatory neurons with spiny dendrites or on
inhibitory neurons with few if any spines on their dendrites that use
GABA as a neurotransmitter. The data did not directly answer this
question, but the total population of neurons can be sorted by their
spike duration, which has been shown consistently to have a high
correlation: fast spikes <0.75 msec are characteristic of GABAergic
neurons, whereas longer (regular or slow) spikes are typical of
excitatory neurons [see discussion by Rema et al. (1998a) ]. Figure
5 shows that in both the fast- and
slow-spiking neuron populations in PAE animals there is (1) the
generalized decrement in response, and (2) significant shift in the
D1/D3 ratio occurs after 14 d. However, the degree of shift (i.e.,
the D1 (paired)/D3 (cut) ratio) is greater for the slow-spiking neurons at 14 d (D1 = 11.3 ± 4.3 vs D3 = 2.5 ± 1.5)
than it is for the fast-spiking neurons (D1 = 7.1 ± 1.8 vs
D3 2.7 ± 1.0) (Fig. 5, 14 Day WP). Thus, the
slow-spiking cells show greater upregulation of the paired D1 whisker
response, with little change in the cut D3 whisker response.

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Figure 5.
Comparison of responses of fast (<0.75
msec) and slow (>0.75 msec) spiking D2 barrel neurons of
alcohol-exposed and control animals. Only layer IV neurons were
included because the proportion of fast-spiking neurons recorded in
other layers was much smaller. Both neuron types showed reduced
response magnitudes in PAE animals. Synaptic plasticity demonstrated by
a significant increase in responses to the paired D1 whisker occurred
at 14 d in both neuron types (p = 0.0007 and 0.0069, Wilcoxon, for fast- and slow-spiking neurons,
respectively) in the PAE animals and is maintained at 30 d for the
fast-spiking neurons (p = 0.0005, Wilcoxon)
but not for the slow-spiking neurons (p = 0.1319, Wilcoxon). Standard error on the bars without
error markers is too small to be seen at this scale.
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Effect of PAE on individual neurons that constitute the sample
The mean response of PAE and control groups to test stimuli
applied to the intact D1 and the cut D3 whiskers masks the variability of individual neurons that contribute to the averaged response. Figure
6 shows the response of every D2 barrel
neuron in our sample to the D-row surround whiskers D1 and D3 before
(normal) and after 7 d (control and PAE) whisker pairing. In
normal animals, without the challenge of whisker pairing, roughly equal
numbers of the D2 barrel neurons respond better to each of the surround
D-row whiskers D1 and D3 (Fig. 6, D1>D3=49%). Because the
neurons were from several different penetrations, animals, and litters,
the response may be somewhat biased by the position of the electrode in
the D2 barrel, although all penetrations have been confirmed histologically to be in the D2 barrel column (Armstrong-James et al.,
1994 ). As examples, the unfilled arrow in Figure 6 points to
a neuron that responded best to the D1 whisker, whereas the filled arrow points to a neuron in which the D3 whisker
provides the stronger input in a normal animal. Recasting the responses to the D1 and D3 whiskers separately by magnitude of response (Sort by Mag.) helps visualize the symmetry of the surround
whisker influence on D2 barrel neurons before whisker pairing, although the opposing bars are no longer from the same neuron. Seven days of
whisker pairing in control animals skewed the distribution toward the
intact D1 whisker so that 81% of the D2 barrel neurons respond at a
higher level to the intact D1 whisker, which confirms the expected
shift to the active intact whisker. The triple arrow points
to three neurons that still have a better response to the cut D3
whisker after whisker trimming in a control animal. Thus, after 1 week
not every neuron was driven more intensely by the greater activity in
the intact surround whisker, but the trend toward intact D1 whisker
dominance is highly significant (p = 0.0001, Wilcoxon) (Fig. 6).

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Figure 6.
