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The Journal of Neuroscience, May 15, 2001, 21(10):3674-3687
Susceptibility to Kindling and Neuronal Connections of the
Anterior Claustrum
Xia
Zhang1,
Darren K.
Hannesson2,
Deborah M.
Saucier2,
Amy E.
Wallace2,
John
Howland2, and
Michael E.
Corcoran1, 2
1 Neuropsychiatry Research Unit, Department of
Psychiatry, and 2 Department of Psychology, University of
Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada S7N 5E4
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ABSTRACT |
The claustrum has been implicated in the kindling of generalized
seizures from limbic sites. We examined the susceptibility of the
anterior claustrum itself to kindling and correlated this with an
anatomical investigation of its afferent and efferent connections.
Electrical stimulation of the anterior claustrum resulted in a pattern
of rapid kindling with two distinct phases. Early kindling involved
extremely rapid progression to bilaterally generalized seizures of
short duration. With repeated daily kindling stimulations, early-phase
generalized seizures abruptly became more elaborate and prolonged,
resembling limbic-type seizures as triggered from the amygdala. We
suggest that the rapid rate of kindling from the anterior claustrum is
an indication that the claustrum is functionally close to the
mechanisms of seizure generalization.
In support of our hypothesis, we found significant afferent, efferent,
and often reciprocal connections between the anterior claustrum and
areas that have been implicated in the generation of generalized
seizures, including frontal and motor cortex, limbic cortex, amygdala,
and endopiriform nucleus. Additional connections were found with
various other structures, including olfactory areas, nucleus accumbens,
midline thalamus, and brainstem nuclei including the substantia nigra
and the dorsal raphe nucleus. The anatomical connections of the
anterior claustrum are consistent with its very high susceptibility to
kindling and support the view that the claustrum is part of a forebrain
network of structures participating in the generalization of seizures.
Key words:
kindling; epilepsy; seizure; claustrum; PHA-L; Fluoro-Gold; epileptogenesis
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INTRODUCTION |
The claustrum is a thin column of
gray matter in the rostral half of the forebrain between the basal
ganglia and cortex (Kowianski et al., 1999 ). The functions of the
claustrum are unclear, although data suggest that it may be involved in
coordination of sensorimotor or motor control (Olson and Graybiel,
1980 ; Crescimanno et al., 1989 ; Salerno et al., 1989 ; Cortimiglia et
al., 1991 ; Shima et al., 1996 ), voluntary swallowing (Zald and Pardo,
1999 ), nociception (Sloniewski et al., 1995 ; Persinger et al., 1997 ),
and conditioned fear (Beck and Fibiger, 1995 ), and may become
pathological in Alzheimer's disease or aging (Ogomori et al., 1989 ;
Morys et al., 1994 , 1996a ,b ) and Parkinson's disease (Yoshimura et
al., 1988 ).
Recent studies suggest that the claustrum may play an important role in
epileptiform activity. Thus Kudo and Wada (1990) found that
electrolytic lesions of the cat anterior claustrum ipsilateral to the
kindled amygdala degraded generalized kindled seizures to partial
seizures and retarded kindling. Similar results have also been observed
in monkeys (Wada and Tsuchimochi, 1997 ). Radio-frequency (RF)
lesions of the posterior claustrum delay amygdaloid kindling in rats
(Mohapel et al., 2001 ). The results are not conclusive, however,
because electrolytic and RF lesions can also damage fibers of passage.
We recently observed that the posterior claustrum shares many
characteristics of kindling with the perirhinal cortex (Mohapel et al.,
1998 , 1999 ), the region showing the fastest rate of kindling in the
forebrain (McIntyre et al., 1993 ; Kelly and McIntyre 1996 ). Kindling
from the posterior claustrum passes through two distinct phases. Early
kindling involves extremely rapid progression to bilaterally
generalized seizures with little partial seizure expression. With
repeated daily stimulations, the short generalized seizures abruptly
become more elaborate and prolonged, resembling limbic-type seizures
triggered from the amygdala (Mohapel et al., 1998 , 1999 ). The rapid
rate of kindling from the posterior claustrum could be taken to suggest
that it is functionally close to the mechanisms of seizure generalization.
Anatomical data indicate that the anterior claustrum has prominent
connections with the motor and frontal cortex (Minciacchi et al., 1985 ;
Sloniewski et al., 1986b ; Sadowski et al., 1997a ,b ; Kowianski et al.,
1998a ,b ), which play a pivotal role in kindling (Corcoran et al., 1976 ;
Kelly et al., 1999 ). We therefore hypothesized that the anterior
claustrum is also markedly susceptible to kindling. The present
experiment was designed to test the hypothesis in rats.
Previous neuroanatomical studies on the claustrum have focused on
neuronal connections between claustrum and neocortex, but no
comprehensive investigation of the afferent and efferent connections of
the claustrum is available. Such data could clarify the contribution of
claustrum to epileptogenesis. We therefore also examined the connections of the anterior claustrum by use of iontophoretic delivery
of the anterograde tract-tracing agent Phaseolus vulgaris leucoagglutinin (PHA-L) (Gerfen and Sawchenko, 1984 ) and the retrograde tract-tracing agent Fluoro-Gold (FG) (Schmued and Fallon, 1986 ) into
the anterior claustrum. The results reveal extensive afferent and
efferent connections of the anterior claustrum with many forebrain structures reportedly involved in epilepsy.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Animals. Adult male Long-Evans hooded rats, weighing
300-350 gm at the time of surgery, were used. The rats were housed
under controlled temperature and light conditions (12 hr
light/dark cycle with lights on at 8:00 A.M.), with ad
libitum access to food and water. All procedures were in strict
accordance with the guidelines established by the Canadian Council on
Animal Care as approved by the University of Saskatchewan Animal Care Committee.
Kindling. After 7 d of habituation to the colony, rats
were anesthetized with sodium pentobarbital (Somnotol; 65 mg/kg, i.p.) and placed in a stereotaxic instrument. Bipolar stimulating/recording electrodes constructed of twisted strands of nichrome wire, 127 µm in
diameter and insulated with enamel, were implanted bilaterally into the
anterior claustrum. The stereotaxic coordinates were 2.8 mm anterior to
bregma, 2.1 mm lateral to the midline, and 4.5 mm ventral to the
surface of the brain, with the incisor bar set at 3.8 mm (Paxinos and
Watson, 1998 ). A reference wire and four additional dental screws were
anchored to the skull, and then all the wires and screws were affixed
to the skull with dental acrylic.
One week after surgery, afterdischarge (AD) thresholds were determined
at one of the two electrodes. Electrical stimulation consisted of a 1 sec train of balanced biphasic square-wave pulses of 1 msec duration
and delivered at 60 pps. Stimulation was delivered initially at
100 µA (base to peak) and increased in increments of 100 µA (<1000
µA) or 1000 µA (>1000 µA) until AD was triggered (Pelletier and
Corcoran, 1992 , 1993 ). AD threshold (ADT) was arbitrarily defined as
the lowest intensity to evoke an AD lasting 5 sec. One day later,
claustrum kindling commenced, involving stimulation of the anterior
claustrum once daily at ADT. The duration and intensity of AD and the
behavioral seizures stages (Racine, 1972 ) were recorded after each
stimulation. After kindling of stage 5 seizures and a concomitant AD
lasting >35 sec, the rats were killed by overdose with sodium
pentobarbital (100 mg/kg, i.p.) and perfused through the heart with
saline followed by 10% formaldehyde. Brains were removed from the
skull, immersed in 30% sucrose for 2-10 d at 4°C, and sectioned on
a sliding microtome into 50-µm-thick sections. The sections were
mounted on glass slides and stained with cresyl violet for routine
examination of electrode locations.
