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The Journal of Neuroscience, October 15, 2002, 22(20):9015-9023
Different Mechanisms for Loss and Recovery of Binocularity in the
Visual Cortex
David S.
Liao1,
Amanda
F.
Mower1, 3,
Rachael L.
Neve4,
Carmen
Sato-Bigbee2, and
Ary S.
Ramoa1
Departments of 1 Anatomy and Neurobiology and
2 Biochemistry, and 3 The Neuroscience Program,
Virginia Commonwealth University School of Medicine, Richmond, Virginia
23298-0709, and 4 Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical
School, McLean Hospital, Belmont, Massachusetts 02478
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ABSTRACT |
Diverse molecular mechanisms have been discovered that mediate the
loss of responses to the deprived eye during monocular deprivation.
cAMP/Ca2+ response element-binding protein (CREB)
function, in particular, is thought to be essential for ocular
dominance plasticity during monocular deprivation. In contrast, we have
very little information concerning the molecular mechanisms of recovery
from the effects of monocular deprivation, even though this information
is highly relevant for understanding cortical plasticity. To test the
involvement of CREB activation in recovery of responses to the deprived
eye, we used herpes simplex virus (HSV) to express in the primary
visual cortex a dominant-negative form of CREB (HSV-mCREB) containing a single point mutation that prevents its activation. This mutant was
used to suppress CREB function intracortically during the period when
normal vision was restored in two protocols for recovery from monocular
deprivation: reverse deprivation and binocular vision. In the reverse
deprivation model, inhibition of CREB function prevented loss of
responses to the newly deprived eye but did not prevent simultaneous
recovery of responses to the previously deprived eye. Full recovery of
cortical binocularity after restoration of binocular vision was
similarly unaffected by HSV-mCREB treatment. The HSV-mCREB injections
produced strong suppression of CREB function in the visual cortex, as
ascertained by both DNA binding assays and immunoblot analysis showing
a decrease in the expression of the transcription factor C/EBP ,
which is regulated by CREB. These results show a mechanistic dichotomy
between loss and recovery of neural function in visual cortex; CREB
function is essential for loss but not for recovery of deprived eye responses.
Key words:
CREB; ocular dominance plasticity; recovery of function; primary visual cortex; monocular deprivation; herpes simplex virus
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INTRODUCTION |
The monocular deprivation model of
amblyopia is one of the most well characterized models of neuronal
plasticity. Monocular eyelid suture during a critical period of
development leads to a dramatic loss of responses to the deprived eye
and to subsequent loss of connections relaying information from this
eye (Wiesel and Hubel, 1965 ). Recovery of binocular function can be
obtained, however, if normal visual stimulation to the deprived eye is
promptly restored. Understanding the mechanisms of loss and recovery of responses to the deprived eye may have significant implications for
understanding cortical plasticity and developing novel therapeutic approaches for amblyopia.
To date, many molecular mediators of the functional loss of connections
that occurs during monocular deprivation have been discovered. Recent
cDNA array analysis has shown that several clusters of genes may be
involved in visual cortical plasticity (Prasad et al., 2002 ). Some
specific molecules include NMDA receptors (Bear et al., 1990 ;
Rauschecker et al., 1990 ; Roberts et al., 1998 ), neurotrophins (Maffei
et al., 1992 ; Galuske et al., 2000 ; Gillespie et al., 2000 ), and
protein kinase A (Beaver et al., 2001 ). A common mechanism through
which these molecules might act in ocular dominance plasticity is
phosphorylation of the cAMP/Ca2+ response
element-binding protein (CREB), which in turn regulates the
transcription of plasticity-related genes (Gonzalez and Montminy, 1989 ;
Deisseroth et al., 1996 ; Finkbeiner et al., 1997 ). More recent
experiments have indeed shown that CREB function is necessary for the
occurrence of an ocular dominance shift during monocular deprivation
(Mower et al., 2002 ).
We have much less information concerning the mechanisms of recovery
from the effects of monocular deprivation. Previous experiments have
suggested that recovery and loss of function may share the same
molecular mediators, specifically NMDA receptors (Gu et al., 1989 ; Bear
et al., 1990 ). An interesting implication of these results is that CREB
function may also be necessary for recovery. Consistent with this
possibility, upregulation of CREB has been observed in models of
cortical recovery from scotoma (Obata et al., 1999 ). However, evidence
exists that challenges the notion of common mechanisms for loss and
recovery of visual cortical function. First, although binocular
competition is thought to drive the loss of cortical connections
mediating responses from the deprived eye, binocular competition cannot
drive recovery because initially the deprived eye cannot activate
cortical neurons. Second, clinical findings showing that recovery from
amblyopia can occur after the critical period for the effects of
monocular deprivation (Birnbaum et al., 1977 ) suggest that different
sensitive periods characterize loss and recovery of visual acuity (Daw, 1998 ). In conclusion, it remains unclear whether the mechanisms that mediate loss of cortical binocular function can also contribute to recovery.