Comparison of response magnitudes of individual
neurons in the D2 barrel column to stimulation of D1 and D3 whiskers in
normal animals (i.e., whiskers not trimmed) (A),
diet control animals after 7 d of whisker pairing (D1 and D2 were
paired) (B), and PAE animals after 7 d of
whisker pairing (D1 and D2 were paired) (C). The
left column (Sort by Cell) of each
pair of bars represents the response of each neuron to stimuli to the
D1 (striped bars) and D3 (black bars)
whiskers, and they are sorted arbitrarily in descending order by the
magnitude of D1 responses to illustrate how each neuron varied in its
response. Neurons in all layers and with all spike durations were
included in the sample. In the right column of each pair
(Sort by Mag), the neurons were sorted independently by
the magnitude of response to D1 and D3. Thus, the Sort by
Mag. column no longer represents the responses of single
neurons, but this procedure greatly enhances visualization of the
symmetry or asymmetry of the responses of the two surround whiskers
before and after whisker pairing in the entire sample of neurons. The
numbers for each pair of columns indicate the percentage of neurons
that responded better to one or the other whisker. The PAE animals
showed no significant shift toward the intact D1 surround whisker after
7 d. The width of the individual bars was determined by the number
of neurons in the sample displayed in a column of fixed length. The
magnitude of response was truncated above 50 spikes/50 stimuli. The
open arrow points to a neuron that responded best to D1
whisker, and the closed arrow points to a neuron with
stronger response to D3 whisker in the normal animal. The triple
arrow points to three neurons that still had better responses
to the cut D3 whisker in control animals after 7 d of whisker
pairing. The x-axis is the response level in spikes/50
stimuli for the D1 and D3 whisker.
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Prenatal alcohol exposure, even after 3 months of recovery, left the
neurons not only low in response magnitude after 7 d of whisker
pairing, but unexpectedly strengthened the inputs to quite a number of
neurons to the inactive, trimmed whisker. For this reason, although the
overall values remain roughly half (D1 > D3 = in 52%
of cells) of the cortical neurons responding better to one or the other
surround whisker, many neurons respond much better to the cut D3
whisker. It is noteworthy that in a certain sense this represents a
type of plasticity that is still occurring, the unusual feature being
that the shift is moving toward the low activity input. This phenomenon
was obscured by averaging. However, when the responses were lined up by
magnitude they formed a very symmetrical distribution, denying a shift
in the population toward either the intact D1 or the cut D3 surround
whisker after 7 d of whisker pairing. The failure of shifting at
7 d but its presence at 14 d supports the conclusion that the
expected shift toward the active surround whisker (plasticity) is
abnormally slow in PAE animals.
Effect of PAE on neurons in different layers of cortex
Another question raised by averaging responses from all neurons
sampled is whether there is specificity of effect on neurons in
different layers. One rationale for examining layer responses would be
that because of the preservation of the short latency responses to the
principal D2 whisker, the layer IV neuron responses that receive a high
density of the thalamocortical inputs may develop normally, and the
failures could involve neurons in other layers that depend more heavily
on intracortical inputs for their activation. Because layer IV neurons
in the cortical barrels project almost exclusively to more superficial
neurons in layer II/III (Kim and Ebner, 1999 ), neuron by neuron
responses to whisker pairing in layer II/III neurons were separated and
compared with responses of neurons in layer IV and layer V of PAE and
control animals. Figure 7 shows that the
changes in response to whisker pairing occur differently in different
cortical layers. In PAE animals, layer II/III neurons showed that after
7 d there was already a significant (p < 0.015, Wilcoxon) shift toward the intact surround D-row whisker (D1).
Layer IV neurons showed strong biases; 47% of neurons toward the
paired D1 whisker and 37% toward the cut D3 whisker and the
remaining neurons showed equal responses to both, but the mean
response profile for layer IV neurons remains symmetrical, and hence
without the expected bias toward the paired D1 whisker. Quite
unexpectedly, the layer V neurons showed a better response to the cut
D3 (53%) than to the paired D1 whisker (37%) (Fig. 7, bottom
panels). Thus, after 7 d of whisker pairing in PAE animals,
neurons in different layers were affected in strikingly different ways
from that of controls: superficial layer neurons showed the expected
plasticity, thalamic input-dominated layer IV neurons showed great
variability in response to one or another whisker but no net plasticity
yet, and the output neurons in layer V responded best to the inactive
inputs. By 14 d there was significant shift toward the intact
whisker by neurons in all layers.

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Figure 7.
Comparison of neurons in layers II/IIII, IV, and V
to stimulation of the intact (paired) whisker D1 (gray
bars) and cut whisker D3 (black bars) from
7 d control animals, compared with 7 and 14 d whisker-paired
PAE animals. The shift to the intact surround D1 whisker was already
significant (p < 0.015) at 7 d in
layer II/III neurons. Layer IV neurons failed to show the shift to the
paired whisker at 7 d, but most neurons in all layers shift by
14 d. The layer V PAE neurons showed the lowest response level and
actually a shift toward the cut D3 whisker at 7 d, and then a
shift toward the intact D1 whisker (expected response) at 14 d.
