Mathis Diana M, Furman Jennifer L, Norris Christopher M
Graduate Center for Gerontology, University of Kentucky College of Public Health, KY, USA.
J Vis Exp. 2011 Mar 23(49):2330. doi: 10.3791/2330.
The rodent hippocampal slice preparation is perhaps the most broadly used tool for investigating mammalian synaptic function and plasticity. The hippocampus can be extracted quickly and easily from rats and mice and slices remain viable for hours in oxygenated artificial cerebrospinal fluid. Moreover, basic electrophysisologic techniques are easily applied to the investigation of synaptic function in hippocampal slices and have provided some of the best biomarkers for cognitive impairments. The hippocampal slice is especially popular for the study of synaptic plasticity mechanisms involved in learning and memory. Changes in the induction of long-term potentiation and depression (LTP and LTD) of synaptic efficacy in hippocampal slices (or lack thereof) are frequently used to describe the neurologic phenotype of cognitively-impaired animals and/or to evaluate the mechanism of action of nootropic compounds. This article outlines the procedures we use for preparing hippocampal slices from rats and transgenic mice for the study of synaptic alterations associated with brain aging and Alzheimer's disease (AD)(1-3). Use of aged rats and AD model mice can present a unique set of challenges to researchers accustomed to using younger rats and/or mice in their research. Aged rats have thicker skulls and tougher connective tissue than younger rats and mice, which can delay brain extraction and/or dissection and consequently negate or exaggerate real age-differences in synaptic function and plasticity. Aging and amyloid pathology may also exacerbate hippocampal damage sustained during the dissection procedure, again complicating any inferences drawn from physiologic assessment. Here, we discuss the steps taken during the dissection procedure to minimize these problems. Examples of synaptic responses acquired in "healthy" and "unhealthy" slices from rats and mice are provided, as well as representative synaptic plasticity experiments. The possible impact of other methodological factors on synaptic function in these animal models (e.g. recording solution components, stimulation parameters) are also discussed. While the focus of this article is on the use of aged rats and transgenic mice, novices to slice physiology should find enough detail here to get started on their own studies, using a variety of rodent models.
啮齿动物海马脑片制备可能是研究哺乳动物突触功能和可塑性最广泛使用的工具。海马可以快速、轻松地从大鼠和小鼠中取出,脑片在含氧的人工脑脊液中可存活数小时。此外,基本的电生理技术很容易应用于海马脑片突触功能的研究,并为认知障碍提供了一些最佳的生物标志物。海马脑片在研究学习和记忆中涉及的突触可塑性机制方面特别受欢迎。海马脑片突触效能的长期增强和抑制(LTP和LTD)诱导的变化(或缺乏变化)经常被用来描述认知受损动物的神经表型和/或评估益智化合物的作用机制。本文概述了我们从大鼠和转基因小鼠制备海马脑片以研究与脑衰老和阿尔茨海默病(AD)相关的突触改变的程序(1-3)。使用老年大鼠和AD模型小鼠可能会给习惯于在研究中使用年轻大鼠和/或小鼠的研究人员带来一系列独特的挑战。老年大鼠的头骨比年轻大鼠和小鼠更厚,结缔组织更坚韧,这可能会延迟脑提取和/或解剖,从而消除或夸大突触功能和可塑性的实际年龄差异。衰老和淀粉样病理也可能会加剧解剖过程中对海马造成的损伤,这再次使从生理评估中得出的任何推论变得复杂。在这里,我们讨论了解剖过程中为尽量减少这些问题而采取的步骤。提供了从大鼠和小鼠的“健康”和“不健康”脑片中获得的突触反应示例,以及代表性的突触可塑性实验。还讨论了其他方法学因素对这些动物模型中突触功能的可能影响(例如记录溶液成分、刺激参数)。虽然本文的重点是老年大鼠和转基因小鼠的使用,但切片生理学的新手应该能在这里找到足够的细节,从而开始使用各种啮齿动物模型进行自己的研究。