To test the involvement of CREB activation in recovery of cortical
function after monocular deprivation, we used viral mediated gene
transfer of a dominant-negative mutant (mCREB) to suppress cortical
CREB function (Carlezon et al., 1998 ) in the visual cortex of ferrets
during the period when normal vision is restored to the deprived eye.
Vectors expressing CREB and LacZ were used as controls. This
methodology is advantageous in that it allows temporally and spatially
restricted expression of transgenes while preserving normal visual
cortical responses (Mower et al., 2002 ). Quantitative in
vivo recording techniques were then used to assess recovery. Results show that CREB function is essential for loss, but not recovery, of cortical neuron responses to the deprived eye.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Overall experimental design. Ferrets at postnatal day
45 (P45), the peak of ocular dominance plasticity (Issa et al., 1999 ), had the eyelid of one eye sutured closed to prevent patterned visual
stimulation. After 5-7 d of monocular deprivation, ferrets received
two intracortical injections of herpes simplex virus (HSV) vectors
expressing CREB, mCREB, or LacZ (HSV-CREB, HSV-mCREB, and
HSV-LacZ, respectively). In some injections, mCREB was
tagged with green fluorescent protein (HSV-mCREB-GFP). One day after the injections, one group of ferrets (reverse deprivation group) had
the eyelid of the deprived eye opened and the lid of the experienced eye sutured closed, while another group (binocular recovery group) had
their eyelids opened to restore binocular vision. The reverse deprivation and binocular vision were started 1 d after injection to make certain of adequate transgene expression before recovery. The
length of reverse deprivation or binocular vision after monocular deprivation was chosen to ensure maximal transgene expression during
the recovery period (Carlezon et al., 1998 ) as well as full recovery of
deprived eye responses in the untreated cortex (see Results). After
3 d of reverse deprivation or binocular vision, the animals were
anesthetized, and quantitative single-unit electrophysiology was
performed to assess changes in cortical ocular dominance. The
injections led to patches of infected cells ~1 mm in diameter; areas
of uninfected cells lateral and medial to the infected cells within the
same hemisphere were used for control recordings. The Institutional
Animal Care and Use Committee of Virginia Commonwealth University
approved all procedures described here.
Injection of viruses. Animals were premedicated by
subcutaneous injection of a tranquilizer (acepromazine, 1 mg/kg) and a muscarinic antagonist (methyl atropine bromide, 0.2 mg/kg) to reduce
bronchial secretions, anesthetized with intraperitoneal sodium
pentobarbital (35 mg/kg), and placed in a stereotaxic frame. No
surgical procedures were initiated until animals were sufficiently anesthetized, as ascertained by the loss of withdrawal and
corneal-blink reflexes. A small craniotomy (~1 mm diameter) was
performed above the binocular region of the primary visual cortex.
Next, the tip of a 32 gauge Hamilton syringe (Hamilton Company, Reno,
NV) containing the virus (average titer of the purified virus stocks,
4.0 × 107 infectious units/ml) was
lowered stereotaxically through the dura mater and into the binocular
region of the primary visual cortex to a depth of 1 mm. A volume of 2.0 µl was injected at a rate of 0.2 µl/min. We have shown previously
that these injections result in robust transgene expression in a
restricted area of cortex, leaving a large uninfected region available
for control recordings in the same hemisphere (Mower et al., 2002 ).
Extracellular recordings in vivo. Animals were
premedicated by subcutaneous injection of acepromazine (1 mg/kg) and
methyl atropine bromide (0.2 mg/kg), anesthetized with intraperitoneal sodium pentobarbital (35 mg/kg), and placed in a stereotaxic frame. No
surgical procedures were initiated until the animals were sufficiently anesthetized, as ascertained by the loss of withdrawal and cornea-blink reflexes. Surgery consisted of a craniotomy (3-5 mm in diameter) over
the binocular region of the primary visual cortex within which
recordings were conducted. A tracheal cannulation was performed, and
the animal was placed on a ventilator. Expired
pCO2 and SpO2 were
monitored continuously and maintained at ~4.0% and above 90%,
respectively. Body temperature was maintained at 38°C using a
homeostatic blanket. Withdrawal reflexes and heart rate were monitored
during the experiment. Supplemental doses of pentobarbital and
acepromazine were given along with subcutaneous injections of 10%
dextrose and 0.9% saline every hour throughout the experiment or when
heart rate or expired pCO2 increased. The eyelids
were opened, nictitating membranes were retracted using pseudoephedrine (2.5%), the pupils were dilated with atropine sulfate (1%), and contact lenses were placed on the corneas.
A tungsten-in-glass electrode (Levick, 1972 ) was used to make
single-unit recordings from both the treated and untreated portions of
the hemisphere contralateral to the deprived eye (first deprived eye in
the case of the reverse deprivation group). Recordings of treated cells
were made in electrode penetrations within 500 µm of the injection
site, whereas control recordings were made at least 2 mm away.
