 |
Previous Article | Next Article 
The Journal of Neuroscience, July 15, 2002, 22(14):6062-6070
Synchronous Neuronal Activity Is a Signal for Axonal Sprouting
after Cortical Lesions in the Adult
S. Thomas
Carmichael and
Marie-Françoise
Chesselet
Department of Neurology, University of California Los Angeles, Los
Angeles, California 90095
 |
ABSTRACT |
The ability of the adult brain to form new connections in areas
denervated by a lesion (axonal sprouting) is more widespread than
previously thought, but mechanisms remain unknown. We have previously
demonstrated an unexpected, robust axonal sprouting of contralateral
corticostriatal neurons into the denervated striatum after ischemic
cortical lesions. We now take advantage of marked differences in the
degree of axonal sprouting from contralateral homotypic cortex after
two types of cortical lesions to define the role of neuronal activity
in this response. Thermal-ischemic lesions (TCL) of sensorimotor
cortex, which induce axonal sprouting, produced two sequential patterns
of low-frequency, synchronized neuronal activity that are not seen
after similarly sized aspiration lesions, which do not induce
axonal sprouting. An early rhythm of synchronous neuronal activity
occurred in perilesion cortex on day 1 after lesion, with a
frequency range of 0.2-2 Hz. A later pattern of activity occurred on
days 2 and 3 after lesion, with a frequency range of 0.1-0.4 Hz. This
second rhythm synchronized neuronal activity across widespread areas,
including the cortical areas that contain the cell bodies of the
sprouting axons. TTX was used to block this patterned neuronal activity
and determine whether axonal sprouting was prevented. Chronic TTX
infusion into the lesion site blocked the synchronous neuronal activity
after TCL as well as axonal sprouting. Thus, both after different types of lesions and in the blockade experiments axonal sprouting was strongly correlated with synchronous neuronal activity, suggesting a
role for this activity in anatomical reorganization after brain lesion
in the adult.
Key words:
cerebral ischemia; tetrodotoxin; striatum; repair; neuroplasticity; regeneration; activity; EEG
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Axonal sprouting is emerging as an
important component of the CNS response to injury and may be critical
for functional plasticity and recovery. Indeed, axonal sprouting has
long been thought restricted to the immature brain or to discrete,
highly plastic regions in the adult, notably the hippocampus. However,
axonal sprouting also occurs in the cortex after lesions (Napieralski
et al., 1996 ; Carmichael et al., 2001 ). Remarkably, the cell bodies of
the neurons involved are often located at a considerable distance from
the lesion (Napieralski et al., 1996 ). It is unclear what signals, originating either at the lesion site or in the denervated area, participate in the sprouting response of distant neurons.
Electrophysiological activity is a prime candidate for such a signal.
Recent evidence suggests that specific patterns of activity could be
involved not only in synaptic refinement (Feller, 1999 ), but also in
axonal growth during development (Catalano and Shatz, 1998 ; Dantzker and Callaway, 1998 ). Therefore, we investigated the role of in vivo electrophysiological activity in a model of long distance axonal sprouting in the adult brain.
This research has been limited by the difficulty in distinguishing
between the degenerative effects of a lesion and signals specifically
associated with sprouting in most experimental models in which
sprouting occurs. In a model system that addresses this question, we
have shown that ischemic lesions of the sensorimotor cortex induced by
thermocoagulation of pial blood vessels in adult rats are followed by a
massive sprouting of axons from the contralateral homotypic cortex into
the denervated striatum (Napieralski et al., 1996 ; Uryu et al., 2001 ).
In contrast, ablation of the exact same cortical area by acute
aspiration does not induce a sprouting response. In this model, axonal
sprouting can first be detected by alterations in growth cone markers
at 7 d after lesion (M. H. Shomer and M. F. Chesselet,
unpublished observations) and at 16 d by ultrastructural study
(Uryu et al., 2001 ) and, in the striatum, is limited to the region of
the dorsolateral striatum denervated by the lesion (Napieralski et al.,
1996 ). Postlesion axonal sprouting closely overlaps with an area
containing activated astrocytes, as detected by an increase in glial
fibrillary acidic protein immunostaining (Szele et al., 1995 ).
This experimental model has the advantages that axonal sprouting occurs
from cortical sites in the hemisphere opposite the ischemic lesion and
that both aspiration and ischemic lesions share similar degrees of tissue damage and axotomy. Thus, this cortical lesion model provides the ability to eliminate lesion effects unrelated to sprouting by
comparing two similarly sized lesions that differ primarily in induced
axonal sprouting.
In the present study, we have used this model to examine the role of
neuronal activity as a signal for axonal sprouting from cortex
contralateral to the lesion into striatum ipsilateral to the lesion in
the adult. Neuronal activity was recorded for 7 d in perilesion
and in contralateral cortex in adult rats with either a
thermocoagulatory (TCL) or aspiration (ASP) lesion of the
sensorimotor cortex. Only the sprouting-inducing thermocoagulatory lesions were followed by a characteristic pattern of activity, first in
the perilesion cortex and secondarily on the side opposite to the
lesion. To confirm that this transient network of neuronal activity
induced by the thermocoagulatory lesion was necessary for axonal
sprouting, tetrodotoxin (TTX) was infused chronically into the
perilesion cortex. This treatment blocked the lesion-induced activity
and abolished axonal spouting from contralateral cortex into the
denervated striatum.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Physiological preparation. Animal procedures
were conducted within National Institutes of Health and University of
California Los Angeles Department of Laboratory Animal Medicine
guidelines. Adult Sprague Dawley rats (250-400 gm, 15 males) were
anesthetized with Equithesin (1.0 ml/300gm, i.p.) and immobilized in a
stereotaxic frame. Skull screw electrodes for ground and indifferent
channels were implanted over both cerebellar hemispheres. Four
insulated tungsten microelectrodes (0.04 mm diameter, 0.2-0.5 M
impedance at 1 kHz) were placed through small burr holes in cortical
sites that would become, after the cortical lesion (see below): (1) perilesion cortex [relative to bregma: anteroposterior (AP) 7 mm,
mediolateral (ML) 2 mm; Paxinos and Watson, 1997 ], (2)
contralateral parietal cortex (AP 4, ML 3), (3) contralateral frontal
cortex (AP 0, ML 4), and (4) contralateral occipital cortex (AP 7, ML 3) (see Fig. 1D). In four animals (two with TCL and
two with ASP), sintered Ag-AgCl DC electrodes (A-M Systems, Carlsborg,
WA) were also implanted in perilesion cortex, contralateral parietal
cortex, and ipsilateral cerebellum. All electrode leads were
immobilized in a dental acrylic headset. After a 1 d recovery, the
animals were reanesthetized, and a craniotomy was cut above frontal and parietal cortex in the left hemisphere and either ASP
(n = 5) or TCL (n = 5) produced as
previously described (Szele et al., 1995 ). The bone defect was sealed
with sterilized plastic wrap and dental cement. In five physiology sham
animals skull screw and microelectrodes were placed, but no lesion was given.
Lesions. Two types of cortical lesions were produced as
previously described (Szele et al., 1995 ). A craniotomy was cut above frontal and parietal cortex. In TCL, pial blood vessels were
thermocoagulated with a heater probe, leaving the dura intact. For ASP,
the dura was opened and the cortex gently aspirated with a fine pipette to a point just above the subcortical white matter (Uryu et al., 2001 ).