WP, Whisker paired. Cell and
Mag. indicate neuron sorting as described in the Figure
6 legend. x-axis is the response level in spikes per 50 stimuli. Responses with three spikes and less are not seen in the
Figures because of the small scale, but neurons were represented to the
bottom of the column.
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Effect of enriched environment rearing on PAE cortex
The rate of whisker pairing plasticity can be
influenced in normal animals by the levels of sensory activity present
after the whiskers are trimmed, so a logical question is whether the environmental challenge of enriched rearing conditions from weaning to
3 months would reverse some or all of the deficits seen after prenatal
alcohol exposure. In control animals the main effect of enriched
rearing conditions was to accelerate the increase in response to the D2
whisker to peak levels as early as 3 d instead of 7 d of
whisker pairing (Fig. 8). In the
alcohol-exposed group, enriched rearing increased the response
magnitude to each individual whisker and accelerated the rate of
whisker pairing plasticity so that there was an overall shift toward
the intact D1 whisker at 7 d (p < 0.002, Wilcoxon) (Fig. 8), although equivalent neurons in PAE animals in a
standard environment would show the plasticity changes only after
14 d. The effects of enrichment indicate that the low cortical
activity levels caused by the alcohol did not eliminate plasticity but
rather created conditions under which much greater activity was
required to reach the threshold for modification, and this was
partially achieved by increased environmental challenge.

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Figure 8.
Comparison of responses to 3 and 7 d of
whisker pairing after standard cage rearing with responses in animals
reared from weaning to P90 in an enriched and social environment.
Enriched rearing significantly increased the responses of D2 barrel
neurons after 3 d of whisker pairing in PAE animals but did not
induce surround whisker plasticity. D1 is the intact
whisker, and D3 is the cut whisker. Enriched rearing did
produce a significant (p < 0.002) D1
(intact)/D3 (cut) shift at 7 d in PAE animals, when the standard
reared animals showed no surround plasticity. Note that in control
animals the enriched rearing accelerated the peak increase in the D2
whisker response from 7 to 3 d of whisker pairing.
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The accelerated shift seen in PAE animals with enriched rearing
experience was not reflected in all layers. Different layers responded
differently to the enriched rearing (Fig.
9). Enigmatically, the layer II/III
neurons appeared to transiently "lose ground," with a trend for the
cut whisker to become a stronger drive on cortical neurons under
enriched conditions. Layer IV was greatly affected by enriched rearing,
such that the absence of 7 d plasticity after standard caged
rearing was converted into a robust and significant shift
(p = 0.0001, Wilcoxon) toward the active
surround whisker after 7 d of whisker pairing under enriched
rearing conditions. Layer V neurons do not show any significant shift
to the intact whisker (p > 0.1, Wilcoxon) after
7 d of whisker pairing, even under enriched rearing
conditions.

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Figure 9.
Layer-by-layer analysis of the effects of enriched
rearing on cortical cell responses in PAE animals to stimulation of
intact (paired) D1 (gray bars) and cut D3
(black bars) whiskers. After standard rearing and 3 d of whisker pairing, the layer II/III neurons show change, but
"inappropriately" toward the cut D3 whisker. Standard rearing
produces no significant change at 3 d in layer IV and V neurons.
Enriched rearing increases the response level in neurons in all layers
after 3 d of whisker pairing, but without any sign of shift in any
layer. After 7 d of whisker pairing the layer II/III neurons again
show the shift toward the cut D3 whisker, the layer IV neurons show the
expected increase in responses to the intact D1 whisker, and the layer
V neurons still show no significant shift.
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Qualitative observation of videotapes taken as single-frame time-lapse
exposures at 5 min intervals during one period of enriched experience
each week suggested that the PAE animals were moving around and using
the environment indistinguishably from control animals. The data did
not allow us to determine whether they were learning from sensory
experience and adapting to the environment differently from controls.
Status of NMDA receptors in PAE cortex
The findings above and the deficiency in longer latency,
NMDA-dependent components of the evoked response led us to examine the
status of NMDA receptors in the barrel field cortex of alcohol-exposed animals after they reached 3 months of age. Because the NMDAR1 subunit
is the obligatory protein for a functional NMDA receptor calcium
channel, immunocytochemistry was used to look for evidence of change.