Histological examination confirmed that the recordings of treated cells
were made within the area of infection, whereas control recordings were
outside of this region. Once a single unit was isolated, its receptive
field, ocular dominance, preferred orientation, direction, and velocity
were qualitatively determined using a moving bar of light
0.5o wide and
20o long. Ocular dominance was then
quantitatively determined by presenting a computer-controlled light bar
stimulus to each eye 10 times. Each stimulus presentation consisted of
the bar of light moving across the receptive field first in one
direction and then in the opposite direction. Evoked responses and
spontaneous activity were recorded using Spike2 software (Cambridge
Electronics Design, Cambridge, UK). Spontaneous activity was determined
by recording in the absence of stimulation for at least 2 sec after
each presentation. Electrolytic lesions (4 µA for 5 sec) were made at
the end of each penetration. After the conclusion of the experiment,
the animal was killed with Euthansol (125 mg/kg pentobarbital). When the expired pCO2 began to fall, the animal was
perfused transcardially with 0.9% saline followed by 4%
paraformaldehyde. The brain was postfixed for at least 12 hr, after
which the primary visual cortex was cut into 50 µm sections in the
coronal plane using a vibratome. Alternating sections were stained with
cresyl violet and the appropriate antibody. Cresyl violet staining was
used to reconstruct electrode recording tracts, and
immunohistochemistry was used to confirm expression of the transgenes
within the primary visual cortex.
Quantification of ocular dominance. Using peristimulus
histograms generated for each cell in Spike2, the number of spikes evoked for each eye was determined by measuring the total neuronal response during stimulus presentation. The spontaneous activity was
then subtracted from the total number of spikes. To quantify cortical
binocularity, an ocular dominance index was then calculated for each
cell as described in Results. To analyze the results statistically, we
calculated a contralateral bias index (CBI) defined as
[(P0.00-0.19 P0.80-1.00) + (P0.20-0.39 P0.40-0.69)/2 + 100]/200, where
PA-B denotes the percentage of
cells with binocular indices between A and B. We
obtained for each animal a CBI for recordings performed in treated
cortex and a CBI for recordings performed in untreated control cortex
in the same hemisphere. A Wilcoxon Mann-Whitney U test was
then used to determine for each experimental group whether CBIs
obtained in the treated and untreated regions were significantly
different from each other.
Immunohistochemistry. Free-floating sections were washed
three times for 10 min each in 0.1 M PBS with
0.3% Triton X-100 (Sigma, St. Louis, MO). Endogenous peroxidase
activity was quenched by a 20 min incubation with 1%
H2O2 in PBS with 0.3%
Triton X-100. The sections were again washed as above and were blocked
for 1 hr with 0.3% Triton X-100-10% normal goat serum-2% bovine
serum albumin in PBS. Sections were then incubated overnight at 4°C with rabbit anti-CREB IgG (1:1000; Upstate Biotechnology, Lake Placid,
NY) in blocking solution. The sections were again washed as above and
were incubated with biotinylated goat anti-rabbit IgG (1:1000; Vector
Laboratories, Burlingame, CA). After another wash, sections were
incubated with ABC solution (Vectastain Elite ABC kit; Vector
Laboratories) for 1 hr. After a final wash, sections were reacted with
0.06% cobalt enhanced 3,3'-diaminobenzidine tetrahydrochloride
(Sigma). Sections were mounted on chrom-alum subbed slides, dehydrated
through graded alcohols (50, 70, 95, and 100% ethanol) and clearing
agent (Stephens Scientific, Riverdale, NJ), and mounted in Permount
(Fisher Scientific, Fair Lawn, NJ). For visualization of
LacZ expression, sections were treated using a
-Gal Staining Set (Roche Diagnostics Corporation,
Indianapolis, IN).
CRE binding assays. mCREB contains a mutation that prevents
its phosphorylation at serine 133 without affecting its binding to DNA.