Sham animals received a craniotomy alone.
Recording. Spontaneous cortical activity was recorded before
and after the lesions in awake, unrestrained animals in 1 hr sessions
each day for 7 d after the lesion. Thus, each animal served as its
own control. AC signals were amplified, filtered, and digitized (six
channel simultaneously recording at 2.5 kHz; Axoscope 7.0; Axon
Instruments, Foster City, CA). DC activity was recorded in reference to
the cerebellar skull screw electrode and with a cerebellar DC electrode
as indifferent (Grass DC amplifier; 3 Hz low-pass filter). Baseline DC
electrode drift was not significant until 5 d after the lesion, at
which time DC recording was terminated. Cortical depolarization shifts
or spreading depressions were recorded in DC mode. In addition, AC
recordings were analyzed during each recording session for the
characteristic transient depression produced in this mode by spreading
depressions (Hossmann, 1996 ).
TTX physiological experiments. Seven day infusing osmotic
minipumps (Alza 1007D; Alza, Palo Alto, CA) filled with TTX
(Calbiochem, San Diego, CA) dissolved in sterile citrate buffer (Reiter
et al., 1986 ) were primed at 37oC in
sterile saline overnight. Operative procedures were as above. Tungsten
microelectrodes were implanted in perilesion cortex and contralateral
parietal cortex, skull electrodes were placed over both cerebellar
hemispheres, and TCL was produced. Minipumps were placed in the
interscapular area and specially constructed cannulas (Kasamatsu and
Schmidt, 1997 ) implanted into the lesion bed 1.0 mm deep to the dural
surface. In preliminary experiments, a single minipump implanted into
the middle of the lesion was inadequate to block action potentials in
both the rostral and caudal peri-infarct cortex. Two minipumps were
thus implanted: 3 mm from the rostral margin of the lesion and 3 mm
from the caudal margin of the lesion. Minipump cannulas were
fixed with dental cement. Spontaneous cortical activity from the two AC
channels was filtered, amplified, and digitized.
Data processing. Five minute epochs of cortical activity
from each electrode at each recording session were subjected to Fast Fourier Transform (Clampfit 8.0; Axon Instruments). These power spectra
were then averaged across animals in the same lesion group to give the
average power of the cortical activity for each brain region, for each
condition (ASP, TCL, sham, TCL plus vehicle, TCL plus TTX) at
each time point before and after each lesion. These values were
compared across lesion conditions using factorial ANOVA and a
Tukey-Kramer post hoc test (Statview 1.2; SAS Institute Inc., Carey, NC).
Multiunit activity. Multiunit activity was obtained offline
by high-pass filtering each recording session at 300 Hz (Colder et al.,
1996 ). Three minute epochs of multiunit action potential activity
simultaneously recorded from the four AC electrodes in the first
electrophysiology experiments or two AC electrodes in the TTX
experiments were passed through a window discriminator set to twice
background (Origin 6.0; Microcal Software, Northampton, MA). In
individual animals, multiunit cross-correlations were computed (Sears
and Stagg, 1976 ) using a 2 msec bin width and a 200 msec sampling
window (Stranger; Biographics, Inc., Winston-Salem, NC).
Cross-correlation bin counts were converted to firing rate. Statistical
significance was tested using Poisson statistics. Confidence limits of
99% for an independent firing relationship were calculated based on
the average firing frequency (Abeles, 1982 ; Stranger; Biographics,
Inc.). Additionally, cross-correlation bin counts were averaged for all
animals within each experimental group to generate average firing rate
histograms per cortical area per time point after lesion. These were
statistically compared using the same cross-correlation function as
above. Differences in spontaneous multiunit activity between TCL plus
vehicle and TCL plus TTX were tested with an unpaired Student's
t test (Statview 1.2; SAS Institute Inc.).
Anatomical tracing and histology. In the electrophysiology
experiments, 7 d after the lesion or 8 d after electrode
implantation in sham, animals were anesthetized and perfused with
buffered saline and 4% paraformaldehyde. Brains were post-fixed,
cryoprotected, frozen-sectioned at 50 µm, and stained with cresyl
violet. Sections were analyzed for lesion size, including involvement
of subcortical white matter and corpus callosum. Two sets of animals
received biotinylated dextran amine (BDA) injections to directly
demonstrate axonal sprouting: a set of ASP, TCL, and craniotomy (sham)
controls (n = 3 for each group) and a set of TCL plus
TTX and TCL plus vehicle animals (n = 5 for each
group). Twenty-eight days after the lesion, animals received four, 160 nl injections into cortical layer V at AP 1.2, ML 3.O (Paxinos and
Watson, 1997 ) of a 10% solution of BDA (Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR)
as described previously (Carmichael et al., 2001 ). Seven days later,
the animals were perfused as above, and 50 µm tissue sections were
processed for BDA visualization (Carmichael et al., 2001 ). BDA is a
bidirectional label (Reiner et al., 2000 ), but we quantified the
surface area of labeled axonal profiles in the anterograde-only
corticostriatal projection (Heimer et al., 1995 ). Digital
photomicrographs of the dorsolateral striatum ipsilateral and
contralateral to the cortical injection at three coronal levels within
the region of the contralateral corticostriatal projection (Napieralski
et al., 1996 ; AP 1.45, AP 0.8, AP -0.7; Paxinos and Watson, 1997 ) were given a gray scale threshold to include only labeled axons. The surface area of labeled axons was measured (NIH Image 1.6) in three
separate regions within the projection zone in each section and
averaged to give a mean surface area per section of corticostriatal labeling for both sides of the striatum. The contralateral surface area
was then divided by that in the ipsilateral striatum to give a
contralateral-ipsilateral ratio as a measure of axonal sprouting (see
Fig. 1D). The contralateral-ipsilateral labeling
ratios were compared by condition using factorial ANOVA and a
Tukey-Kramer post hoc test (Statview 1.2; SAS Institute
Inc.). In these same groups of animals, a separate series of 50 µm
sections was stained for Nissl. The surface area of the lesion was
measured in five sections through the lesion site (SPOT 3.2.4 software;
Diagnostic Instruments, Inc., Sterling Heights, MI), and the volume of
the lesion was computed by multiplying each surface area by the
distance between sections. The lesion size of TCL plus TTX and TCL plus vehicle was compared with the Mann-Whitney U test, and the
correlation of contralateral-ipsilateral labeling to lesion size was
tested using linear regression analysis (Statview 1.2; SAS Institute Inc.).
Fluorojade-B histochemistry was used to measure neuronal
degeneration 1 d after TCL plus TTX and TCL plus vehicle as
described (Schmued and Hopkins, 2000 ). A separate group of TCL plus
vehicle and TCL plus TTX (n = 5 for each group) was
prepared as above. At 1 d after lesion, the animals were
anesthetized, perfused, and the brains were frozen and sectioned at 25 µm. Sections were processed with fluorojade B (Schmued and Hopkins,
2000 ), labeled cells were counted at 400× in three sections through
the lesion at the AP levels described for axonal quantification, and
the effect of TCL plus TTX versus TCL plus vehicle tested statistically (Mann-Whitney U test; Statview 1.2; SAS Institute
Inc.).
 |
RESULTS |
Different types of cortical lesions elicit distinct axonal
sprouting responses
Axonal sprouting after cortical lesions was first quantified after
two types of cortical lesions known to produce markedly different
degrees of postlesion axonal sprouting in adult rats (Szele et al.,
1995 ; Napieralski et al., 1996 ). TCLs were produced by coagulating pial
blood vessels in frontoparietal cortex. These lesion produced a total
cell loss in all cortical layers down to the subcortical white matter
over a period of 3-5 d (Szele et al., 1995 ) (Fig.