Levels of NMDAR1 immunoreactivity were visibly decreased in all layers
of the somatic sensory cortex (Fig.
10A). The
staining in the neuropil of the supragranular layers that was densest
in the control cases was markedly reduced after alcohol exposure, and
the intense immunoreactivity of layer V neurons and their apical
dendrites was reduced, as was the number of densely labeled neurons.
Western blot analysis confirmed quantitatively that the levels of
NMDAR1, NMDAR2A, and NMDAR2B proteins were reduced by ~50, 40, and
30%, respectively (Fig. 10B,C). One of the AMPA receptor subunits, GluR1, was examined and found to be elevated rather than
depressed (data not shown).

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Figure 10.
Analysis of NMDA receptor subunit
levels after prenatal ethanol exposure. A,
Immunohistochemical staining of the somatic sensory cortex from control
and PAE rats with NR1 antibody AB59 showing a reduction in NMDAR1
protein in all layers. B, Western blot analyses of
proteins from a membrane-enriched fraction of somatic sensory cortices
of chow control (CC), liquid diet control
(LC), and prenatal alcohol exposed
(E) rats with antibodies to NR1
(AB59), NR2A, and NR2B. Iodinated
secondary antibodies were used to detect bands and to aid in
quantification. C, The bands from the immunoblot were
quantified using a phosphorimager, and the relative intensity refers to
the values calculated by assigning arbitrary values of 100% to the
controls.
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DISCUSSION |
The central finding of these experiments was that the normal
functioning and the capacity to reorganize in the somatic sensory cortex are severely impaired by prenatal alcohol exposure for at least
3 months after birth under standard laboratory rearing conditions. The
deficits were characterized by low levels of all types of spontaneous
and long latency cortical activity. The preserved, 3-10 msec short
latency responses were typically produced only by stimulation of the
principal whisker. In normal animals these short latency responses are
almost completely dependent on AMPA-type glutamate receptors, and the
longer latency (10-100 msec) responses depend mostly on the NMDA type
of glutamate receptor (Armstrong-James et al., 1993 ; Rema et al.,
1998a ), so the suppression of long latency responses in PAE rats may be
related to the reduction in NMDA receptors.
Effect of PAE on cortical plasticity
Theoretically there is a carefully modulated balance between
excitation and inhibition in adult cortex that maintains the excitability needed for processing new sensory inputs and for plasticity and learning (Xing and Gerstein, 1996 ; Shadlen and Newsome,
1998 ). The low levels of spontaneous and driven cortical neuron
excitability in the PAE animals could be produced by a decrease in
excitation, by excessive inhibition, or both. Several reports suggest
that there are direct negative impacts of PAE on inhibitory processes.
For example, the inhibition expected after paired-pulse stimulation at
short interstimulus intervals in hippocampal CA1 neurons is minimal or
absent after PAE (Hablitz, 1986 ). At comparably short (20 msec)
interstimulus periods, inhibition has been shown to be maximal in
barrel field cortex (Simons, 1985 ). The reduced inhibition after PAE
appears to be attributable in part to impairment of GABAA1 receptor
subunit-mediated inhibition (Allan et al., 1998 ). The linkage between
PAE and deficits in inhibition, and whether the effect of prenatal
alcohol is on only certain subtypes of GABAergic neurons, such as those
that contain high levels of certain calcium-binding proteins, is not
yet clear. Parvalbumin-containing GABAergic neurons, for example, are
reduced by 45% in the cingulate gyrus of alcohol-exposed rats (Moore
et al., 1998 ), but it is not yet known whether this is true for
parietal cortex as well.
Indirect effects of PAE on activity levels, and hence on plasticity,
could arise through insufficient activity to induce activity-dependent aspects of cortical development that occur postnatally. Low activity just after birth could add a "sensory deprivation" type of
plasticity deficit (Huang and Ebner, 1995 ) on top of the direct,
residual alcohol effects, and the combination of the two insults could prolong or consolidate the alcohol-induced deficits in cortical function (Ebner et al., 1998 ). Similar plasticity deficits in the
hippocampus may share this etiology (Swartzwelder et al., 1988 ).