To confirm that mCREB expressed by HSV-mCREB competes with endogenous
phosphorylated CREB for binding to the cAMP response element (CRE), we
performed protein-DNA binding assays in which nuclear extracts from
untreated, HSV-mCREB-injected, and HSV-LacZ-injected cortices were incubated with oligonucleotides containing the CRE sequence. Cortices were harvested from reverse sutured animals 2 d
after injection of the different HSV vectors, and nuclear extracts were
prepared according to the methods of Schreiber et al. (1989) , with
minor adaptations. The tissue was homogenized in a hypotonic buffer (in
mM: 10 HEPES, pH 7.9, 10 KCl, 0.1 EDTA, 1 DTT,
and 0.5 PMSF) and incubated on ice for 20 min in the presence of
protease inhibitors (1:100; Genotech, St. Louis, MO) and phosphatase inhibitors (1:100; Sigma). 10% NP-40 (1:50; Sigma) was then added, and
the cells were vortexed vigorously. The nuclear pellet was collected by
centrifugation of the homogenate at 10,000 × g for 30 sec at 4°C. The pellet was resuspended in a high-salt buffer B (20 mM HEPES, pH 7.9, 0.4 M
NaCl, 1 mM EDTA, 1 mM DTT,
and 1 mM PMSF) to dissociate proteins bound to
the DNA and incubated on ice for 15 min. The extract was centrifuged at
11,000 × g for 5 min at 4°C. The supernatant
containing the nuclear proteins was collected and concentrated using a
microconcentrator (Centricon). During the concentration, buffer B was
exchanged for binding buffer (20 mm HEPES, 20% glycerol, 100 mM KCl, 0.2 mM EDTA, 0.2 mM DTT, 1:100 protease inhibitors). The
5'biotinylated oligonucleotide containing the CRE
(5'GATCAGAGATTGCCTGACGTCAGAGAGCTAG-3') and its complement
(Ransom Hill Bioscience, Ramona, CA) were annealed and incubated with
streptavidin-coated agarose beads (Upstate Biotechnology). The
bead-oligonucleotide complex was incubated with the nuclear extract (at
least 30 µg of protein per 50 µl of beads) in the presence of 1 µg/ml poly(dI-dC) for 2 hr at room temperature. After the binding
reaction, the nuclear extract/bead suspension was centrifuged at
10,000 × g for 3 min at 4°C. The pellet was
carefully washed and subjected to SDS-PAGE followed by immunoblot
analysis with anti-CREB (1:1000; Cell Signaling Technology, Beverly,
MA) and anti-phospho-CREB (1:500; Upstate Biotechnology) antibodies. To
detect C/EBP , protein assays were performed (Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA),
and equal amounts of nuclear protein extract from each treatment group
were subjected directly to SDS-PAGE and immunoblot analysis with
anti-CEBP (1:500; Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Santa Cruz, CA).
Immunoreactive bands were detected by chemiluminescence using
SuperSignal West Dura Extended Duration Substrate (Pierce, Rockford,
IL). The relative intensities of the bands were determined by scanning
densitometric analysis of the x-ray films.
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RESULTS |
Cortical expression of transgenes
Ferrets received intracortical injections of HSV vectors
expressing wild-type CREB, mCREB, mCREB tagged with green fluorescent protein (mCREB-GFP), or -galactosidase. Intracortical injections of
HSV vectors resulted in successful expression of the appropriate transgenes in cells located near the injection site, as shown in Figure
1. Animals injected with HSV-mCREB-GFP
exhibited fluorescence in a large number of cells surrounding the
injection site (Fig. 1A). In contrast, cells located
~2 mm away from the injection site were not labeled (Fig.
1B). Immunohistochemistry using a CREB-specific
antibody in animals injected with HSV-CREB (Fig. 1C) or
HSV-mCREB (data not shown) showed a large number of darkly labeled
cells surrounding electrolytic lesions (Fig. 1C, arrows) that were made at the end of the penetrations. Immunohistochemistry lightly stained endogenous CREB in cells located ~2 mm away from the
injection site (Fig. 1D). The conditions used for
immunohistochemistry were chosen to minimize the detection of
endogenous CREB; therefore, the number of darkly stained cells probably
underestimates transgene expression. We only used animals that had at
least one successful penetration in each of the control and
treated regions of the same hemisphere. Together, these results confirm
previous findings showing that successful expression of CREB and
control transgenes occurs after intracortical injections of HSV (Mower
et al., 2002 ).

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Figure 1.
Histological examination shows successful
expression of transgenes in the primary visual cortex.
A, The photomicrograph shows a very large number of
cells expressing mCREB-GFP near the site of an injection made 4 d
earlier. Scale bar, 180 µm. B, Few cells expressed
mCREB-GFP ~2 mm away from the injection. C, Darkly
labeled cells stained with CREB-specific antibodies (1:1000; Upstate
Biotechnology) are seen near the injection of HSV-CREB. Note the
presence of electrolytic lesions (arrows) made during an
electrode penetration near the injection site. D,
Lightly stained cells ~2 mm away from the injection of HSV-CREB. The
immunohistochemical procedures were chosen to minimize detection of
endogenous CREB and therefore underestimate the number of infected
cells.
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Models of recovery from monocular deprivation
Ferrets were monocularly deprived for 5-7 d, after which visual
input was re-established to the deprived eye in one of two recovery
protocols: (1) the eyelid of the deprived eye was opened, and the lid
of the experienced eye was sutured closed (reverse deprivation), or (2)
the eyelid of the deprived eye was opened to restore binocular vision.
Three days after the initiation of recovery, extracellular recordings
were conducted in the binocular region of the visual field. To
quantify ocular dominance of cortical neurons, we calculated an ocular
dominance index using the equation LE/(RE + LE), where LE and RE stands
for the response to stimulation of the left and right eye,
respectively. An ocular dominance index of 1.0 indicates responsiveness
only to the left eye; an index of 0.0 indicates responsiveness only to
the right eye.