FG and PHA-L ejections. Naive rats were anesthetized
with sodium pentobarbital (60 mg/kg, i.p.) and placed in a stereotaxic instrument for iontophoretic ejection of FG into the anterior claustrum. Other rats received ejection of PHA-L into the anterior claustrum. FG (Fluorochem Inc., Denver, CO) was dissolved in filtered (0.22 µm) 0.1 M sodium acetate buffer, pH 3.3, just before use. Following the procedure from previous studies
(Pieribone and Aston-Jones, 1988 ; Chen and Su, 1990 ), an iontophoretic
ejection of a 1% solution of FG was made through a glass micropipette
(tip diameter 10-20 µm) by applying a +1.0 µA current pulsed at 7 sec intervals provided by a constant-current source (Stoelting, Wood
Dale, IL), for 5 min. A single iontophoretic ejection of a 2.5%
solution of PHA-L (Vector Laboratories, Burlingame, CA) in 0.1 M sodium phosphate buffer, pH 7.4, was made
through a glass micropipette (tip diameter 15-25 µm) by applying a
+5.0 µA current pulsed at 7 sec intervals for 15-30 min. The
micropipette was withdrawn 5-10 min after ejection of PHA-L or FG. The
coordinates for PHA-L and FG ejection were the same as those used for
implantation of electrodes.
Ten days after FG and PHA-L ejection, each animal was deeply
anesthetized with sodium pentobarbital (100 mg/kg, i.p.) and perfused
transcardially with 150 ml of 0.1 M PBS, pH 7.4, followed by 250 ml of freshly prepared 4% paraformaldehyde in PBS. The brains
were immediately removed, post-fixed for 2 hr in the same fixative, and
immersed in 30% sucrose dissolved in PBS at 4°C for 2-3 d.
FG and PHA-L immunohistochemistry. Frozen sections 40 µm
thick were prepared on a sliding microtome in the frontal plane and collected through the olfactory bulbs and forebrain to the midbrain and
hindbrain. All sections were collected and divided into five series:
two series of sections were stored at 4°C for later use; one series
of sections was stained for cresyl violet to facilitate the
identification of specific brain nuclei; and the adjacent two series of
sections were processed for FG and PHA-L immunohistochemical staining
using a conventional avidin-biotin-immunoperoxidase technique as
described previously in detail (Zhang et al., 1996 , 1997a ,b ). Briefly,
this procedure included pretreating sections at room temperature for 30 min in 0.2% hydrogen peroxide and for 1 hr in the blocking buffer
containing PBS, 0.3% Triton X-100, and 5% normal goat serum (for FG
stain) or 5% normal rabbit serum (for PHA-L stain). Sections were then
incubated in the primary rabbit anti-FG antibody (1:5000; Chemicon,
Temecula, CA) or the goat anti-PHA-L antibody (1:2000; Vector
Laboratories, Burlingame, CA) diluted in the blocking buffer at 4°C
for 3 d on a shaker. The primary antibodies were localized using
Vectastain Elite reagents (Vector Laboratories); namely, sections were
incubated sequentially in biotinylated anti-rabbit or anti-goat IgG
(1:250) and avidin-biotinylated horseradish peroxidase complex (1:100)
for 2 hr at each incubation. The reaction product was developed by
incubating the sections in a solution containing diaminobenzidine and
hydrogen peroxide at room temperature for 5-10 min. The sections were
mounted on slides, which were then air dried, dehydrated, cleared, and
coverslipped with DPX.
Data analysis. The measures of kindling included the
following: ADT; AD duration; the latency to the first bilateral
forelimb clonus; the duration of forelimb clonus; the rate of kindling, which was defined as the number of daily stimulations necessary to
trigger the first stage 5 motor seizure according to Racine's scale
(Racine, 1972 ) as well as to trigger the first stage 5 motor seizure
with an AD exceeding 30 sec; and AD duration over the first two stage 5 seizures. Statistical analysis of the data was performed using a
one-way ANOVA, and post hoc comparisons were performed with
t tests.
Sections stained with FG or PHA-L immunohistochemistry were examined
with a Zeiss microscope with both bright-field and dark-field illumination. The distribution of FG- and PHA-L-labeled neuronal component in the ejection sites was plotted onto maps prepared from
adjacent Nissl-stained sections. Illustrations were prepared by
charting the distribution of retrogradely labeled cells (in the case of
FG ejection) or anterogradely labeled fibers (in the case of PHA-L
ejection) onto a series of standard drawings of the rat brain. In
transposing our results onto standard drawings, we carefully compared
the cytoarchitectonic features of adjacent Nissl-stained sections to
ensure an accurate match between the actual experimental section being
mapped and the corresponding standard section illustrated in the
reference atlas (Paxinos and Watson, 1998 ). Ejection sites and axon and
neuronal distributions were photographed, the films were scanned with a
high resolution (2700 dpi) film scanner (Nikon, Super Coolscan 2000),
and the images were digitally processed with Adobe Photoshop 5.0. Each image was adjusted for optimal contrast and morphological clarity. Layout was accomplished by using both Adobe Photoshop 5.0 and Adobe
Illustrator 8.0. Each gray scale figure was then printed out with an HP
PhotoSmart P1100 printer with a color cartridge, which produces
high-quality photomicrographs (up to 2400 × 1200 dpi in resolution).
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RESULTS |
Nomenclature
Some researchers (LeVay and Sherk, 1981 ; Morys and Sloniewski,
1986 ; Sherk, 1988 ; Dinopoulos et al., 1992 ; Sadowski et al., 1997a ,b ) have argued that the claustrum consists of two parts, the
insular (or dorsal) claustrum, which underlies the insular cortex, and
the prepiriform (or piriform or ventral) claustrum, which is also
referred to as the endopiriform or dorsal endopiriform nucleus. In the
present study, however, we favor the concept first established by
Krettek and Price (1977a) that the terms claustrum and dorsal
endopiriform nucleus are reserved for the "insular claustrum" and
the "prepiriform claustrum," respectively, for the following
reasons. First, it has long been shown that the claustrum is a
cortically related structure originating from the cortex (Meynert,
1868 ; Brodmann, 1909 ; de Vries, 1910; Macchi, 1951 ; Filiminoff,
1966 ; Bayer and Altman, 1991 ; Bayer et al., 1993 ), whereas the dorsal
endopiriform nucleus is generated in the palliostriatal ventricular
angle (Bayer and Altman, 1991 ; Bayer et al., 1993 ). Second, the
claustrum is heavily and reciprocally connected with neocortex (Druga,
1972 , 1982 ; Carey and Neal, 1985 ; Minciacchi et al., 1985 ; Morys and
Sloniewski, 1986 ; Sloniewski et al., 1986b ; Druga et al., 1990 ; Clasca
et al., 1992 ; Dinopoulos et al., 1992 ; Kowianski et al., 1996 , 1998a ;
Sadowski et al., 1997a ,b ), whereas the dorsal endopiriform nucleus is
mainly connected with the piriform, entorhinal, insular, and orbital
cortices (Krettek and Price, 1977a ,b , 1878a ,b ; Haberly and Price, 1978 ;
Markowitsch et al., 1984 ; Wilhite et al., 1986 ; Witter et al., 1988 ;
Behan and Haberly, 1999 ).