1D). In another group
of rats, the same cortical region was acutely removed by aspiration
with a glass pipette (ASP), taking care to leave the corpus callosum
intact as well (Uryu et al., 2001 ) (Fig. 1B). Sham
animals received only a craniotomy (Fig. 1A).

View larger version (62K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 1.
Axonal sprouting after focal cortical lesions.
Coronal sections through rat brain with BDA tracer injection
(arrowheads) in right frontal cortex and sham
(A) and ASP (B) or TCL
(D) in left frontoparietal cortex. After TCL
(D) there is a substantial increase in axonal
labeling in contralateral striatum and in cortex medial to the lesion
site (arrows). Scale bar: B, 500 µm.
C, Quantification of corticostriatal projections by
lesion condition. Measurements are taken from three levels in each
animal (r, rostral; m, middle;
c, caudal). Asterisks denote significance
of p < 0.01 (Tukey-Kramer post hoc
test, n = 3; see Results for ANOVA values).
E, Electrode placement for in vivo
physiological recording. Vertical line represents the
level of coronal sections in A, B, and
D.
|
|
To demonstrate the pattern of axonal connections from cortex
contralateral to the lesion, small injections of the axonal tracer BDA
were placed into frontal cortex contralateral to the lesion 28 d
after surgery. Each injection was exactly matched in volume and
stereotaxic position. The resultant axonal labeling showed that the
normally small, crossed corticostriatal pathway (Fig. 1A) had sprouted into the denervated striatum on the
side of the lesion after TCL (Fig. 1D) but not ASP
(Fig. 1B), as we have described previously
(Napieralski et al., 1996 ). There is also an increase in axonal
labeling in the medial perilesion cortex after TCL that is not seen in
sham animals or after ASP (Fig. 1).
Crossed corticostriatal projections were quantified by measuring the
surface area of the axonal projection in three coronal sections through
the territory of this projection. The ratio of the contralateral to
ipsilateral projections was calculated to account for possible
differences in labeling caused by small variations in the diffusion
distance of the tracer immediately surrounding the injection site from
animal to animal. ASP did not change the ratio of contralateral versus
ipsilateral labeling compared with sham. In contrast, this ratio was
increased twofold to threefold after TCL (Fig. 1C). This
difference is statistically significant in TCL versus ASP
(p < 0.01 at all levels; Tukey-Kramer
post hoc test; F(1,4) = 44.61 for rostral, F(1,4) = 210.28 for
mid, F(1,4) = 18.32 for caudal) and
p < 0.01 TCL versus sham
(F(1,4) = 49.90 for rostral,
F(1,4) = 279.84 for mid,
F(1,4) = 15.33 for caudal). There was
no significant difference between ASP and sham (Fig. 1C).
Thus, although ASP and TCL removed similar regions of cortex, only TCL
produced axonal sprouting in perilesion cortex and striatum. Because
this sprouting occurs from a distant, connected cortical site (Fig.
1A), we hypothesized that the trigger for axonal
sprouting may be an electrophysiological signal in the connections
between the damaged cortex and contralateral, homotypic cortex.
Lesions that produce axonal sprouting trigger rhythmic neuronal
activity in perilesion cortex
We recorded spontaneous cortical activity for 7 d after TCL,
ASP, and in sham animals, the time frame of axonal sprouting in other
models of neuronal plasticity in adults (Steward et al., 1988 ) (Fig.
1E). The pattern of spontaneous cortical activity was
initially similar among sham, ASP, and TCL (Fig.
2A). However, 1 d
after the induction of TCL, activity in perilesion cortex consisted
entirely of high-voltage slow waves (Fig. 2A). These were biphasic positive-negative waves with a frequency centered at 1 Hz. Each wave ranged from 200 to 700 µV in amplitude and 200-500
msec in duration (Fig. 2B). This activity pattern was maximal at day 1 and absent by day 5 after the lesion (Fig.
2A). In contrast, spontaneous cortical activity after
ASP lesions remained low voltage and desynchronized as in sham cases
throughout the 7 d recording period (Fig. 2A).
Multiunit recording during the slow waves induced by TCL showed action
potential activity synchronized on the negative phase of the wave (Fig.
2B). Thus, slow waves are induced by TCL in
perilesion cortex early and transiently after the lesion and
synchronize action potential activity.

View larger version (26K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 2.
Spontaneous cortical activity in perilesion
cortex. A, Spontaneous cortical activity in single
animals over the recording period. Each trace is from a
single animal before and after lesion, or from equivalent days after
electrode implantation in sham animals. B, Coincident
action potential and slow wave activity after TCL. Slow wave activity
and multiunit action potential activity taken from the same electrode
in perilesion cortex on day 1 after TCL.
|
|
To quantify this activity pattern, power spectra were computed for each
animal in each condition for each time point after the lesion. Power
spectral analysis in sham and ASP animals showed no change in the
pattern of spontaneous electrical activity in perilesion cortex over
the 7 d recording period (Fig. 3).
In contrast, animals with a TCL had a substantial increase in power
spectra in the 0.2-2 Hz frequency range on days 1-3 after the lesion
in the perilesion cortex (Fig. 3C), the same frequency of
the slow waves in this region (Fig. 2A). The mean of
all power spectra for each lesion group in perilesion cortex was
significantly different in a frequency range from 0.226 Hz
(F(1,8) = 18.03) to 2.2 Hz (F(1,8) = 28.15) on day 1 after the
TCL compared with ASP and for TCL compared with sham conditions (0.226 Hz, F(1,8) = 2.69-2.2 Hz;
F1,8 = 31.03) (n = 5 for each
group; p < 0.05) (Fig. 3E), but not at
other time points.

View larger version (29K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 3.
Quantitative analysis of spontaneous cortical
activity in perilesion cortex. A-E, Pattern of
spontaneous cortical activity in perilesion cortex. The top
panels show averaged power spectra in all animals in each group
for each time point: A, sham; B, ASP;
C, TCL groups. D, E, Quantitative
analysis of spontaneous cortical activity in perilesion cortex before
in D and 1 d after in E ASP
(black) and TCL (red), or at 1 and 2 d after electrode implantation in sham (green)
animals. In all cases, graphs are scaled to match that in
E. Asterisks denote values significant at
p < 0.05 for TCL versus ASP and sham
(Tukey-Kramer post hoc test, n = 5;
see Results for ANOVA values). F-J, Pattern of
spontaneous cortical activity in contralateral cortex. Same conventions
as in A-E. The top panels show averaged
power spectra for all animals in each group for each time point:
F, sham; G, ASP; H, TCL
groups. I, J, Quantitative analysis of cortical activity
on day 3 in contralateral cortex. Asterisks denote
values significant at p < 0.05 for TCL versus ASP
and sham (Tukey-Kramer post hoc test,
n = 5; see Results for ANOVA values).
|
|
Lesions that produce axonal sprouting trigger rhythmic neuronal
activity in contralateral cortical areas
Synchronous spontaneous activity was also detected with in
vivo recordings in the contralateral cortex after TCL, but not after ASP or sham. Large, very low-frequency waves first occurred in
cortex contralateral to the lesion on day 1 and became maximal by day 3 after TCL (Fig. 4A).