The effects of the two recovery protocols, binocular vision and reverse
deprivation, following a period of monocular deprivation are shown in
Figure 2. These histograms show the
marked ocular dominance shift relative to normal (compare A,
B) typically seen in ferrets after a period of 5-7 d of monocular
deprivation. The ocular dominance distribution shifted back toward the
previously deprived eye after 3 d of reverse deprivation (D). In
these animals, the previously deprived eye dominated most cortical
responses, and cortical binocularity did not recover. In contrast, a
few days of binocular vision after a period of monocular deprivation restored cortical binocularity to the level present before deprivation so that the ocular dominance profile was similar to normal (compare A, C). In conclusion, these patterns of ocular dominance
provide us with two distinctive models of recovery from monocular
deprivation: the reverse deprivation model, in which both recovery (to
the previously deprived eye) and loss of responses (to the newly
deprived eye) are evident, and the binocular recovery model, in which
binocular recovery predominates.

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Figure 2.
Recovery of responses to the deprived eye in two
recovery protocols. Whereas the normal ferret ocular dominance profile
is characterized by a high degree of binocularity (A;
n = 119 neurons), ~1 week of monocular lid suture
starting at P45 caused a dramatic loss of responses to the deprived eye
(B; n = 110). Full recovery of
cortical binocularity was present after a 3-5 d period of binocular
vision (C; n = 228). In contrast,
the ocular dominance distribution was shifted back toward the
previously deprived eye after a period of reverse deprivation
(D; n = 119). In this case, 3 d
of reverse deprivation caused a striking loss of responses to the newly
deprived eye and did not induce binocular recovery.
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Suppression of CREB function during reverse deprivation
To elucidate the role of CREB function on loss and recovery of
responses in the same preparation, we examined the effects of
expression of different transgenes on ocular dominance plasticity during reverse deprivation. Specifically, we asked whether CREB function is required in recovery of responses to the previously deprived eye as well as loss of responses to the newly deprived eye.
The histograms showing the distribution of neurons into binocularity ranges are shown in Figure 3 for animals
that received intracortical injection of HSV-mCREB (A, B)
and were reverse sutured. As expected, the ocular dominance
distribution was markedly shifted toward the previously deprived eye in
untreated neurons (Fig. 3A). This distribution reflects
recovery of responses to the previously deprived eye as well as an
almost complete loss of responses to the newly deprived eye. The
results observed in penetrations made in untreated cortex located
medially and laterally from the injection site were similar and have
been pooled together. In contrast to these findings, the ocular
dominance shift was markedly reduced in cells recorded within the area
of HSV-mCREB infection (Fig. 3B). In these penetrations, a
large number of neurons continued to respond preferentially to the
newly deprived eye, and several neurons located in the area of
infection were binocularly driven. The ocular dominance indices in the
group of neurons near the injection site differed significantly from
those observed in the group of untreated neurons
(p < 0.05; Wilcoxon Mann-Whitney U test).

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Figure 3.
Dichotomy in CREB dependence of recovery and loss
of neuronal responses during reverse deprivation. A,
B, The histograms with error bars show that most neurons
located away from the HSV-mCREB-treated cortex
(A) responded preferentially to the previously
deprived eye. In contrast, recordings in treated cortex revealed that a
large proportion of neurons continued to respond to the newly deprived
eye (B). However, treatment did not prevent the
recovery of responses to the previously deprived eye. Most (84% of
119) untreated neurons studied in six animals had a binocularity index
<0.5 after 3 d of reverse deprivation, indicating that they
responded preferentially to the previously deprived eye. In contrast,
recordings from 76 neurons located in the treated region of the
hemispheres in the same animals indicated that an approximately equal
number of cells responded preferentially to stimulation of the
previously deprived (n = 42) and newly deprived
(n = 34) eye. Note that several cells are
binocularly driven. The results obtained from recordings located near
and away from the injection site were significantly different
(p < 0.05; Wilcoxon Mann-Whitney
U test). C, D, The histograms show an
ocular dominance shift toward the previously deprived eye in animals
treated with HSV-CREB within 3 d. The results obtained from
neurons studied near (C; n = 83 cells in four animals) and away (D;
n = 68 cells) from the injection of HSV-CREB were
indistinguishable (p > 0.05).
E, F, Similarly, results obtained from
recordings located near (E; n = 40 cells in two animals) and away (F; n = 35 cells) from the injection of HSV-lacZ revealed an
ocular dominance shift toward the previously deprived eye within 3 d.
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Specificity of these effects was confirmed by examining cortical
binocularity in animals treated with intracortical injection of HSV
containing the cDNA for CREB (Fig. 3C,D) or the
LacZ reporter gene (Fig. 3E,F) during
reverse deprivation. The regions of untreated and HSV-CREB infected
cortex showed similar ocular dominance distributions that were
characterized by a pronounced shift toward the previously deprived eye
(Fig. 3C, D, respectively). The binocularity indices observed in the treated and untreated groups of neurons were not significantly different (p > 0.05). Similar
results were observed in animals treated with HSV-LacZ (Fig.