The claustrum borders the orbital cortex anteriorly, the perirhinal
cortex caudally, and the entire extent of the insular cortex laterally.
The ventral border of the claustrum lies sequentially with the
orbital cortex, which is ventral to the anterior claustrum, and the
dorsal endopiriform nucleus, which is ventral to the middle and
posterior parts of the claustrum (the rhinal fissure divides the middle
and posterior parts of the claustrum from the dorsal endopiriform
nucleus). Medial to the anterior claustrum is the forceps minor corpus
callosum, whereas medial to the middle and posterior claustrum lies the
external capsule (which is itself medial to the caudate-putamen). The
forceps minor corpus callosum and the somatosensory cortex overlie,
respectively, the anterior and the remaining parts of the claustrum.
The term "anterior claustrum" as used throughout this paper is
similar to the claustrum presented in Paxinos and Watson (1998 , their
Figs. 7-9) and in Swanson (1998 , his Plates 7-9),
whereas the term "posterior claustrum" as used here is similar to
the claustrum appearing in Paxinos and Watson (1998 , their Figs.
25-27) and in Swanson (1998 , his Plates 25-27). Percolation of each
structure or region and the associated nomenclature used in the present
study were derived primarily from the atlas of the rat brain provided
by Paxinos and Watson (1998) .
Anterior claustrum kindling
Kindling data were obtained from seven rats with accurate
electrode placements in the anterior claustrum (Fig.
1A,B).
For comparison, kindling from stimulation of the basolateral nucleus of
the amygdala was examined in 11 additional rats. Kindling from the
anterior claustrum progressed through two distinct phases of
generalized seizure development, similar to the pattern of kindling
from stimulation of the posterior claustrum (Mohapel et al., 1998 ,
1999 ). The early stage 5 seizure phase involved very rapid progression
to generalized seizure stages 4 and 5, with little or no partial
seizure expression. On repeated daily stimulations, these short
generalized stage 5 seizures abruptly became more elaborate and
prolonged (late phase). To fully describe anterior claustrum kindling
and compare it with amygdaloid kindling, we compared kindling from the
two sites in terms of characteristics of AD, features of behavioral
seizures, and speed of kindling.

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Figure 1.
Kindling site and EEG pattern. A,
Bright-field microphotograph showing the location of an implanted
electrode. Arrowheads indicate the track of the
electrode, with the electrode tip located within the anterior
claustrum. B, Schematic representation of the location
of electrode tips (black dots) in the anterior claustrum
in the seven rats that received kindling stimulation. C,
A typical EEG profile associated with a seizure kindled from the
anterior claustrum. After electrical stimulation the rat almost
immediately exhibited stages 3/4 seizures, several episodes of stage 5 seizures, and one episode of stage 4 seizures in sequence, which were
accompanied by a relatively short period of cortical-type EEG seizure
and a relatively long-lasting limbic-type seizure. D, A
typical EEG profile of a seizure kindled from the basolateral
amygdaloid nucleus. After stimulation the rat showed a limbic-type EEG
seizure lasting for 2 min, whereas no obvious behavioral seizure
appeared until 10 sec after stimulation, at which time the rat began to
sequentially show stages 2, 3, 4, and 5 seizures. Acb,
Accumbens nucleus; AI, agranular insular cortex;
AOP, anterior olfactory nucleus, posterior part;
Cg1, cingulate cortex, area 1; Cla,
claustrum; DEn, dorsal endopiriform nucleus;
GI, granular insular cortex; IL,
infralimbic cortex; LO, lateral orbital cortex;
M1, primary motor cortex; M2, secondary
motor cortex; Pir, piriform cortex; PrL,
prelimbic cortex; S1, primary somatosensory cortex;
VO, ventral orbital cortex. Also see Results for a more
complete account of the contralateral afferent connections. Scale bar,
520 µm.
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Characteristics of AD
The mean (±SEM) AD threshold in the anterior claustrum was much
higher than in the amygdala (471.43 ± 94.40 µA vs 50.91 ± 4.56 µA, respectively; t(17) = 5.669; p < 0.01), as shown in Table 1. The mean duration of the initial AD in
the anterior claustrum was significantly longer than in the amygdala
(12.71 ± 2.35 sec vs 5.64 ± 0.90 sec, respectively;
t(17) = 3.677; p < 0.01) (Table 1), and repeated-measures ANOVA indicated that there was a
significant difference in the change in AD durations between groups
(F(16,1) = 5.94; p < 0.01) and over time (F(16,2.811) = 9.83; p < 0.05), with a significant interaction
(F(16,2.811) = 2.95; p < 0.05).
Speed of kindling
Repeated-measures ANOVA indicated that kindling to different
seizure stages differed between the groups
(F(16,1) = 22.83; p < 0.01) and over time (F(16,7) = 29.45;
p < 0.01), with a significant interaction
(F(16,7) = 6.23; p < 0.01). Stimulation of the anterior claustrum required significantly
fewer ADs to kindle the first bilateral clonus
(t(17) = 5.310; p < 0.01) and the first stage 5 seizure
(t(17) = 2.649; p < 0.05) than did the amygdala, as shown in Table
2 and Figure
2A. The first
stimulation of the anterior claustrum at ADT provoked stage 2 or 3 seizures. Bilateral clonus developed after a mean of 3.0 claustrum ADs,
significantly faster than the 8.1 ADs with amygdaloid stimulation, and
the first stage 5 seizure developed after 5.6 claustrum ADs,
significantly faster than the 9.4 ADs with amygdaloid stimulation
(Table 2). This corresponds to the early phase of kindling we have
observed previously with stimulation of the posterior claustrum
(Mohapel et al., 1998 , 1999 ).
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Table 2.
Speed of kindling and features of behavioral seizures with
kindling of anterior claustrum (CLA) and amygdala
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Figure 2.
Kindling profiles in the anterior claustrum and
basolateral amygdaloid nucleus. A, Behavioral seizure
stages plotted against the corresponding afterdischarges.
B, Duration of afterdischarges plotted against motor
seizures.
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To characterize the transition into the late phase of limbic-type stage
5 seizures, we noted the first AD on which rats exhibited a stage 5 seizure that exceeded 30 sec in AD duration. As reported previously
(Mohapel et al., 1998 , 1999 ), this measurement corresponds closely to a
twofold increase in AD duration from the immediately preceding stage 5 seizure, an additional criterion for limbic-type generalization. As
shown in Table 2, the late phase of limbic-type generalized stage 5 seizures developed after a mean of 11.3 claustrum ADs, not
significantly different from the 9.4 ADs required with amygdaloid
stimulation (p > 0.05). We also measured the AD
durations of the first early and late stage 5 seizures. Again, the mean AD duration in the first stage 5 seizures was significantly shorter in
the anterior claustrum group than in the amygdaloid group
(p < 0.05) (Table 1, Fig.