Within single animals, these slow waves occurred with an irregular
range of frequencies, at one wave per 2.5-12.5 sec (Fig.
4A,B). These waves did not correspond to seizure
activity, sleep, or body movement. Each wave consists of a complex of
0.8-1 sec duration with an initial positive component, followed by a
longer negative phase (Fig. 4B,C). Smaller waves at
4-6 Hz or 12-16 Hz were superimposed on the negative phase (Fig.
4B,C). Quantitative analysis of this pattern of
spontaneous cortical activity using power spectra showed that most of
the overall amplitude of the spontaneous cortical activity after TCL occurred between 0.1 and 1 Hz on days 1 and 3 after the lesion (Fig.
3H). The mean of all power spectra at each frequency
for each lesion group was significantly different at day 3 in a range from 0.113 Hz (F(1,8) = 4.29) to 0.396 Hz (F(1,8) = 13.98) in TCL compared
with ASP, and in TCL compared with sham (0.113 Hz, F(1,8) = 4.73-0.396 Hz;
F(1,8) = 10.23) (n = 5 for each group; p < 0.05) (Fig. 3J).
There were no differences between ASP and sham at this (Fig.
3J) or other time points (Fig.
3F,G,I).

View larger version (28K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 4.
Slow wave and multiunit activity in contralateral
cortex after TCL. A, Periodic slow wave activity in
cortex contralateral to TCL on day 2 after the lesion. The
top and bottom traces in each panel were
simultaneously recorded from frontal and parietal cortex contralateral
to TCL. B, Periodic slow waves on day 3 after TCL in
contralateral cortex. Traces are from a different animal
than in A and show the morphology of the individual
waves. C, D, Simultaneous slow wave and action potential
activity in cortex contralateral to TCL on day 3. C and
D are taken from recordings from frontal and parietal
cortex contralateral to TCL in different animals. E,
Coincident multiunit action potential activity in two regions of cortex
contralateral to TCL on day 3 in the same animal.
|
|
As with the earlier perilesion slow waves on day 1 after TCL,
multiunit neuronal discharges were synchronized on the negative phase of the slow waves in cortex contralateral to TCL on days 2 and 3 (Fig. 4D). Multiunit activity appears synchronized
across distant cortical sites after TCL during this slow wave activity (Fig. 4E). Indeed, cross-correlation analysis showed
that action potential activity after TCL was synchronized across
widespread cortical areas contralateral and ipsilateral to the lesion
site in individual animals during slow wave activity on day 3 after TCL
(Fig. 5A). Furthermore, a
cross-correlation of the average of the multiunit activity for all TCL
animals at each cortical site from sampling windows taken during
low-frequency slow waves showed significant correlation in the action
potential activity on days 2 and 3 after TCL (Fig. 5B). This
correlation represents coincident neuronal activity in cortical
areas separated by 3.5 mm (parietal to occipital), 5 mm (frontal to
parietal), and across hemispheres for a 2 d period after TCL in
awake, behaving animals. It was no longer observed by day 5, after slow
waves have subsided (Fig. 5A,B).

View larger version (31K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 5.
Cross-correlation of multiunit activity after TCL.
A, Correlograms show multiunit activity from one
recording site compared with that occurring at a reference site, before
and on days 3 and 5 after TCL. Above each column of
correlograms the listed site on the left is the
reference site. The dashed line in each graph shows the
99% confidence level for a correlation greater than chance. These were
computed from one animal. B, Average correlograms for
all animals before and on days 3 and 5 after TCL (n = 5). The ordinate shows the average firing frequency in
each 2 msec bin. The more closely spaced dashed line
shows the upper limit of the SD for each 2 msec bin. The more
broadly spaced dashed line shows the 99% confidence
level for a correlation grater than chance.
|
|
Spreading depressions
Focal cortical lesions are known to trigger spreading depressions,
which could also serve as a signal for postlesion neuronal plasticity
(Hossmann, 1996 ). We measured spreading depressions during each
recording session. Spreading depressions occurred solely ipsilateral to
the lesion immediately after lesion induction. These were infrequent,
and their number did not differ between TCL (mean of 1.6 ± 0.89 events/hr) and ASP lesions (mean of 1.3 ± 0.45 events/hr). Each
spreading depression lasted from 0.6 to 1.3 min. These features are
consistent with the characteristics of spreading depressions after
other types of brain lesions (Hossmann, 1996 ).
TTX infusion into perilesion cortex blocks postlesion
synchronous activity
The previous experiments showed that a sequential pattern of
synchronous neuronal activity arises first in perilesion cortex and
then in contralateral cortex only in the type of lesion (TCL) that
produces axonal sprouting. To determine whether this activity was
directly causative in the axonal sprouting response, we used activity
blockade to block the synchronous activity pattern and test whether
this in fact blocked axonal sprouting after TCL. Synchronous activity
could either be blocked in the perilesion cortex where it originates or
in cortex contralateral to the lesion, the site of the cell bodies of
the sprouting axons. However, sustained drug delivery into cortex
contralateral to the lesion produces a secondary lesion at the delivery
site, either with minipumps (Jablonska et al., 1993 ) or with
Elvax-polymer slow release (our unpublished observations). TTX infused
into the lesion to block action potential activity in perilesion cortex
circumvents this problem: it is infused directly into a lesion and thus
produces no additional damage of adjacent brain (see below for
quantification). Also, the diffusion distance of TTX at this site is
limited by the physical barrier of the corpus callosum and the
ischemia-induced reduction in water diffusion (see below). Furthermore,
TTX has not been shown to produce general effects on normal neuronal
function or on neuronal lesions, outside of its blockade of
voltage-dependent sodium channels (Reiter et al., 1986 ; Olson and
Meyer, 1994 ; Catalano and Shatz, 1998 ).
In pilot experiments, increasing concentrations of TTX were tested,
beginning with the concentrations used in earlier studies in developing
animals (Reiter et al., 1986 ). Five and 10 µM TTX only
produced a partial activity blockade in perilesion cortex. These
concentrations were not used. Fifteen micromolar TTX infused into the
lesion bed blocked most action potentials in the perilesion cortex of
the awake, behaving animal but had no effect on multiunit firing in
cortex contralateral to the lesion (Fig.
6A,B). The difference
in firing rate between TTX and vehicle-treated animals in perilesion
cortex is statistically significant (unpaired t test: day 1, df = 8, t = 7.28, p < 0.001;
day 3, df = 8, t = 6.2, p = 0.003). However, 15 µM TTX had no effect on the
baseline frequency of action potentials in contralateral cortex (Fig.
6B,C). Thus, the direct effect of TTX infusion, which
is blockade of voltage-gated sodium channels and as a result action
potential generation, is seen only adjacent to the lesion, not in
cortex contralateral to the lesion.

View larger version (36K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 6.
TTX blocks action potential activity in perilesion
cortex and low-frequency slow waves in both hemispheres. A,
B, The top trace in each panel shows slow waves,
and the bottom trace shows multiunit activity,
simultaneously recorded from the same electrode during either TTX or
vehicle infusion. Traces are from different vehicle- and
TTX-treated animals. C, Power spectral analysis of
effect of TTX infusion on slow wave activity in perilesion cortex.