Effect of PAE on neurons in different layers of cortex
Previous studies have shown that whisker-pairing plasticity occurs
at different rates in different cortical layers. Within 24 hr
significant changes occur in layer II/III, before any plasticity is
detectable in layer IV (Diamond et al., 1994 ). This rate of plasticity
is accelerated by high levels of activity, so that enriched environment
rearing conditions for only 15 hr after whisker pairing is enough to
produce significant synaptic modification in layer IV neurons (Rema et
al., 1998b ). Early sensory deprivation, on the other hand, slows
equivalent cortical plasticity to 3-7 d (Huang and Ebner, 1995 ). In
the present study the effect of PAE on the rate of plasticity was even
greater. Layer IV and layer V neurons in PAE animals did not shift to
the intact surround whisker after 7 d of whisker pairing under
standard cage conditions, but could be induced to do so by enriched
rearing conditions. However, the enriched rearing did not restore
plasticity in any layer after 3 d of whisker pairing, so
restoration of the rate of synaptic change to normal levels was not complete.
Another noteworthy feature of the laminar analysis was the reverse bias
of the layer II/III neurons after 3 d of whisker pairing and for
layer V neurons after 7 d of whisker pairing in the PAE animals.
This type of "anti-Hebbian" reversal of plasticity such that the
synaptic strengths related to the inactive inputs are increased has
been reported under several conditions in previous studies. The
clearest example occurred when muscimol, a GABA agonist, was minipumped
onto kitten visual cortex during monocular experience, and the cortical
neurons changed their responses such that the closed eye inputs became
stronger than the open eye inputs (Reiter and Stryker, 1988 ).
Our interpretation of this effect is consistent with theirs:
postsynaptic neuron activity is crucially important for
activity-dependent strengthening of active synapses.
A similar reversal has been reported after acetylcholine (ACh)
depletion, where the cut whisker inputs became stronger than the intact
surround whisker inputs in the whisker-pairing paradigm (Baskerville et
al., 1997 ; Sachdev et al., 1998 ). The low spontaneous activity seen
after PAE could create a condition analogous to the muscimol
application or ACh depletion, causing the inactive whisker to achieve
greater strength, but we also show that the depressed responsiveness
can be overcome. The results confirm that the superficial layers are
most sensitive to changes in levels of activity caused by whisker
pairing even in PAE animals, but they produce "anti-Hebbian"
plasticity after 3 d of whisker pairing attributable to the
developmental impairments. By 7 d, layer II/III neurons shifted to
show the expected Hebbian modifications. Similar changes occur in deep
layer neurons but at a slower rate; i.e., at 7 d more neurons
responded to the cut (inactive) whisker and by 14 d they shifted
to the active input. Layer IV neurons took 14 d to show a shift to
the active whisker under standard conditions but were speeded up by
enriched rearing. A global anti-Hebbian shift toward the inactive
whiskers has never been witnessed in normal animals, before the
expected activity-driven change, but the possibility exists that it
occurs in some layers as a normal prelude to the bias toward the active
whisker, but for a very transient (and easily overlooked) period. To
our knowledge, there is currently no evidence showing the functional
effect of anti-Hebbian plasticity on cortical information processing or
a molecular explanation of its pathogenesis.
Abnormal neuron migration is a prominent feature of PAE in laboratory
animals and humans; i.e., some neuronal cell bodies end up in the
"wrong" layer (Miller et al., 1990 ; Miller, 1997 ) or on the
cortical surface, or they are delayed in arriving in their appropriate
layer (Clarren et al., 1978 ; Miller, 1986 ). The extent of abnormal cell
migration depends on the time and amount of alcohol exposure. In light
of the demonstrated importance of NMDA receptors on cortical neuron
migration (Komuro and Rakic, 1993 ), migration abnormalities could be
one early consequence of the reduction in NMDA receptors demonstrated
here. The point to note is that when the "responses of 50 neurons in
layer II/III" are described in this paper, it is not known what
percentage of those cells have mismigrated into those laminae and how
that would influence the results. We assume that the number of
mismigrated neurons in our sample is small enough that they would not
change the mean values for a given lamina but might increase the variance.