2B), whereas the first late-phase stage 5 seizure in
the claustrum group did not differ significantly in duration from the
first stage amygdaloid seizure (means of 40.5 ± 10.1 and
61.4 ± 3.2 sec, respectively;
t(9.5) = 1.972; p = 0.078).
Features of behavioral seizures
The mean latency to bilateral forelimb clonus with stimulation of
the anterior claustrum was much shorter than that with stimulation of
the amygdala (Table 1) (t(17) = 1.999; p < 0.01). Furthermore, the mean duration of
bilateral forelimb clonus in early stage 4 or stage 5 claustrum
seizures was significantly shorter than in generalized amygdaloid
seizures (t(17) = 7.104, p < 0.0001 for stage 4;
t(17) = 5.309, p < 0.0001 for stage 5), whereas the difference in duration of the first
late stage 5 claustrum seizure from stage 5 amygdaloid seizures was not
statistically significant (Table 2).
Figure 1C shows a typical EEG profile recorded from the
anterior claustrum in a rat exhibiting late-phase stage 5 seizures. Stimulation triggered short cortical-like AD, during which brief stage
3 or 4 seizures occurred. The AD and behavioral seizure were
immediately followed by the appearance of a limbic-like stage 5 behavioral seizure and AD. After amygdaloid stimulation, however, rats
showed the typical gradual onset of AD, culminating in the development
of sequential behavioral seizures of stages 2, 3, 4, and 5 (Fig.
1D).
Efferent connections of the anterior claustrum
PHA-L ejection sites with varying numbers of clearly labeled
neurons in the anterior claustrum and surrounding region were obtained
in nine animals. Of these, three deposits were restricted within the
morphological limits of the anterior claustrum (Fig. 3A), three were in the core
area of the anterior caudate putamen posterior to the anterior
claustrum, two were in the ventral orbital cortex ventral to the
anterior claustrum, and one was in the lateral orbital cortex
ventrolateral to the anterior claustrum. The distribution of anterior
claustrum projections is schematically illustrated in Figure
4, which is based primarily on the
results in rat 99217 (Fig. 3). The pattern of distribution was quite
similar to those in two other rats with PHA-L deposits centered in the
anterior claustrum, but differed greatly from the pattern in rats with PHA-L ejection outside the claustrum.

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Figure 3.
Localization of PHA-L immunoreactivity in the rat
brain. Bright-field (A) and dark-field
(B-H) microphotographs of coronal
sections showing an ejection site and the distribution of
PHA-L-immunoreactive axons in representative brain regions in rat
99217. A, PHA-L occupied the major part of the anterior
claustrum with minimal spread outside the morphological limits of the
anterior claustrum. B, Layer II of the lateral orbital
cortex was occupied with a high density of labeled fibers, whereas
layer I exhibited low to moderate density of labeled axons.
C, In contrast with the primary motor cortex (on the
left side of the image), with a low concentration of
labeled fibers oriented perpendicularly to the cortical surface, many
axons with a moderate density of varicosities were distributed with no
specific direction in the secondary motor cortex (on the right
side of the image). D, The middle part of the
claustrum exhibited many fine, labeled axons, some of which ran
laterally into the adjacent insular cortex toward the cortical surface.
E, Although many fibers oriented parallel to the
cortical surface in deep layers of the perirhinal cortex (on the
right side of the image), some axons were oriented
perpendicularly to the cortical surface in the superficial layers of
the perirhinal cortex (on the left side of the image).
F, Numerous axons with many varicosities ran
dorsoventrally in deep layers of the posterior part of the lateral
entorhinal cortex. G, Many labeled fibers were
concentrated within the morphological limits of the posterior part of
the anterior olfactory nucleus. H, The submedius
thalamic nucleus ipsilateral to the ejection site (on the left
side of the image) was fully occupied by an especially high
density of numerous terminal-like axons, whereas the contralateral
submedius thalamic nucleus (on the right side of the
image) contained a much lower concentration of terminal-like axons.
LEnt, Lateral entorhinal cortex; PRh,
perirhinal cortex; Sub, submedius thalamic nucleus. All
other abbreviations are as indicated in Figure 1. Scale bars:
A, 290 µm; B-H, 110 µm.
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Figure 4.
Projections of the anterior claustrum in rat
99217. Schematic representation of the density and localization of
PHA-L-labeled fibers determined by immunohistochemistry was plotted
from seven representative coronal sections corresponding to bregma
4.70, 2.70, 1.20, 0.26, 2.56, 4.80, and 6.80 mm
(A-G, respectively). The
irregular dark area in B indicates the
ejection site, which is illustrated in Figure 3A. The
full extent of labeled axons contralateral to the injection is not
shown (see Results for more complete account of the contralateral
projection). This schematic was generated on an IBM-compatible computer
using Paxinos and Watson (1998) . AcbC, Accumbens
nucleus, core; AcbSh, accumbens nucleus, shell;
AOM, anterior olfactory nucleus, medial part;
AOV, anterior olfactory nucleus, ventral part;
APT, anterior pretectal nucleus; Au,
secondary auditory cortex; BLA, basolateral amygdaloid
nucleus, anterior part; BLP, basolateral amygdaloid
nucleus, posterior part; BLV, basolateral amygdaloid
nucleus, ventral part; BM, basomedial amygdaloid
nucleus; BST, bed nucleus of the stria terminalis;
Ce, central amygdaloid nucleus; Cg,
cingulate cortex; CL, centrolateral thalamic nucleus;
Cli, caudal linear nucleus of the raphe;
CM, central medial thalamic nucleus; CPu,
caudate putamen; DI, dysgranular insular cortex;
DMD, dorsomedial hypothalamic nucleus, dorsal part;
Ect, ectorhinal cortex; FrA, frontal
association cortex; GP, globus pallidus;
IMD, intermediodorsal thalamic nucleus;
La, lateral amygdaloid nucleus; LD,
laterodorsal thalamic nucleus; LH, lateral hypothalamic
area; LM, lateral mammillary nucleus; MD,
mediodorsal thalamic nucleus; Me, medial amygdaloid
nucleus; Ment, medial entorhinal cortex;
MO, medial orbital cortex; PAG,
periaqueductal gray; PC, paracentral thalamic nucleus;
Po, posterior thalamic nuclear group;
PtA, parietal association cortex; PV,
paraventricular thalamic nucleus; Re, reuniens thalamic
nucleus; Rh, rhomboid thalamic nucleus;
RS, retrosplenial cortex; RSA,
retrosplenial agranular cortex; RSG, retrosplenial
granular cortex; S, subiculum; S2,
secondary somatosensory cortex; SNC, substantia nigra,
pars compacta; SNR, substantia nigra, pars reticulata;
SuM, supramammillary nucleus; TeA,
temporal association cortex; Tu, olfactory tubercle;
V1, primary visual cortex; V2L, secondary
visual cortex, lateral part; V2M, secondary visual
cortex, medial part; VL, ventrolateral thalamic nucleus;
VM, ventromedial thalamic nucleus; VP,
ventral pallidum; ZI, zona incerta. All other
abbreviations are as indicated in previous figures.