Plots show average and SD of all animals in TCL alone, TCL plus
vehicle, and TCL plus TTX groups. Asterisks denote
p < 0.05; TCL plus TTX versus TCL alone and versus
TCL plus vehicle (Tukey-Kramer post hoc test,
n = 5 for each group). D, Power
spectral analysis of effect of TTX infusion on slow wave activity in
cortex contralateral to the lesion. Asterisks denote
p < 0.05; TCL plus TTX versus TCL alone and versus
TCL plus vehicle (Tukey-Kramer post hoc test,
n = 5 for each group). Pound sign
denotes p < 0.05; TCL plus TTX versus TCL alone
(Tukey-Kramer post hoc test, n = 5 for each group). E, Effect of TTX on action potential
activity. n = 5 for TTX and vehicle groups.
Asterisks denote p < 0.001; TTX
versus vehicle on day 1; p < 0.003; TTX versus
vehicle on day 3 (unpaired Student's t test,
n = 5, see Results). F, TTX
infusion blocks the increase in the surface area of axonal labeling in
contralateral striatum after TCL. Same conventions as in Figure
1C. n = 4 TCL plus TTX and TCL plus
vehicle, n = 5 for TCL and n = 3 for sham. Asterisks denote p < 0.01 for vehicle and TCL versus sham and TTX (Tukey-Kramer post
hoc test).
|
|
By blocking action potential activity in perilesion cortex, TTX blocked
the synchronous pattern of slow waves in perilesion cortex after TCL
(Fig. 6A). This effect was quantified through power
spectral analysis of the activity pattern in perilesion cortex in TCL
plus TTX, TCL plus vehicle, and TCL alone. In perilesion cortex, TCL
plus TTX produced a pattern of cortical activity that was significantly
different from TCL alone and TCL plus vehicle from 0.46 Hz
(F(1,8) = 16.61 for TCL plus TTX vs
TCL; F(1,8) = 27.69 for TCL plus TTX
vs TCL plus vehicle) to 1.38 Hz
(F(1,8) = 17.40 for TCL plus TTX vs
TCL; F(1,8) = 12.55 for TCL plus TTX vs TCL plus vehicle) (p < 0.05;
n = 5 for each group) (Fig.
7D). This corresponds to a
blockade of the lower frequencies in the synchronous activity
triggered by TCL in perilesion cortex (Fig. 3D).

View larger version (214K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 7.
Blockade of rhythmic slow wave activity prevents
axonal sprouting after TCL. BDA was injected into cortex contralateral
to TCL 28 d after the lesion. A, Corticostriatal
projections in sham-operated animal. B, Corticostriatal
projections in TCL. C, Corticostriatal projections in
TCL plus vehicle. D, Corticostriatal projections in TCL
plus TTX. The middle column contains photomicrographs
from striatum contralateral to the lesion. The right
column contains photomicrographs from striatum ipsilateral to
the lesion. The left column contains high-powered
photomicrographs from the area within the box in the
middle column. Scale bars: A1 (applies to
left column), 50 µm; A2 (applies to
middle and right columns), 100 µm.
|
|
As a consequence of the blockade of action potential and slow wave
activity in perilesion cortex, the pattern of slow wave activity in
contralateral cortex after TCL did not develop. TCL plus TTX did not
produce a pattern of slow wave activity significantly different from
control animals in contralateral cortex (Tukey-Kramer post
hoc test, for frequencies 0, 0.23. 0.46, 0.69, 0.92, 1.16, 1.40 Hz; F(5,24) = 1.84, 1,47, 1.10, 0.60, 1.58, 1.71, and 2.10, respectively) (compare Fig. 3F and
6E). In fact, TCL plus TTX produced a pattern of
activity that was significantly different from TCL alone and TCL plus
vehicle at a range of 0.231 (F(1,8) = 17.49 for TCL plus TTX vs TCL; F(1,8) = 35.62 for TCL plus TTX vs TCL plus vehicle) to 0.92 Hz
(F(1,8) = 23.79 for TCL plus TTX vs
TCL; F(1,8) = 5.33 for TCL plus TTX vs
TCL plus vehicle) (n = 5 for each group;
p < 0.05) (Fig. 6E). In the previous
studies the frequency range of spontaneous cortical activity that
differed between TCL and sham/ASP in contralateral cortex was
0.113-0.396 (Fig. 3J). TCL plus TTX produced
significantly less power in the contralateral cortex when compared with
TCL alone up to a frequency of 1.16 Hz
(F(1,8) = 11.58; p < 0.05) (Fig. 6E). TTX infusion into perilesion cortex
thus blocks the development of the local perilesion pattern of
synchronous activity and the later, more distributed pattern of
synchronous activity after TCL in the area of origin of the sprouting axons.
TTX infusion does not influence lesion size after TCL
To compare axonal sprouting after TCL plus TTX as compared with
TCL plus vehicle, it is important to establish that TTX did not alter
the size of the lesion. Lesion size was measured at 35 d after the
lesion, the end point of the tracing experiments (see below). Because
of the technical constraints created by the need to secure the delivery
cannula to the skull, lesion sizes were usually smaller and more
variable in these experiments with both vehicle and TTX delivery than
when no minipump-cannula setup was put in place. Nevertheless, lesion
size was not significantly different in TCL plus TTX, 8.99 ± 4.36 mm3, compared with TCL plus vehicle,
9.13 ± 3.01 mm3 (Mann-Whitney
U test; z = 0.289; p = 0.77;
n = 4 for each group). Furthermore, a linear regression
analysis of axonal sprouting ratio (see below) and lesion size showed
there was no relationship between lesion size and degree of axonal
sprouting among animals within TCL plus TTX and TCL plus vehicle groups
(TCL plus TTX: r2 = 0.44,
p = 0.79; TCL plus vehicle,
r2 = 0.16, p = 0.52).
The effect of TCL plus TTX on spontaneous cortical activity was present
at 1 d after lesion. To evaluate any effect of TTX on the degree
of neuronal degeneration at this time point, we compared the effect of
TCL plus TTX versus TCL plus vehicle 1 d after the lesion by
measuring the number of degenerating neurons quantitatively in the two
groups using fluorojade B histochemistry (Schmued and Hopkins, 2000 ;
Zuch et al., 2000 ), a marker of both necrotic and apoptotic cells (Zuch
et al., 2000 ). There was no difference in the number of degenerating
neurons in the sampled brain region between TCL plus TTX, 261 ± 72 cells, and TCL plus vehicle, 257 ± 85 cells (Mann-Whitney
U test; z = 0.104; p = 0.92;
n = 5 for each group).
Blockade of synchronous neuronal activity after cortical lesions
blocks axonal sprouting
To assay the effects of blocking the TCL-induced synchronous
cortical activity on axonal sprouting, neuroanatomical tract tracing
was performed in rats with and without TTX infusion after TCL. BDA was
injected into frontal cortex contralateral to TCL plus TTX and TCL plus
vehicle 28 d after the lesion was produced, and these results were
compared with data previously obtained in rats with TCL alone, ASP, and
in sham. Cortical projections are heavily labeled in the dorsolateral
striatum ipsilateral to the injection site in all experimental groups
(Fig. 7A3-D3). A smaller contralateral corticostriatal
projection is present in sham animals (Fig. 7A1,A2). Axonal
sprouting after TCL has produced a substantial increase in the labeled
axons projecting to the contralateral striatum (Fig. 7B1,B2)
that is not altered by vehicle infusion (Fig.