Effect of enriched environment rearing on PAE cortex
Enriched rearing does increase the responsiveness and plasticity
of cortical neurons significantly after PAE, although not up to control
levels. This partial improvement in cortical cell responsiveness
indicates that the enhanced sensory and social challenge cannot
completely restore cortical plasticity after PAE. Similar enhancement
of performance in PAE animals has been reported after enriched rearing,
such as improvements in motor skills, compared with animals reared
alone in a cage (Hannigan et al., 1993 ). The environmental enrichment
increased the density of dendritic spines on the apical and basal
dendrites of control animals, but it failed to increase spine density
in the PAE animals (Berman et al., 1996 ). This result appears at odds
with the results of Miller et al. (1990) in which a single subclass of
neuron, corticospinal neurons, showed a 32% increase in spine density in PAE animals with simple cage rearing, although many spines took on
odd shapes and in some cases the cell bodies had migrated to the wrong
layer in cortex. The possibility exists that the enriched environment
would reduce the exuberant number of spines in these PAE neurons and
move them toward or below normal densities, but such experiments have
not been reported. The failure of an enriched environment to completely
restore plasticity suggests that additional mechanisms that are less
dependent or independent of neural activity are affected by prenatal
alcohol exposure.
Other demonstrated regulators of whisker-pairing plasticity in normal
animals are the modulatory neurotransmitters acetylcholine and
norepinephrine (Lu et al., 1996 ; Sachdev et al., 1998 ). After cholinergic depletion there is only a slight reduction in spontaneous activity and in the response of cortical cells to whisker stimulation, but a profound failure of whisker-pairing plasticity that persists for
as long as the animals were tested (Baskerville et al., 1997 ; Sachdev
et al., 1998 ). A reduction of AChE-positive axons in the cortex
has been reported in PAE animals (Miller and Rieck, 1993 ), but the
functional impact of PAE on cholinergic mechanisms has not been studied
in detail. In addition to direct actions of PAE on cholinergic neurons
and the receptors in cortex, indirect actions could be exerted by
reducing cholinergic enhancement of calcium entry through NMDA
receptors (Auerbach and Segal, 1992 ). Other modulatory
neurotransmitters have shown transient decreases after PAE. Dopamine
and D1 receptor binding sites were reduced in frontal cortex and
striatum after PAE, whereas at the same time the same features of D2
receptors remained unaffected (Druse et al., 1990 ).
Status of NMDA receptors in PAE cortex
NMDA-type glutamate receptor levels increase after birth (Insel et
al., 1990 ), and this late developing feature of cortex and hippocampus
predicts that the greatest impact of alcohol on NMDA mechanisms would
be produced by exposure that occurs during the last part of gestation.
Savage et al. (1992) indeed showed that alcohol exposure throughout
gestation reduces the NMDA-sensitive glutamate binding sites in the
postnatal hippocampus. The change in receptor binding was not present
if the exposure was restricted to the first half of gestation, but it
was equal in magnitude to exposure throughout gestation if the alcohol
was given only during the last one-half to last one-third of pregnancy.
These results indicate that the vulnerability of the developing brain to some of the more subtle effects of alcohol exposure on plasticity mechanisms is high in the perinatal period. Furthermore, the results predict that the pathogenesis of decreased neuronal function after PAE
is in part channeled through the demonstrated decrease in calcium entry
through NMDA receptors (Dildy and Leslie, 1989 ; Hoffman et al., 1989 ;
Lee et al., 1994 ; Spuhler-Phillips et al., 1997 ).
Hippocampal NMDA receptor binding is significantly reduced in PAE
animals at ~6 weeks postnatal (Savage et al., 1991 ). NMDA-evoked excitability is also reduced in hippocampal slices from PAE animals (Morrisett et al., 1989 ). Spuhler-Phillips et al. (1997) showed that
PAE reduced NMDA-stimulated increases in intracellular calcium. However, when they analyzed membrane fractions from the forebrain (everything in front of the midbrain) of rats exposed to prenatal ethanol in a procedure similar to the present studies using a monoclonal antibody to NR1, they found no significant difference in NR1
subunit protein compared with control group on P0 and P21 (Spuhler-Phillips et al., 1997 ). These results and those of Hughes et
al. (1998) are different from the present results. One methodological difference was that a membrane-enriched particulate fraction was prepared from only somatic sensory cortex at P90 in these experiments, and there was a decrease in NR1, NR2A, and NR2B. For NR1 analysis a
polyclonal antibody prepared in our lab was used (Rema and Ebner, 1996 ). Sample area (barrel field cortex vs forebrain) or age at the
time of analysis (P90 vs P0 to P21) or the type of antibody (polyclonal
vs monoclonal) could influence these differences.