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Axonal labeling at the rostral cerebral cortex appeared in all regions
of the prefrontal cortex, the nomenclature for which is based on a
combination of classical (Kolb, 1990 ) and recent (Paxinos and Watson,
1998 ) descriptions of this region. The prefrontal cortex consists of
the secondary motor cortex (equivalent to area 2 of the frontal
cortex), area 1 of the anterior cingulate cortex, prelimbic cortex
(equivalent to area 3 of the cingulate cortex), and infralimbic,
orbital, and anterior insular cortices. Numerous labeled axons with
dense varicosities ran in the secondary motor cortex and area 1 of the
anterior cingulate cortex from layer VI up into layer III, and many
labeled axons continued to head into the superficial layers. Ventral or
anterior to the anterior cingulate cortex, axonal labeling decreased
significantly in both the prelimbic and infralimbic cortices, where a
low density of labeled fibers with a moderate density of varicosities
was seen upward and inward in all the layers. A similar density of
PHA-L labeling was also observed in the medial and dorsolateral orbital cortices. Although layers II and III of the lateral and ventral orbital
cortices displayed a high density of fine axons with numerous varicosities, deep layers contained low to moderate densities of
labeled fibers (Fig. 3B). The ipsilateral secondary motor
cortex, area 1 of the anterior cingulate cortex, and lateral and
ventral orbital cortices were innervated significantly more than the
contralateral side. The anterior insular cortex, which consists of
granular and agranular parts, was occupied by a few labeled axons
scattered over deep layers. These results confirm the findings of
previous retrograde tracing studies showing that the claustrum
innervates the prefrontal parts of the secondary motor cortex and area
1 of the cingulate cortex, and ventral and lateral orbital cortices heavily on the ipsilateral side and much less heavily on the
contralateral side (Divac et al., 1978 ; Donoghue and Parham,
1983 ; Conde et al., 1995 ; Reep et al., 1996 ), and that the prelimbic,
infralimbic, and medial orbital cortices receive a direct innervation
from a few neurons in the ipsilateral anterior claustrum (Conde et al.,
1995 ; Reep et al., 1996 ).
In addition to the prefrontal cortex, other cortical areas also
exhibited varying degrees of PHA-L labeling. Thus the dorsomedial area
of the frontal association cortex, a region just anterior to the
secondary motor cortex, showed numerous labeled axons, whereas other
parts of the frontal association cortex showed very low to low
densities of labeled fibers. The number of labeled fibers decreased
obviously from the anterior cingulate cortex to the middle and
posterior cingulate cortices, which showed a low concentration of fine
axons. Farther caudal to the cingulate cortex, the agranular
retrosplenial cortex also contained a low concentration of fine axons
located in layers II-VI, whereas only a few labeled axons were
detected in the granular retrosplenial cortex. These projections from
claustrum to retrosplenial cortex are in agreement with the recent
findings obtained with retrograde tract-tracing techniques (van Groen
and Wyss, 1990a , 1992a ).
Similar to the cingulate cortex, the relative numbers of labeled fibers
with numerous varicosities also decreased from a high density in the
anterior part of the secondary motor cortex to the moderate density in
the middle and posterior parts (Fig. 3C). Although a few
axons were observed in the primary motor cortex, which is equivalent to
area 1 of the frontal cortex and located lateral to the secondary motor
cortex, labeled fibers in both the primary and secondary motor cortices
were similarly distributed in layers II-VI. A few labeled axons were
detected in the rostrocaudal extent of the primary and secondary
somatosensory cortices (equivalent to areas 1 and 2 of the parietal
cortex), the lateral area of the secondary visual cortex, the primary
visual cortex, and the auditory cortex. The parietal association
cortex, the medial area of the secondary visual cortex, and deep layers
of the temporal association cortex contained low to moderate densities
of labeled axons distributed throughout layers II-VI. These findings
confirm the recent observations with retrograde tract-tracing
techniques that both the medial area of the secondary visual cortex and
the temporal association cortex receive direct projection from many neurons in the anterior claustrum (Sloniewski and Pilgrim,
1984 ; Carey and Neal, 1985 ; Burwell and Amaral, 1998 ).
Moderate to high densities of labeled axons run mediolaterally from the
middle and posterior parts of the claustrum into deep layers of the
granular and agranular insular cortex (Fig. 3D), and the
superficial layers of the insular cortex were occupied with few, if
any, labeled axons. Ventral to the claustrum, the dorsal endopiriform
nucleus was moderately labeled, whereas a few fine axons were seen in
the deep layers of the dorsal area of the piriform cortex. A strip of
densely packed axons with numerous varicosities ran from the deep
layers of the ectorhinal cortex, through the deep layers of the
perirhinal cortex (Fig. 3E), and down into the deep layers
of the lateral entorhinal cortex (Fig. 3F). Some
fibers with varicosities running through deep layers emitted
collaterals and then headed to superficial layers, a phenomenon especially evident in the perirhinal cortex. These results are consistent with a recent retrograde tract-tracing study showing that
many neurons in the rat anterior claustrum innervate the ectorhinal,
perirhinal, and lateral area of the lateral entorhinal cortex (Deacon
et al., 1983 ; Burwell and Amaral, 1998 ). The medial entorhinal cortex
as defined by Paxinos and Watson (1998) contained no PHA-L-labeled
fibers (Fig. 4G).
Labeled fibers were distributed exclusively on the ipsilateral side in
the major cortical areas mentioned above, with the exception of a light
labeling that was detected in those cortical areas that showed high
density of labeled axons, including the anterior part of the secondary
motor cortex, superficial layers of the lateral and ventral orbital
cortex, claustrum, perirhinal cortex, and lateral entorhinal cortex.
These findings are generally consistent with recent studies (Minciacchi
et al., 1985 ; Sloniewski et al., 1986b ).
PHA-L labeling was also observed in various subcortical structures.
Although a low density of labeled fibers was observed in the medial and
ventral parts of the anterior olfactory nucleus, a high density of
labeled axons was present in the posterior part (Fig. 3G).
Ventral and caudal to the anterior olfactory nucleus, the olfactory
tubercle exhibited low to moderate densities of labeled fibers.
Numerous labeled axons coursed ventrally in the shell of the nucleus
accumbens, in contrast to the relative absence of fibers in the core of
the accumbens. Caudal to the accumbens, the major parts of the bed
nuclei of the stria terminalis and ventral pallidum were modestly
labeled. Farther caudally, a modest density of labeled axons was also
distributed in the nucleus of the lateral olfactory tract as well as in
several amygdaloid nuclei, including the central nucleus, the anterior,
posterior, and ventral parts of the basolateral nucleus, and the
lateral nucleus.