7C1,C2). TTX infusion blocks this increase in
axonal labeling in contralateral striatum (Fig.
7D1,D2). Quantitative analysis of the ratio of
the surface area of the corticostriatal projection confirmed these
observations (Fig. 6F). There was no statistical
difference in the pattern of striatal labeling between TCL plus vehicle
and TCL alone. Comparison of sham, TCL, TCL plus vehicle, and TCL plus
TTX showed that the pattern of axonal labeling in TCL plus TTX was
significantly different from TCL plus vehicle (rostral section,
F(1,6) = 51.64; mid section
F(1,6) = 108.39; caudal section
F(1,6) = 56.29) and from TCL
alone (rostral section, F(1,5) = 70.35; mid section F(1,5) = 178.75;
caudal section F(1,5) = 15.12)
(p < 0.01, Tukey-Kramer post hoc
test; n = 4 for TTX groups; n = 3 for
TCL alone) but not from sham. Thus, blockade of the synchronous
neuronal activity induced by TCL blocks axonal sprouting after TCL.
 |
DISCUSSION |
Axonal sprouting from neurons in cortex contralateral to the
lesion site was induced by an ischemic-thermal lesion, but not by a
similarly sized aspiration lesion of cortex. This lesion-induced sprouting response is remarkable in the adult brain: it dramatically expands long distance projections from the cortex of one hemisphere into the striatum of the other. The similar features of tissue damage
and axotomy shared by TCL and ASP allowed us to separate alterations
common to both lesions from those directly related to axonal sprouting,
which are unique to the TCL. We have found that only those cortical
lesions that induce axonal sprouting produced a transient network of
low-frequency synchronized neuronal activity and that blockade of this
activity prevented axonal sprouting. This lesion-induced activity is
strikingly different from seizure activity in the hippocampus. Indeed
in the hippocampus cellular activity is characterized by repeated
afterdischarges: seconds to minutes of sustained synaptic activity,
action potential discharges, and behavioral seizures (Racine, 1972 ;
Traub and Jefferys, 1994 ).
Rhythmic neuronal activity after cortical lesions
TCL induced two types of synchronous activity. The early pattern,
with a frequency range of 0.2-2.2 Hz in perilesion cortex 1 d
after the lesion, resembles polymorphic delta waves (Gloor et al.,
1977 ; Sharbrough, 1999 ). In experimental animals, this activity pattern
was thought to arise from injury involving subcortical structures
(Gloor et al., 1977 ). However, these older studies did not record
longer than 6 hr after lesion. We have found that this activity pattern
develops 1 d after the lesion. Polymorphic delta waves have long
been recognized in the clinical electrophysiology literature
(Sharbrough, 1999 ), but their significance has remained unknown. Our
results suggest that this EEG pattern may be part of a lesion-induced
signal for anatomical reorganization within adult brain.
A second, slower and more distributed rhythm became maximal 3 d
after the lesion. This activity pattern crossed functional cortical
areas, occurring over much of the contralateral hemisphere and in
bilateral occipital areas. The distribution and synchrony of the slow
waves and neuronal bursting in this rhythm suggest that it involves a
network of cortical and subcortical structures (Steriade, 1998 ). The
timing of synchronous activity first in perilesion cortex then in
cortex contralateral to the lesion suggests a progression from sites
adjacent to the damage to those in distant, connected areas. The fact
that blockade of neuronal activity in perilesion cortex prevents later
rhythmic activity in contralateral cortex also suggests a progression
of rhythmic activity from the lesion site to connected areas. The
underlying mechanism of these two types of patterned activity remains
unclear. Our data do not allow a determination of whether
perilesional or contralateral activity patterns, or both, are important
for axonal sprouting. However the data clearly show that this
distributed pattern of cortical activity develops only after the
progressive destruction associated with ischemic-thermal injury and
not the immediate cortical injury that occurs after aspiration.
We have previously shown that these two types of lesions do not induce
differential changes in the expression levels of many molecules that
could directly influence sprouting, including chondroitan sulfate
proteoglycan, laminin, tenascin, fibroblast growth factor, glial
fibrillary acidic protein, or the polysialylated from of the neural
cell adhesion molecule (Szele et al., 1995 ). However, ASP but not TCL
does induce a marked increase in the mRNA encoding NogoA, a
myelin-associated inhibitory protein, both in the surrounding cortex
and underlying corpus callosum (Shomer and Chesselet, unpublished observations).
One major difference between these two lesion types pertains to timing.
Unlike the acute injury of cortical aspiration, ischemic cortical
injury produces a progression of tissue damage over days (Salin and
Chesselet, 1992 ; Szele et al., 1995 ; Wei et al., 1998 ) that may account
for the different physiological responses of cortex to these two
lesions. Baseline neuronal firing frequency increases as early as
1 d after ischemic lesions (Schiene et al., 1996 ), the time point
of rhythmic multiunit firing in the perilesion cortex in the present
study. In vitro experiments have shown that ischemic injury
results in prolonged EPSPs to afferent stimulation, diminished IPSPs
and paired pulse inhibition (Neumann-Haeflin et al., 1995 ;
Mittmann et al., 1998 ), and a facilitated induction of LTP
(Hagemann et al., 1998 ) days to weeks after the lesion. In the present
in vivo study a lesion-specific state of repetitive, synchronous neuronal activity in cortical networks was necessary for
axonal sprouting in the days during which the lesion is still evolving
(Salin and Chesselet, 1992 ; Szele et al., 1995 ). Thus, although
equivalent amounts of cortex may be lost after brain lesions, the
mechanisms and timing of actual damage contain important variables in
both the physiological and anatomical processes of neuroplasticity.
TTX blocked the development of synchronous neuronal activity after TCL.
The direct diffusion distance of TTX is difficult to determine in this
model. TTX currently cannot be produced in a radiolabeled or
biologically tagged form, and electrophysiologically establishing the
area of TTX influence would require cannula-head set removal and
serial microelectrode penetrations, causing secondary lesioning of the
TCL site and adjacent cortex. Nevertheless, four lines of evidence
suggest that the TTX effect on axonal sprouting was attributable to a
specific blockade of the synchronous activity signal, rather than to a
general effect of TTX in more distant brain regions. First, there was
no direct effect of TTX on the contralateral cortex, the site of the
cell bodies of the sprouting axons. Second, a concentration of TTX just
sufficient to block local action potential activity in peri-infarct
cortex was used. Third, in developing brain similar concentrations of
TTX have a limited diffusion distance (Reiter et al. 1986 ) that is
likely to be substantially smaller in adult brain (Lehmenkühler
et al., 1993 ). Fourth, TTX was infused into an ischemic lesion, a site of substantially reduced extracellular diffusion (Li et al., 1999 ; Liu
et al., 2001 ). Therefore, our data indicate that ipsilateral action
potential blockade prevents ipsilateral and contralateral synchronous
activity after TCL.