3E,F). These findings indicate that overexpression of
the wild-type protein CREB or expression of the foreign protein
-galactosidase does not lead to loss of ocular dominance plasticity
during reverse deprivation, indicating specificity of the effects
observed with HSV-mCREB injection.
Suppression of CREB function during binocular recovery
The above results suggest that a dichotomy exists between the CREB
dependence of recovery and loss of cortical responses. To test this
idea further, we suppressed CREB function in the binocular recovery
group of animals, in which recovery predominates. Similar ocular
dominance profiles were observed in untreated (Fig. 4A) and treated (Fig.
4B) cortices, showing that injection of HSV-mCREB
did not prevent recovery of cortical binocularity. The binocularity
indices observed in the treated and untreated groups of neurons were
not different (p > 0.05). Thus, suppression of CREB function at the time when binocular vision is restored does not
prevent recovery of responses to the previously deprived eye. Together,
the results from the reverse deprivation and binocular recovery animals
indicate that CREB function is required in loss, but not recovery of
functional connections after a brief period of monocular
deprivation.

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Figure 4.
Intracortical injection of HSV-mCREB did not
prevent recovery of cortical binocularity during binocular vision.
Histograms with error bars show that most neurons located near
(B) as well as away (A)
from the HSV-mCREB-treated cortex fully recovered cortical
binocularity relative to normal animals (compare with Fig.
2A). The results obtained from recordings located
near (n = 93 cells in 5 animals) and away
(n = 92 cells in the same hemispheres as the
treated cells) were statistically indistinguishable
(p > 0.05).
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Suppression of CREB function by HSV-mCREB injections
To examine whether lack of effects of HSV-mCREB injection on
recovery of responses to the deprived eye resulted from inappropriate blockade of CREB function, we conducted two assays to verify transgene activity in visual cortex. We performed DNA binding assays using nuclear extracts obtained from untreated, HSV-mCREB-treated, and HSV-LacZ-treated cortices of animals subjected to reverse
deprivation. These studies predict that if mCREB expression is to
successfully block endogenous CREB activity, it must compete with CREB
for CRE binding sites. Therefore, the presence of CRE-bound mCREB should decrease the amount of CRE-bound endogenous CREB, thereby downregulating CRE-mediated gene transcription. Because mCREB is
unphosphorylatable, the ratio of CRE-bound phospho-CREB to total CREB
(CREB plus mCREB) should also decrease. To examine these possibilities,
we have incubated nuclear extracts from untreated, HSV-mCREB-treated,
and HSV-LacZ-treated hemispheres with a double-stranded oligonucleotide containing the CRE sequence (see Materials and Methods). The relative proportion of phospho- to total CREB bound to
the oligonucleotide was detected by Western blot analysis (Fig. 5A,B). These experiments show
that the ratio of CRE-bound phospho-CREB to CRE-bound total CREB is
markedly lower in HSV-mCREB-treated than in normal or
HSV-LacZ-treated cortices, indicating that mCREB competes
efficiently with endogenous CREB for binding to CRE elements.

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Figure 5.
mCREB competes efficiently with endogenous CREB
for binding to the CRE. Pairs of nuclear extracts were prepared from
cortices of animals (n = 5) that received
injections of HSV-mCREB in one hemisphere and HSV-LacZ
(n = 4) or no injection (n = 1)
in the other. These animals represent a group separate from those used
in physiology and histology. In each nuclear extract, the proportion of
nonphosphorylated CREB competing with phospho-CREB for binding to the
CRE was assessed by using synthetic nucleotides, as described in
Materials and Methods. For each sample, the proportion of phospho-CREB
to total CREB (phosphorylated + non-phosphorylated) was determined by
Western blot analysis after separation of the protein-DNA complexes.
A, Total CREB; B, phospho-CREB. The ratio
of pCREB/total CREB determined after densitometric analysis of the
Western blots for mCREB- and LacZ-treated samples is
represented in C. The results from cortices that
received HSV-LacZ or no injection were similar and have
been pooled. The ratio of phospho- to total CREB bound to the CRE was
significantly less in HSV-mCREB-treated animals
(p < 0.05; paired t test)
indicating that mCREB competes for CRE binding sites.
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To confirm whether this competition results in decreased expression of
genes that are transcriptionally regulated by CREB, we have examined
the expression of the transcription factor C/EBP (Niehof et al.,
1997 ) in animals that were reverse deprived. Effects of HSV injections
on protein expression were examined and quantified using specific
antibodies in Western blotting. The results shown in Figure
6 indicate that C/EBP expression was
downregulated in nuclear extracts from HSV-mCREB-injected cortex
relative to HSV-LacZ-injected cortex. In conclusion, the
findings that expression of mCREB efficiently decreased the binding of
phospho-CREB to the CRE and successfully suppressed expression of a
CREB-regulated gene further substantiate the evidence that a dichotomy
exists in CREB dependence of the processes of recovery and loss of
neural function in visual cortex.