In addition to the cerebral cortex as described above, another
principal target of labeled fibers in the rat brain after PHA-L ejection into the anterior claustrum was the midline thalamus. The
ipsilateral submedius nucleus was especially heavily labeled with
significant terminal-like axons, whereas the contralateral submedius
nucleus was moderately labeled (Fig. 3H). Dorsally, the central part of the mediodorsal nucleus was also moderately labeled
unilaterally. Labeling was light to moderate in other midline thalamic
nuclei, including the paraventricular, paracentral, central medial,
intermediodorsal, interanteromedial, rhomboid, reuniens, and
subparafascicular nuclei. Laterally, labeling was further modest
in the centrolateral, laterodorsal, ventrolateral, ventromedial, and
parafascicular nuclei, as well as in the posterior thalamic nuclear
group and zona incerta. These results are generally consistent with
previous findings of direct projections from the anterior claustrum to
both the submedius thalamic nucleus (Yoshida et al., 1992 ) and many
other thalamic nuclei (Groenewegen, 1988 ; Chen and Su, 1990 ).
The hypothalamus was also modestly labeled in the lateral and posterior
hypothalamic areas, dorsal part of the dorsomedial nucleus,
supramammillary nucleus, and lateral mammillary nucleus. Relatively
light labeling was found in several structures in the ipsilateral brain
stem, including the medial part of the substantia nigra, medial areas
of both the reticular and compact parts of the substantia nigra,
dorsolateral and lateral areas of the periaqueductal gray, and dorsal
raphe nucleus.
Afferent connections of the anterior claustrum
Discrete FG ejection sites in the anterior claustrum and
surrounding regions were obtained in 10 rats. Of these, four small ejections were contained completely within the territory of the anterior claustrum (Fig. 5A).
As shown in Figure 6, which schematically illustrates the distribution of afferents to the anterior claustrum based primarily on the results obtained in rat 99143 (Fig. 5), four
major structures exhibited marked concentrations of retrogradely labeled neurons after a unilateral FG ejection into the anterior claustrum: the cerebral cortex, amygdaloid complex, thalamus, and
several brainstem nuclei.

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Figure 5.
Localization of FG immunoreactivity in rat 99143. Representative bright-field microphotographs of coronal sections
showing an ejection site that occupied the major part of the anterior
claustrum (A) and the distribution of
FG-immunoreactive neurons in the orbital cortex
(B), motor and cingulate cortices
(C), middle part of the claustrum
(D), perirhinal cortex (E),
central part of the mediodorsal thalamic nucleus
(F), basolateral amygdaloid nucleus
(G), and substantia nigra
(H). The orientation of all images is such
that the left side of the image is to the lateral side
of the brain, right side to medial, and top
side to dorsal. All other abbreviations are as indicated in
previous figures. SN, Substantia nigra. Scale bars:
A, B, 435 µm;
C-E, G, 174 µm;
F, H, 87 µm.
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Figure 6.
Afferent connections of the anterior claustrum in
rat 99143. The distribution of FG-immunoreactive cells was plotted onto
a series of standard drawings of the rat brain (Paxinos and Watson,
1998 ) at the same levels as in Figure 4. The dark gray
area in B indicates the ejection site, which is
illustrated in Figure 5A. See Results for a more
complete account of the contralateral afferent connections. For
abbreviations, see previous figures.
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Two strips of low to moderate densities of FG-labeled neurons
concentrated in layers II and V were seen in the medial prefrontal cortex, including the secondary motor cortex, area 1 of the anterior cingulate cortex, and prelimbic cortex. The orbital cortex contained varying degrees of labeled cells, with moderate to high densities in
layers II-IV in the medial and ventral orbital cortices (Fig. 5B), and a low density in deep layers of the medial and
ventral orbital cortices as well as in the lateral orbital cortex.
Labeled cells in the prefrontal regions were distributed bilaterally, with a higher density ipsilaterally. In addition, a few labeled cells
were also detected in the deep layers of the dorsal and ventral parts
of the agranular insular cortex ipsilateral to the FG ejection. These
results confirm previous findings that the anterior cingulate,
prelimbic, and orbital cortices moderately innervate the anterior
claustrum (Beckstead, 1979 ; Reep et al., 1996 ; Levesque and
Parent, 1998 ) and that PHA-L ejection into the infralimbic cortex
resulted in a modest labeling in the anterior claustrum (Takagishi and
Chiba, 1991 ).
Caudal to the prefrontal cortex, a continuum of a moderate
concentration of retrogradely labeled neurons in layer V stretched throughout the rostrocaudal extent of the ipsilateral secondary motor
cortex and cingulate cortex, and retrograde labeling in the primary
motor cortex remained modest (Fig. 5C). The contralateral secondary motor cortex and cingulate cortex were also modestly labeled.
Farther caudally, a few labeled cells were detected in the anterior
part of the retrosplenial agranular cortex ipsilaterally. This finding
is not inconsistent with the previous finding that no labeled axons
were detected in the claustrum after PHA-L ejection into the middle
part of the retrosplenial agranular cortex (van Groen and Wyss,
1992a ).
Caudal to the motor cortex, many labeled neurons were identified
bilaterally in layers V and VI in the medial parts of both the parietal
association cortex and the secondary visual cortex, thus confirming the
previous findings that deep neurons in area 18b of the visual cortex
directly innervate the anterior claustrum (Carey and Neal, 1985 ). Other
areas of the parietal association cortex and visual cortex (including
the lateral part of the secondary visual cortex and primary visual
cortex) showed a modest labeling in layer VI. A similar pattern of
retrograde labeling was also seen in the ipsilateral
primary and secondary sensorimotor cortices and the auditory and
temporal association cortices. Although the major part of the insular
cortex contained a modest density of labeled cells, a high
concentration of labeled neurons appeared in the contralateral anterior
claustrum as well as in the entire extent of the ipsilateral claustrum
at middle and posterior parts (Fig. 5D).
Caudal to the insular cortex, many labeled cells were distributed
throughout the entire extent of the ectorhinal and perirhinal cortices
(predominantly in layer V), with moderate to high concentrations ipsilaterally (Fig. 5E) and a modest concentration
contralaterally. Although a few labeled cells could be seen in the
medial entorhinal cortex, moderate to high densities of labeled cells
were present in the lateral entorhinal cortex ipsilaterally. This
observation is generally consistent with the results of previous PHA-L
studies (Swanson and Kohler, 1986 ; Insausti et al., 1997 ).
Clusters of retrogradely labeled neurons were seen in many midline and
intralaminar thalamic nuclei ipsilateral to the FG ejection. Thus
moderate to high concentrations of cell labeling appeared in the
paracentral nucleus, middle and posterior parts of the paraventricular
nucleus, central part of the mediodorsal nucleus (Fig.