Effect of synchronous neuronal activity on axonal sprouting
Lesion-induced axonal sprouting was prevented when synchronous
activity was blocked by TTX. TTX is unlikely to have had an effect on
the uptake and transport of BDA, because BDA was injected into the
cortex contralateral to the infusion site and, furthermore, anterograde
tracers with similar uptake and transport properties to BDA (Reiner et
al., 2000 ) are unaffected by TTX activity blockade (Olson and Meyer,
1994 ). Moreover, a diffuse effect of TTX in the striatum deep to the
infusion site or beyond the perilesion cortex might be expected to
increase axonal sprouting (Catalona and Shatz, 1998 ; Cohen-Cory, 1999 ),
whereas the exact opposite effect is reported here. Therefore, the data
show a very strong association between the patterns of neuronal
activity induced by TCL and the sprouting of crossed corticostriatal
projections into the denervated striatum. It will be interesting to
impose low-frequency synchronous activity similar to that observed
after TCL to the cortex of animals with ASP lesions to further
establish the role of patterned neuronal activity in inducing axonal sprouting.
In our model, statistical differences in the pattern of cortical
activity between TCL, sham, and ASP were limited to the first 3 d
after the lesion, and thus we propose that early synchronous neuronal
activity is an initial trigger for axonal sprouting. In other cortical
injury models, dendritic sprouting occurs early after the lesion, in
the sensorimotor cortex contralateral to electrolytic forelimb cortex
lesions, but is then partially pruned back to control levels after this
period (Jones and Schallert, 1994 ). This late pruning phase can be
prevented by MK-801 administration, suggesting that neuronal activity
or glutamate receptors are involved in delayed neuronal reorganization
after cortical lesions (Kozlowski and Schallert, 1998 ). In
contrast, in our model axonal sprouting in the denervated striatum is
maintained for at least 1 month after the lesion. Therefore, the
transient nature of the electrophysiological activity we have observed
may be critical for the induction and maintenance of axonal sprouting
after ischemic brain lesions.
Although the type of activity we have observed has never, to our
knowledge, been associated with axonal sprouting in the adult brain,
synchronous cellular activity is widely present in many CNS regions
during the development of axonal projections (Feller, 1999 ). However,
the prevalent hypothesis concerning the role of cellular activity
during development has been that it primarily plays a role in the
refinement of already formed connections (Tessier-Lavigne and Goodman,
1996 ; McCormick, 1999 ). Recent studies have begun to challenge this
idea by showing that activity also may play a role in axonal
pathfinding between neuronal groups (Catalano and Shatz, 1998 ; Dantzker
and Callaway, 1998 ; Goldberg et al., 2002 ). Similarly, there is
emerging evidence from in vitro growth cone guidance studies
that cellular activity could alter cues for axonal pathfinding (Ming et
al., 2001 ). Although the synchronous neuronal activity associated with
the development of neuronal connections has a very low frequency in
subcortical projections, developing cortical circuits exhibit
spontaneous rhythmic activity at similar frequencies to that reported
in the present study (Weliky and Katz, 1999 ). Thus, the sprouting of
new connections in the adult brain after a lesion is associated with
electrical rhythms that could play a role in a similar process in the
developing animal.
Although our data indicate that axonal sprouting does not occur in the
absence of the slow rhythmic waves induced by TCL, they do not
distinguish between a permissive or inductive role for this activity on
axonal growth. Patterned cellular activity could play a permissive role
by altering the normally inhibitory adult cellular environment. In
support of this, short bursts of low-frequency neuronal activity have
been shown to alter the inhibitory effect of myelin and netrin-1 into
attractive growth cone cues for developing neurons (Ming et al., 2001 ).
ASP does induce a small number of growth cones in the region
immediately adjacent to the corpus callosum. These do not invade the
denervated dorsolateral striatum and hence do not lead to the
substantial axonal sprouting response seen after TCL (Uryu et al.,
2001 ). This suggests that the small, localized growth cone response
seen after ASP is restricted by an inability to overcome an environment
that is inhibitory to axonal growth in the absence of the synchronous
cellular activity signal. An alternative but nonexclusive possibility
is that the rhythmic slow wave activity produces a pattern of gene
expression in the contralateral cortex that induces axonal sprouting.
In conclusion, this study shows that axonal sprouting in long distance
connections after cortical insults in the mature brain is associated
with the same type of periodic synchronized neuronal activity known to
be an important organizing force in the formation of new connections in
the developing brain. These findings provide new insights into how the
brain reorganizes as a result of injury and may provide important clues
for the improvement of recovery from stroke and other CNS insults. They
also suggest that consideration should be given to the effects of
future neuroprotective therapies on patterns of neuronal activity in
addition to their direct effects on neurodegeneration.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Feb. 22, 2002; revised April 23, 2002; accepted April 25, 2002.
This work was supported by a Howard Hughes Medical Institute
Postdoctoral Research Fellowship for Physicians (S.T.C.) and National
Institutes of Health Grant NS 29230. We thank Drs. Charles Wilson and
Anatol Bragin for technical assistance.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. S. Thomas Carmichael,
Department of Neurology, University of California Los Angeles School of
Medicine, 710 Westwood Plaza, Los Angeles, CA 90095. E-mail:
scarmichael{at}mednet.ucla.edu.
 |
REFERENCES |
-
Abeles M
(1982)
Quantification, smoothing, and confidence limits for single-units' histograms.
J Neurosci Methods
5:317-325[ISI][Medline].
-
Carmichael ST,
Wei L,
Rovainen CM,
Woolsey TA
(2001)
New patterns of intra-cortical projections after focal cortical stroke.
Neurobiol Dis
8:910-922[ISI][Medline].
-
Catalona SM,
Shatz CJ
(1998)
Activity-dependent cortical target selection by thalamic axons.
Science
281:559-562[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Cohen-Cory S
(1999)
BDNF modulates, but does not mediate, activity-dependent branching and remodeling of optic axon arbors in vivo.
J Neurosci
19:9996-10003[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Colder BW,
Wilson CL,
Frysinger RC,
Chao LC,
Harper RM,
Engel Jr J
(1996)
Neuronal synchrony in relation to burst discharges in epileptic human temporal lobes.
J Neurophysiol
75:2496-2508[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Dantzker JL,
Callaway EM
(1998)
The development of local, layer-specific visual cortical axons in the absence of extrinsic influences and intrinsic activity.
J Neurosci
18:4145-4154[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Feller MB
(1999)
Spontaneous correlated activity in developing neural circuits.
Neuron
22:653-656[ISI][Medline].
-
Gloor P,
Ball G,
Schaul N
(1977)
Brain lesions that produce delta waves in the EEG.
Neurology
27:326-333[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Goldberg JL,
Espinosa JS,
Xu Y,
Davidson N,
Kovacs GTA,
Barres BA
(2002)
Retinal ganglion cells do not extend axons by default: promotion by neurotrophic signaling and electrical activity.
Neuron
33:689-702[ISI][Medline].
-
Hagemann G,
Redecker C,
Neumann-Haeflin,
Freund HJ,
Witte OW
(1998)
Increased long-term potentiation in the surround of experimentally induced focal cortical infarction.
Ann Neurol
44:255-258[ISI][Medline].
-
Heimer L,
Zahn DS,
Alheid GF
(1995)
Basal ganglia.
In: The rat nervous system. Ed 2 (Paxinos G,
ed), pp 579-628. San Diego: Academic.
-
Hossmann KA
(1996)
Periinfarct depolarizations.