We have not yet determined whether the accelerated plasticity of
enriched rearing has any effect on upregulation of NMDAR1 expression,
but the results highlight the importance of understanding the
development of NMDAR subunit expression and assembly into functional
receptors during normal development. Insights into this feature of
normal development are complicated by the NMDAR1 subunit being
translated in eight splice variant forms that have different properties
and show different distributions within a cortical neuron (Ehlers et
al., 1995 ; Zukin and Bennett, 1995 ). Alcohol could alter the ratio of
splice variants. Furthermore, the subunit composition of functional
NMDA receptor changes during development (Monyer et al., 1994 ; Sheng et
al., 1994 ). Changes in this feature of NMDA receptor function would not
be detected even if the total subunit protein were restored to control
levels. Given the effect of PAE on NMDA receptor function, it seems
likely that normalization of NMDA receptors in PAE animals may provide a promising strategy for restoring cortical plasticity and perhaps intellectual function. One direction we are pursuing to further enhance
plasticity is to use a partial agonist to the glycine binding site of
the NMDA receptor channel (Lovinger and Zieglgansberger, 1996 ) during
the period of enriched activity to pharmacologically elevate the
function of the NMDA receptors in conjunction with the environmental challenge.
Relevance to fetal alcohol syndrome in children
There has been little controversy since the first reports of Jones
et al. (1973) that PAE affects brain function in children as well as in
animal models. One unique advantage of model systems is the ability to
control other aspects of the animal's life, so that the effects of
alcohol are not confounded by concurrent malnutrition, other abused
substances, neglect, and other sequelae of poverty as is most often the
case in humans (Abel, 1995 ; Abel and Hannigan, 1995 ). Many of
the structural changes found in animal studies also have been reported
in human neuropathology, such as smaller than normal head and brain
size (Mattson and Riley, 1995 ) and failure of cell migration and
malformations (Clarren et al., 1978 ). The intellectual disabilities
persist, with little improvement in children diagnosed with fetal
alcohol syndrome (FAS) and fetal alcohol effects (Streissguth et al.,
1996 ).
Some data from children with fetal alcohol syndrome are comparable to
the present single-unit analysis. Kaneko et al. (1996) using
noninvasive resting EEG analysis in FAS children found greatly reduced
power in the frequency band (7.5-12 Hz) without a correlated increase in slow wave activity as was found in their comparison of
children with Down syndrome. One problem with interpreting this result
is that it does not distinguish deficits in early processing in sensory
systems from predominant dysfunction in "associative/cognitive"
areas less dominated by one sensory modality. Evoked or event-related
potential studies would help resolve this issue. Measurement of visual
evoked potentials in children exposed to prenatal alcohol and other
drugs showed delayed maturation in components of the visual evoked
potential (Scher et al., 1998 ). Similar changes in event-related
potentials in the hippocampus were detected in rats after prenatal
ethanol exposure (Kaneko et al., 1996 ). We think that
interesting new insights could arise from correlating noninvasive EEG
analysis in PAE children with comparable EEG/single-unit analysis from
experimental preparations, so that cross-comparisons could be made
before and after interventions. For the most useful comparison, the
animal studies would need to be performed in awake animals to eliminate
the effects of anesthesia.
All of these data were collected under urethane anesthesia, and there
is no way of evaluating whether the impact of the anesthetic was
greater on responses evoked in impaired PAE cortex than those evoked in
control cortex. Because anesthesia may be a key variable, studies are
being performed to reproduce the experiments using awake animals with
chronically implanted electrodes to measure the effect of anesthesia,
which has been shown to be a potent variable for sensory information
processing in our model system (Chapin et al., 1981 ; Chapin and Lin,
1984 ; Simons et al., 1992 ; Friedberg et al., 1999 ).
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FOOTNOTES |
Received July 2, 1999; revised Sept. 14, 1999; accepted Sept. 30, 1999.
This work was supported in part by National Institutes of Health Grants
NS13031 and NS25907 and a generous gift from Irwin and Annette Eskind.
We thank Mark Maguire and Anita Sankaran for help with alcohol exposure
of the rats and histology, and Dr. Michael Armstrong-James for critical
comments on this manuscript.
Correspondence should be addressed to V. Rema, P.O. Box 152, Peabody
College, Institute for Developmental Neuroscience, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN 37203. E-mail:
rema.velayudhan{at}vanderbilt.edu.
 |
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