5F), intermediodorsal nucleus, central medial
nucleus, dorsal part of the centrolateral nucleus, reuniens nucleus,
parafascicular nucleus, and zona incerta. A modest density of labeled
cells was also present in the paratenial nucleus, anterior part of the
paraventricular nucleus, rhomboid nucleus, ventromedial nucleus, dorsal
and ventral parts of the submedius nucleus, and posterior nucleus. We
could not identify any retrogradely labeled neurons in the
ventrolateral, ventroposterior, laterodorsal, and lateroposterior
thalamic nuclei, medial geniculate nucleus, and the anterior pretectal
region, in contrast to the report of Sloniewski et al. (1986a) , who
used the retrograde tract-tracing agents Fast Blue and Diamidino
Yellow. Moreover, the number of labeled cells in the posterior thalamic nucleus in our present study appears to be much less than that shown by
Sloniewski et al. (1986a) . These discrepancies could be explained by
differences in the tract-tracing properties of FG as compared with Fast
Blue or Diamidino Yellow. That is, injections of both Fast Blue and
Diamidino Yellow usually produce tissue damage in the injection site
(Schmued and Fallon, 1986 ; Sloniewski et al., 1986a ), so that the
tracers can be taken up by damaged fibers of passage (Schmued and
Fallon, 1986 ), whereas FG appears not to be taken up by fibers of
passage at the ejection site, as shown by the present results (see
control ejections below) as well as previous studies (Schmued and
Fallon, 1986 ; Pieribone and Aston-Jones, 1988 ; Chen and Su, 1990 ; Moga
and Moore, 1997 ). In addition, FG does not leak out of labeled cells
(Schmued and Fallon, 1986 ) and thus differs from Fast Blue and
Diamidino Yellow, which can diffuse out of labeled cells (Schmued and
Fallon, 1986 ). These arguments and our present results are further
supported by recent studies showing that although PHA-L ejections into
the laterodorsal thalamic nucleus (van Groen and Wyss, 1992b ) produced no anterograde labeling in the anterior claustrum, localized PHA-L ejection into other midline and intralaminar thalamic nuclei (such as
the paraventricular nucleus) resulted in varying degrees of labeling in
the anterior claustrum (Ohtake and Yamada, 1989 ; Berendse and
Groenewegen, 1991 ; Moga et al., 1995 ).
Ventral to the thalamus, the lateral hypothalamic area also contained a
low density of labeled neurons, whereas the other hypothalamic regions
were devoid of FG labeling. In the brain stem, two populations of
neurons ipsilateral to the FG ejection site were heavily stained,
including neurons in the ventral part of the ventral tegmental area and
the medial part of the substantia nigra pars compacta (Fig.
5H). This is consistent with previous findings that
dopaminergic neurons in the ventral tegmental area and substantia nigra
heavily innervate the anterior claustrum (Lindvall et al., 1978 ;
Bjorklund and Lindvall, 1984 ). The parabrachial nucleus exhibited a
modest level of FG labeling, thus confirming the results of a recent
PHA-L study (Krukoff et al., 1993 ). The ipsilateral dorsal raphe
nucleus contained a moderate concentration of neuronal labeling in the
dorsal and ventrolateral parts, which is supported by previous PHA-L
results indicating that the dorsal raphe nucleus innervates the entire
claustrum (Vertes, 1991 ).
In addition to the FG ejections that were restricted to the anterior
claustrum, we also obtained five ejections localized in regions
adjacent to the anterior claustrum. The results of these experiments
need to be commented on, because they serve as control ejections and
support the specificity of the results of our analysis of the
connections of the anterior claustrum. When FG was injected into the
white matter mediodorsal to the anterior claustrum (i.e., the forceps
minor corpus callosum) in one rat, no specific retrograde labeling was
detected in the forebrain. This confirms the previous observation that
FG appears not to be taken up by fibers of passage at the ejection site
(Schmued and Fallon, 1986 ) and strongly suggests that our FG ejection
centered within the anterior claustrum resulted in a specific
retrograde labeling of neurons. In one rat that displayed a prominent
extension of the FG ejection from the anterior claustrum caudally into
the anterior caudate putamen, we observed a moderate labeling of
pyramidal cells in the subicular complex in the ipsilateral hippocampal formation. We believe that this labeling probably results from the
spread of the FG ejection into the anterior caudate putamen because one
rat with FG ejection localized entirely in the anterior caudate putamen
exhibited a similar pattern of retrograde labeling in the ipsilateral
subicular complex, thus confirming the previous finding that neurons in
the rat subiculum complex innervate the caudate putamen (Heimer et al.,
1995 ). Furthermore, we could not identify any positive labeling in the
subicular complex in four rats with FG ejections restricted to the
anterior claustrum, consistent with the observations that ejection of
PHA-L (van Groen and Wyss, 1990b ) or other tract tracers (Swanson,
1981 ; Jay et al., 1989 ) revealed a substantial projection from the
subicular and CA1 fields to the medial prefrontal cortex but not to the
anterior claustrum. In two other rats with FG ejections located in
areas ventral to the anterior claustrum (i.e., the ventral or lateral
orbital cortex), the pattern of labeling was quite different from that
produced by FG ejections centered in the anterior claustrum. Thus
although no specific labeling could be detected in the piriform cortex and dorsal endopiriform nucleus after FG ejection into the anterior claustrum, FG ejection into the orbital cortex resulted in clear retrograde labeling in the ipsilateral piriform cortex and the dorsal
endopiriform nucleus. This observation is consistent with the results
of retrograde and anterograde tracing studies (Reep et al., 1996 ; Behan
and Haberly, 1999 ).
 |
DISCUSSION |
The present study provides the first description of the
characteristics of kindling from the anterior claustrum in rats.
Anterior claustrum kindling is generally similar to kindling from the
posterior claustrum, as we described previously (Mohapel et al., 1998 ,
1999 ). Both parts of the claustrum display greater sensitivity to
kindling than the amygdala, to a degree comparable to the perirhinal
cortex (McIntyre et al., 1993 ; Kelly and McIntyre, 1996 ).
We have also provided the first detailed description of the efferent
and afferent connections of the anterior claustrum in rats. We found
widespread and robust reciprocal connections between the anterior
claustrum and many cortical and subcortical structures that have been
reported to play an important role in epileptiform activity.
Anterior claustrum kindling
We have reported previously (Mohapel et al., 1998 , 1999 ) that the
posterior claustrum, like the perirhinal cortex, is extremely susceptible to kindling and shows a two-phase progression through stage
5 seizures: an early phase characterized by rapid onset and short
seizure durations, and a late phase virtually identical to limbic stage
5 seizures, with longer onset and duration of seizures. The present
results confirm our prediction that the anterior claustrum is also
susceptible to kindling, displaying a pattern and profile of kindling
similar to that of the posterior claustrum.
The rapid kindling rates and brief latencies to clonus associated with
perirhinal kindling have been cited as evidence for the critical
involvement of perirhinal cortex in seizure generalization (McIntyre et
al., 1993 ; Kelly and McIntyre, 1996 ). The common characteristics of
kindling from perirhinal cortex, insula, and posterior claustrum
suggest that similar considerations apply to the latter two structures
(Mohapel et al., 1998 , 1999 ), and the present results suggest further
that the anterior claustrum may also play an important role in seizure
generalization. Thus we propose the hypothesis that a set of
anatomically interrelated structures in the forebrain, including
anterior and posterior claustrum, insular cortex, and perirhinal
cortex, play a key role in enabling epileptiform activity to access the
motor substrates that support generalized seizures, substrates that at
least in part are located in frontal and motor cortex. The fact that
stimulation of claustrum or perirhinal cortex produces more rapid
kindling than focal stimulation of frontal/motor cortex itself (Seidel and Corcoran, 1986 ) presumably reflects the broad anatomical
connections of claustrum (present results) and perirhinal cortex
(McIntyre et al., 1996 ) with cortex and other structures, which would
allow widespread recruitment of discharge throughout the network. In support of this hypothesis, bilateral frontal lesions damaging the
insula, orbital cortex, and anterior portions of the perirhinal cortex
retard amygdaloid kindling (Corcoran et al., 1976 ), as do small
bilateral lesions of the claustrum (Mohapel et al., 2001 ).