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Figure 6.
Intracortical injections of HSV-mCREB suppressed
expression of C/EBP . C/EBP expression in samples prepared from
animals (n = 4) receiving HSV-mCREB injections in
one hemisphere and HSV-LacZ in the other was determined
by Western blot analysis. These animals were separate from those used
for physiology. For each blot, equal amounts of protein were loaded in
each lane. The immunoblots show that C/EBP expression in visual
cortex near the site of HSV-mCREB treatment is reduced relative to
HSV-LacZ-treated cortex (A). The
bar graphs show that average optical densities for cortex treated with
HSV-mCREB are significantly less than those treated with
HSV-LacZ when normalized to untreated cortex from the
same animals (p 0.05; paired
t test) (B).
|
|
 |
DISCUSSION |
Different mechanisms for loss and recovery of deprived
eye responses
The present report makes two major points concerning the
mechanisms of cortical recovery from the effects of monocular
deprivation. The first point is that suppression of CREB function in
the primary visual cortex prevents loss of responses to the newly
deprived eye in the reverse suture model of recovery. This finding
extends recent results showing that suppression of CREB function in
primary visual cortex prevents the loss of responses to the deprived
eye during monocular deprivation (Mower et al., 2002 ). The effect on
loss of response was specific and did not result from viral toxicity,
because HSV-CREB and HSV-LacZ injections failed to block this type of ocular dominance plasticity. Additionally, the effects did
not result from a suppression of sensory responses, because most
neurons studied in infected cortex responded strongly to visual
stimulation and had stimulus specificities characteristic of the
primary visual cortex of ferrets (Mower et al., 2002 ). These findings
indicate that CREB function is essential for loss of response to the
newly deprived eye during reverse deprivation. In the same animals,
recovery of responses to the previously deprived eye was not prevented
by the HSV-mCREB injections, suggesting that CREB function is not
required for the recovery of responses to the deprived eye.
The second major point of this study is that suppression of CREB
function does not prevent binocular recovery. Full recovery of
responses to the deprived eye was observed in regions of cortex treated
with HSV-mCREB in animals that were monocularly deprived and then
allowed binocular vision, a procedure that promotes recovery of
responses to the deprived eye while preserving responses to the
experienced eye. In these animals, recovery of cortical binocularity was indistinguishable from that present in untreated regions. Full
recovery occurred despite the fact that 1 week of monocular deprivation
induces complete loss of responses to the deprived eye (Issa et al.,
1999 ) and a decrease in the complexity of the deprived thalamocortical
arbors (Antonini and Stryker, 1996 ). Previous studies conducted in cats
and monkeys have shown that restoration of binocular vision after a
short period of deprivation also leads to recovery of responses to the
deprived eye (Wiesel and Hubel, 1965 ; Olson and Freeman, 1978 ), but
recovery of cortical binocularity was less extensive than in ferrets.
The finding that ferrets can recover a normal pattern of binocularity
after 1 week of monocular deprivation (Liao et al., 2001b ) placed us in
a unique position to investigate the mechanisms underlying recovery of cortical binocularity. Use of this animal model has indicated that CREB
function is not required for the recovery of responses to the
previously deprived eye.
The results reported here indicate that there is a mechanistic
dichotomy between loss and recovery of cortical binocularity; CREB
function is essential for loss but not recovery of deprived eye
responses. An alternative interpretation, however, is that injection of
HSV-mCREB may not have produced suppression of CREB function. This is
unlikely because the results of our CRE-binding assays suggest that the
mCREB protein is capable of interfering with endogenous CREB activity.
Importantly, we also show that the transcription factor C/EBP , which
is regulated by CREB (Niehof et al., 1997 ), was downregulated in
nuclear extracts from HSV-mCREB-injected cortex relative to
HSV-LacZ-injected or untreated cortex. These findings
indicate that intracortical injection of HSV-mCREB produced strong
suppression of CREB function near the area of injection.
Previous studies
Molecular mediators involved in recovery from the effects of
monocular deprivation have been examined in very few studies. Specifically, it has been suggested that loss of responses to the
deprived eye (Bear et al., 1990 ; Roberts et al., 1998 ) as well as
recovery of responses after re-establishment of its visual input are
dependent on NMDA receptor activation (Gu et al., 1989 ). In the latter
study, the NMDA receptor antagonist 2-amino-5-phosphonovalerate was
used during reverse suture and was found to prevent recovery of
responses to the previously deprived eye. However, blockade of recovery
may have been caused by suppression of visual responses by this
pharmacological agent (Miller et al., 1989 ). The involvement of NMDA
receptors in binocular recovery needs to be examined using approaches
that preserve visual responses (Roberts et al., 1998 ). More recently,
an interesting study showed that inhibition of proteases blocks loss as
well as recovery of responses during reverse suture but does not
prevent loss of responses during monocular deprivation (Muller and
Griesinger, 1998 ). In contrast, use of viral-mediated gene
transfer in the present study has produced consistent results in the
monocular deprivation, reverse deprivation, and binocular vision models
of ocular dominance plasticity. Inhibition of CREB function prevented
loss of responses to the deprived eye in two models of ocular dominance
plasticity, monocular deprivation and reverse deprivation. Furthermore,
inhibition of CREB function did not block simultaneous recovery of
responses to the deprived eye in reverse deprivation. Recovery was
similarly unaffected after restoration of binocular vision. In
conclusion, the present studies provide direct evidence that loss and
recovery of function in the visual cortex occur through independent pathways.
