We measured pharmacologically isolated GABAergic currents from layer II/III neurons of the rat auditory cortex using patch-clamp recording. Activation of muscarinic receptors by muscarine (1 microM) or oxotremorine (10 microM) decreased the amplitude of electrically evoked inhibitory postsynaptic currents to about one third of their control value. Neither miniature nor exogenously evoked GABAergic currents were altered by the presence of muscarinic agonists, indicating that the effect was spike-dependent and not mediated postsynaptically. The presence of the N- or P/Q-type Ca(2+) channel blockers omega-conotoxin GVIA (1 microM) or omega-AgaTx TK (200 nM) greatly blocked the muscarinic effect, suggesting that Ca(2+)-channels were target of the muscarinic modulation. The presence of the muscarinic M(2) receptor (M(2)R) antagonists methoctramine (5 muM) or AF-DX 116 (1 microM) blocked most of the muscarinic evoked inhibitory postsynaptic current (eIPSC) reduction, indicating that M(2)Rs were responsible for the effect, whereas the remaining component of the depression displayed M(1)R-like sensitivity. Tissue preincubation with the specific blockers of phosphatidyl-inositol-3-kinase (PI(3)K) wortmannin (200 nM), LY294002 (1 microM), or with the Ca(2+)-dependent PKC inhibitor Gö 6976 (200 nM) greatly impaired the muscarinic decrease of the eIPSC amplitude, whereas the remaining component was sensitive to preincubation in the phospholipase C blocker U73122 (10 microM). We conclude that acetylcholine release enhances the excitability of the auditory cortex by decreasing the release of GABA by inhibiting axonal V-dependent Ca(2+) channels, mostly through activation of presynaptic M(2)Rs/PI(3)K/Ca(2+)-independent PKC pathway and-to a smaller extent-by the activation of M(1)/PLC/Ca(2+)-dependent PKC.
Recently, several new functional (f)MRI contrast mechanisms including diffusion, phase imaging, proton density, etc. have been proposed to measure neuronal activity more directly and accurately than blood-oxygen-level dependent (BOLD) fMRI. However, these approaches have proved difficult to reproduce, mainly because of the dearth of reliable and robust test systems to vet and validate them. Here we describe the development and testing of such a test bed for non-BOLD fMRI. Organotypic cortical cultures were used as a stable and reproducible biological model of neuronal activity that shows spontaneous activity similar to that of in vivo brain cortex without any hemodynamic confounds. An open-access, single-sided magnetic resonance (MR) "profiler" consisting of four permanent magnets with magnetic field of 0.32 T was used in this study to perform MR acquisition. A fluorescence microscope with long working distance objective was mounted on the top of a custom-designed chamber that keeps the organotypic culture vital, and the MR system was mounted on the bottom of the chamber to achieve real-time simultaneous calcium fluorescence optical imaging and MR acquisition on the same specimen. In this study, the reliability and performance of the proposed test bed were demonstrated by a conventional CPMG MR sequence acquired simultaneously with calcium imaging, which is a well-characterized measurement of neuronal activity. This experimental design will make it possible to correlate directly the other candidate functional MR signals to the optical indicia of neuronal activity in the future.
The cortex is spontaneously active, even in the absence of any particular input or motor output. During development, this activity is important for the migration and differentiation of cortex cell types and the formation of neuronal connections 1 . In the mature animal, ongoing activity reflects the past and the present state of an animal into which sensory stimuli are seamlessly integrated to compute future actions. Thus, a clear understanding of the organization of ongoing i.e. spontaneous activity is a prerequisite to understand cortex function.Numerous recording techniques revealed that ongoing activity in cortex is comprised of many neurons whose individual activities transiently sum to larger events that can be detected in the local field potential (LFP) with extracellular microelectrodes, or in the electroencephalogram (EEG), the magnetoencephalogram (MEG), and the BOLD signal from functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). The LFP is currently the method of choice when studying neuronal population activity with high temporal and spatial resolution at the mesoscopic scale (several thousands of neurons). At the extracellular microelectrode, locally synchronized activities of spatially neighbored neurons result in rapid deflections in the LFP up to several hundreds of microvolts. When using an array of microelectrodes, the organizations of such deflections can be conveniently monitored in space and time.Neuronal avalanches describe the scale-invariant spatiotemporal organization of ongoing neuronal activity in the brain 2,3 . They are specific to the superficial layers of cortex as established in vitro 4,5 , in vivo in the anesthetized rat 6 , and in the awake monkey 7 . Importantly, both theoretical and empirical studies 2,8-10 suggest that neuronal avalanches indicate an exquisitely balanced critical state dynamics of cortex that optimizes information transfer and information processing.In order to study the mechanisms of neuronal avalanche development, maintenance, and regulation, in vitro preparations are highly beneficial, as they allow for stable recordings of avalanche activity under precisely controlled conditions. The current protocol describes how to study neuronal avalanches in vitro by taking advantage of superficial layer development in organotypic cortex cultures, i.e. slice cultures, grown on planar, integrated microelectrode arrays (MEA; see also [11][12][13][14] ).
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