Cerebrovasc Brain Metab Rev
8:195-208[ISI][Medline].
-
Jablonska B,
Gierdalski M,
Kublik A,
Skangiel-Kramska J,
Kossut M
(1993)
Effects of implantation of Alzet 1007D osmotic minipumps upon 2-deoxyglucose uptake in the cerebral cortex of mice.
Acta Neurobiol Exp
53:577-580[Medline].
-
Jones TA,
Schallert T
(1994)
Use-dependent growth of pyramidal neurons after neocortical damage.
J Neurosci
14:2140-2152[Abstract].
-
Kasamatsu T,
Schmidt EK
(1997)
Continuous and direct infusion of drug solutions in the brain of awake animals: implementation, strengths and pitfalls.
Brain Res Protocols
1:57-69[Medline].
-
Kozlowski DA,
Schallert T
(1998)
Relationship between dendritic pruning and behavioral recovery following sensorimotor cortex lesions.
Behav Brain Res
97:89-98[Medline].
-
Lehmenkühler A,
Syková E,
Svoboda J,
Zilles K,
Nicholson C
(1993)
Extracellular space parameters in the rat neocortex and subcortical white matter during postnatal development determined by diffusion analysis.
Neuroscience
55:339-351[ISI][Medline].
-
Li TQ,
Chen ZG,
Hindmarsh T
(1999)
Diffusion-weighted MR imaging of acute cerebral ischemia.
Acta Radiol
39:460-473.
-
Liu KF,
Li F,
Tatlisumak T,
Garcia JH,
Sotak CH,
Fisher M,
Fenstermacher JD
(2001)
Regional variations in the apparent diffusion coefficient and the intracellular distribution of water in rat brain during acute focal ischemia.
Stroke
32:1897-1905[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
McCormick DA
(1999)
Spontaneous activity: signal or noise.
Science
285:541-543[Free Full Text].
-
Ming G,
Henley J,
Tessier-Lavigne M,
Song H,
Poo M
(2001)
Electrical activity modulates growth cone guidance by diffusible factors.
Neurons
29:441-452[ISI][Medline].
-
Mittmann T,
Qü M,
Zilles K,
Luhmann HJ
(1998)
Long-term cellular dysfunction after focal cerebral ischemia: in vitro analyses.
Neuroscience
85:15-27[ISI][Medline].
-
Napieralski JA,
Butler AK,
Chesselet M-F
(1996)
Anatomical and functional evidence for lesion-specific sprouting of corticostriatal input in the adult rat.
J Comp Neurol
373:484-497[ISI][Medline].
-
Neumann-Haeflin T,
Hagemann G,
Witte OW
(1995)
Cellular correlates of neuronal hyperexcitability in the vicinity of photochemically induced cortical infarcts in the rat in vitro.
Neurosci Lett
193:101-104[ISI][Medline].
-
Olson MD,
Meyer RL
(1994)
Activity-dependent and retinotopic refinement in a low-density retinotectal projection in the goldfish: evidence favoring synaptic cooperation over competition.
J Neurosci
14:208-218[Abstract].
-
Paxinos P,
Watson C
(1997)
In: The rat brain in stereotaxic coordinates, Ed 3. San Diego: Academic.
-
Racine RJ
(1972)
Modification of seizure activity by electrical stimulation: II. Motor seizure.
Electroencalogr Clin Neurophysiol
32:281-294.
-
Reiner A,
Veenman CL,
Medina L,
Jiao Y,
Del Mar N,
Honig MG
(2000)
Pathway tracing using biotinylated dextran amines.
J Neurosci Methods
103:23-37[ISI][Medline].
-
Reiter HO,
Waitzman DM,
Stryker MP
(1986)
Cortical activity blockade prevents ocular dominance plasticity in the kitten visual cortex.
Exp Brain Res
65:182-188[ISI][Medline].
-
Salin P,
Chesselet M-F
(1992)
Paradoxical increase in striatal neuropeptide gene expression following ischemic lesions of the cerebral cortex.
Proc Natl Acad Sci USA
89:9954-9958[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Schiene K,
Breuhl C,
Zilles K,
Qü M,
Hagemann G,
Kraemer M,
Witte OW
(1996)
Neuronal hyperexcitability and reduction of GABAA-receptor expression in the surround of cerebral photothrombosis.
J Cereb Blood Flow Metab
1:906-914.
-
Schmued LC,
Hopkins KJ
(2000)
Fluoro-jade B: a high affinity fluorescent marker for the localization of neuronal degeneration.
Brain Res
874:123-130[ISI][Medline].
-
Sears TA,
Stagg D
(1976)
Short-term synchronization of the intercostal motoneurone activity.
J Physiol (Lond)
263:357-381[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Sharbrough FW
(1999)
Nonspecific abnormal EEG patterns.
In: Electroencephalography. Basic principles, clinical applications and related fields (Niedermeyer F,
Lopes Da Silva F,
eds), Ed 4, pp 215-234. Baltimore: Williams and Wilkins.
-
Steriade M
(1998)
Corticothalamic networks, oscillations and plasticity.
Adv Neurol
77:105-134[Medline].
-
Steward O,
Vinsant SL,
Davis L
(1988)
The process of reinnervation in the dentate gyrus of adult rats: an ultrastructural study of changes in presynaptic terminals as a result of sprouting.
J Comp Neurol
267:203-210[Medline].
-
Szele FG,
Alexander C,
Chesselet M-F
(1995)
Expression of molecules associated with neuronal plasticity after aspiration and thermocoagulatory lesions of the cerebral cortex in adult rats.
J Neurosci
15:4429-4448[Abstract].
-
Tessier-Lavigne M,
Goodman CS
(1996)
The molecular biology of axon guidance.
Science
274:1123-1133[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Traub RD,
Jefferys JG
(1994)
Are there unifying principles underlying the generation of epileptic afterdischarges in vitro?
Prog Brain Res
102:383-394[ISI][Medline].
-
Uryu K,
MacKenzie L,
Chesselet M-F
(2001)
Ultrastructural evidence for differential axonal sprouting in the striatum after thermocoagulatory and aspiration lesions of the cerebral cortex in adult rats.
Neuroscience
105:307-316[ISI][Medline].
-
Wei L,
Craven K,
Erinjeri J,
Liang GE,
Bereckzi D,
Rovainen CM,
Woolsey TA
(1998)
Local cerebral blood flow during the first hour following acute ligation of multiple arterioles in rat whisker barrel cortex.
Neurobiol Dis
5:142-158[ISI][Medline].
-
Weliky M,
Katz LC
(1999)
Correlational structure of spontaneous neuronal activity in the developing lateral geniculate nucleus in vivo.
Science
285:599-604[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Zuch CL,
Nordstroem VK,
Briedrick LA,
Hoernig GR,
Granholm A-C,
Bickford PC
(2000)
Time course of degenerative alterations in nigral dopaminergic neurons following a 6-hydroxydopamine lesion.
J Comp Neurol
427:440-454[Medline].
Copyright © 2002 Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474/02/22146062-09$05.00/0
This article has been cited by other articles:

|
 |

|
 |
 
J. L. Cheatwood, A. J. Emerick, M. E. Schwab, and G. L. Kartje
Nogo-A Expression After Focal Ischemic Stroke in the Adult Rat
Stroke,
July 1, 2008;
39(7):
2091 - 2098.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
|
 |
|
|