Notwithstanding the general similarities in the profiles of kindling
from the insular cortex, perirhinal cortex, and claustrum, we note that
there are some differences. By suspending rats in a harness during
kindling, we were able to detect subtle differences in convulsions
(Mohapel et al., 1999 ), including more rapid and more vigorous forelimb
clonus in seizures kindled from posterior claustrum than in seizures
from perirhinal or insular cortex. In future studies it will be
important to examine anterior claustrum kindling in suspended rats.
Furthermore, kindling from anterior and posterior claustrum is
extremely rapid ("early kindling": anterior claustrum, 3.0 ADs, and
posterior claustrum, 2.5 ADs; "late kindling: anterior claustrum, 9.3 ADs, and posterior claustrum, 13.7 ADs), and somewhat faster than from
perirhinal cortex, insular cortex, or other limbic sites (Mohapel et
al., 1999 ). It remains to be explored whether these differences reflect
different functions or merely differences in density of connections.
Efferent projections and their association with epilepsy
Our results indicate that the anterior claustrum projects
extensively to the frontal cortex of the rat, including motor cortex, orbital cortex, and insular cortex. These cortical structures are
thought to play an important role in epileptogenesis (Corcoran et al.,
1976 ; Wada and Wake, 1977 ; Kelly and McIntyre, 1996 ). In addition, we
observed projections to other areas thought to participate in
epileptiform activity, including perirhinal cortex (McIntyre et al.,
1993 ), entorhinal cortex (Savage et al., 1985 ), and piriform cortex
(McIntyre and Plant, 1989 ; Löscher and Ebert, 1996 ). Widespread
subcortical projections are also present, including projections to
olfactory structures, the endopiriform nucleus, the shell of the
nucleus accumbens, the amygdala, and the midline thalamus, particularly
the submedius nucleus. The sensitivity of the amygdala to epileptiform
activity is well know, and recent data have implicated the endopiriform
nucleus in epileptogenesis (Hoffman and Haberly, 1996 ) as well. One
unanticipated finding was the strong projection to the submedius
nucleus. This structure plays a role in nociception (Roberts and Dong,
1994 ); its functional involvement in claustrum kindling remains to be
examined. The anterior claustrum also projects to brainstem structures,
including the substantia nigra, the periaqueductal gray, and the dorsal raphe nucleus. The substantia nigra pars reticulata has been implicated in seizure susceptibility (Iadarola and Gale, 1982 ), as has the serotoninergic raphe system (Wada et al., 1997 ).
Afferent connections
FG ejections revealed widespread afferent projections to the
anterior claustrum that largely, although not completely, reciprocate the efferent connections of the claustrum. We observed significant innervation from frontal, sensory, association, and limbic cortex, including ectorhinal, perirhinal, and lateral entorhinal cortex. There
was some reciprocity of afferents with subcortical areas innervated by
the anterior claustrum, including the midline thalamus, amygdala,
medial substantia nigra, and dorsal raphe nucleus. Unexpectedly, however, significant afferent projections arise from the contralateral anterior claustrum and the entire extent of the middle and posterior ipsilateral claustrum.
The location of neurons in the medial prefrontal cortex (including
secondary motor cortex, anterior part of area 1 of the cingulate
cortex, prelimbic cortex, and infralimbic cortex) that innervate the
anterior claustrum is similar to that of neurons in the medial
prefrontal cortex, the axons of which join the corticospinal or
pyramidal tract (Miller, 1987 ; Hurley et al., 1991 ). The corticospinal tract is known to collect axons from layer V pyramidal neurons in the
primary motor and somatosensory cortices to innervate the "motor"
nuclei in the brainstem and the spinal cord both in rats (Zilles 1990 ;
Zilles and Wree, 1995 ) and in humans (Nolte, 1993 ; Brodal, 1998 ).
Therefore, our observation of a corticoclaustrum projection from the
medial prefrontal cortex may explain the involvement of the claustrum
in coordination of sensorimotor or motor control (Olson and Graybiel,
1980 ; Crescimanno et al., 1989 ; Salerno et al., 1989 ; Cortimiglia et
al., 1991 ; Shima et al., 1996 ), although it is unknown whether the same
layer V neurons in the medial prefrontal cortex send axonal collaterals
simultaneously joining the corticoclaustrum projection and
corticospinal tract.
In a PHA-L study, McIntyre et al. (1996) demonstrated that one of the
major efferent projections from the anterior perirhinal cortex in rats
is the entire extent of the claustrum, a projection that appears to
originate primarily from deep layers of the anterior perirhinal cortex.
In addition to confirming these findings, the present study further
demonstrated that a similar pattern of perirhinal-claustrum projection
also exists in the middle and posterior parts of the perirhinal cortex
as well as in the ectorhinal cortex as defined in atlases of the rat
brain (Paxinos and Watson, 1998 ; Swanson, 1998 ). These results support
the view that both the ectorhinal and perirhinal cortices located on
the dorsal and ventral banks, respectively, of the rhinal fissure could
be regarded neuroanatomically as a single structure, the perirhinal
cortex (Burwell and Amaral, 1998 ).
Afferent projections to the anterior claustrum from the basolateral
amygdaloid nucleus in rats were initially examined by Krettek and Price
(1977a , 1978a ) using tritiated amino acid as an anterograde tracer.
They found that although the posterior part of the basolateral nucleus
does not project to the entire anterocaudal extent of the claustrum,
the anterior part of the basolateral nucleus heavily innervates the
ipsilateral anterior claustrum but not the posterior claustrum. Our FG
experiments showed, however, that neurons in the posterior part of the
basolateral nucleus also project to the anterior claustrum, although
the projection is much more modest than that from the anterior part of
the basolateral nucleus. The discrepancy in results could result from a
lower sensitivity of tritiated amino acids, because Kita and Kitai
(1990) , using the more sensitive anterograde tracing agent PHA-L,
recently demonstrated a modest projection from the anterior part of the basolateral nucleus to the posterior claustrum.
In summary, significant afferent, efferent, or bidirectional
projections exist between the anterior claustrum and various areas that
have been implicated in epileptiform activity, including frontal and
motor cortex, limbic cortex, amygdala, endopiriform nucleus, olfactory
structures, nucleus accumbens, midline thalamus, and brainstem nuclei,
including the substantia nigra and the dorsal raphe nucleus. The
anatomical connections of the anterior claustrum are consistent with
its very high susceptibility to kindling, as demonstrated here, and
they support the view that the claustrum is part of a forebrain network
of structures that participate in the generalization of seizures.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Oct. 9, 2000; revised March 2, 2001; accepted March 6, 2001.
This research was supported by a grant from the Canadian Institutes of
Health Research awarded to M.E.C. and by an Establishment Grant from
the Health Services Utilization and Research Commission of Saskatchewan
awarded to X.Z. We thank Yan Li for technical assistance.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Michael Corcoran, Office of
Research Services, Kirk Hall Room 217, University of Saskatchewan, 117 Science Place, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada S7N 5C8. E-mail:
corcoran{at}admin.usask.ca.
 |
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