Transcription factors in ocular dominance plasticity
Gene activation by CREB has been shown to be important for several
experimental models of learning (Frank and Greenberg, 1994 ; Silva et
al., 1998 ) as well as for long-term synaptic plasticity in the
hippocampus (Deisseroth et al., 1996 ). Recent studies have also
implicated CREB in ocular dominance plasticity during monocular deprivation (Pham et al., 1999 ; Mower et al., 2002 ). C/EBP is a
transcription factor regulated by CREB (Niehof et al., 1997 ; Taubenfeld
et al., 2001 ) and is similarly associated with long-term facilitation
and long-term memory formation (Alberini et al., 1994 ; Yukawa et al.,
1998 ; Taubenfeld et al., 2001 ). These findings sparked our initial
interest in the possibility that CREB and C/EBP would be required in
ocular dominance plasticity during recovery from the effects of
monocular deprivation. Finding a lack of effects of mCREB expression on
recovery from monocular deprivation was, therefore, surprising. This
was especially true in view of the finding that suppression of CREB was
effective in preventing loss of responses in the reverse deprivation
model. Our results have suggested that C/EBP also may not be
involved in binocular recovery because HSV-mCREB treatment not only
suppressed CREB function but also decreased the expression of C/EBP
in visual cortex. This finding also raises the interesting possibility
that C/EBP has an important role in loss of visual responses to the deprived eye. Future tests of this hypothesis as well as the role of
CREB function in regulating C/EBP expression in the visual cortex
should help elucidate what molecular events downstream of CREB
activation are required in ocular dominance plasticity during monocular deprivation.
Mechanisms mediating recovery of responses to the deprived eye
These results raise the issue of what CREB-independent processes
might mediate binocular recovery after monocular deprivation. Some
possibilities are that local protein synthesis at the synapse is
sufficient for recovery of synapses (Stewart et al., 1996 ; Huber et
al., 2000 ) or that other transcription factors (Brivanlou and Darnell,
2002 ) regulate recovery. The question of whether recovery requires
protein synthesis could be addressed through the use of protein
synthesis inhibitors, which have been used successfully to block loss
of function (Taha and Stryker, 2002 ). Another possibility that should
be considered is that some deprived eye afferents retain their
proximity to postsynaptic contacts, retaining subthreshold inputs on
visual cortical neurons during the first days of monocular deprivation
(Blakemore et al., 1982 ). These subthreshold inputs may contact
physiologically silent synapses (Isaac et al., 1995 ; Liao et al., 1995 ;
Liao et al., 2001a ), leading to their reactivation after eye opening.
Reactivation of silent synapses is a process that can occur rapidly and
requires activation of NMDA receptors (Isaac et al., 1995 ). Finally, it
is conceivable that deprived eye afferents make use of molecular cues
to re-establish connections with target neurons during binocular
recovery. This proposal is reminiscent of recent suggestions that
molecular cues may guide formation of ocular dominance modules in the
visual cortex (Crowley and Katz, 1999 ) and eye-specific layers in the lateral geniculate nucleus (Cook et al., 1999 ). It is important to
note, however, that CREB activity may be required for binocular recovery after more prolonged durations of deprivation, when expansion of the experienced eye afferents occurs (Antonini and Stryker, 1996 ).
In this case, CREB-dependent loss of these overgrown connections may be
necessary to make room for recovering afferents to regain their share
of postsynaptic space.
The results presented here have important implications for studies of
recovery from monocular deprivation and amblyopia. Many molecules have
been implicated in ocular dominance plasticity, but usually in the
context of loss of function during monocular deprivation. It is
appealing to hypothesize that simple stimulation of pathways associated
with these molecules could allow recovery of a deprived eye, even when
the critical period has passed. This approach may yield suboptimal
results, however, considering the potential mechanistic dichotomy
between loss and recovery of function. Therefore, the identity of
molecules that may mediate recovery is a topic that demands increased attention.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received April 29, 2002; revised July 31, 2002; accepted Aug. 6, 2002.
This work was supported by National Eye Institute Grant EY-11508
and National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism Grant AA-13023
(A.S.R.).
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Ary S. Ramoa, Department of
Anatomy and Neurobiology, Virginia Commonwealth University, School of
Medicine, 1101 East Marshall Street, Sanger Hall, Room 12-042,
Richmond, VA 23298-0709. E-mail: aramoa{at}hsc.vcu.edu.
 |
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