The Journal of Neuroscience, March 1, 1999, 19(5):1586-1598
Central Peptidergic Neurons Are Hyperactive during Collateral
Sprouting and Inhibition of Activity Suppresses Sprouting
John A.
Watt1,
Christopher W.
Moffet1,
Xinrong
Zhou1,
Sonja
Short1,
James P.
Herman3, and
Charles M.
Paden1, 2
1 Department of Biology and 2 WWAMI
Medical Program, Montana State University, Bozeman, Montana 59717-0346, and 3 Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology, University of
Kentucky Medical Center, Lexington, Kentucky 40536
Little is known regarding the effect of chronic changes in neuronal
activity on the extent of collateral sprouting by identified CNS
neurons. We have investigated the relationship between activity and
sprouting in oxytocin (OT) and vasopressin (VP) neurons of the
hypothalamic magnocellular neurosecretory system (MNS). Uninjured MNS
neurons undergo a robust collateral-sprouting response that restores
the axon population of the neural lobe (NL) after a lesion of the
contralateral MNS (Watt and Paden, 1991). Simultaneously, lesioned rats
develop chronic urinary hyperosmolality indicative of heightened
neurosecretory activity. We therefore tested the hypothesis that
sprouting MNS neurons are hyperactive by measuring changes in cell and
nuclear diameters, OT and VP mRNA pools, and axonal cytochrome oxidase
activity (COX). Each of these measures was significantly elevated
during the period of most rapid axonal growth between 1 and 4 weeks
after the lesion, confirming that both OT and VP neurons are
hyperactive while undergoing collateral sprouting. In a second study
the hypothesis that chronic inhibition of neuronal activity would
interfere with the sprouting response was tested. Chronic hyponatremia
(CH) was induced 3 d before the hypothalamic lesion and sustained
for 4 weeks to suppress neurosecretory activity. CH abolished the
lesion-induced increases in OT and VP mRNA pools and virtually
eliminated measurable COX activity in MNS terminals. Counts of the
total number of axon profiles in the NL revealed that CH also prevented
axonal sprouting from occurring. These results are consistent with the
hypothesis that increased neuronal activity is required for
denervation-induced collateral sprouting to occur in the MNS.
Key words:
collateral sprouting; activity dependent; neurohypophysis; supraoptic nucleus; magnocellular neurosecretory
system; chronic hyponatremia; oxytocin; vasopressin; hypothalamus
Copyright © 1999 Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474/99/1951586-13$05.00/0