Streeter K A, Sunshine M D, Patel S R, Liddell S S, Denholtz L E, Reier P J, Fuller D D, Baekey D M
Department of Physical Therapy, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida.
Department of Neuroscience, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida; and.
J Neurophysiol. 2017 Mar 1;117(3):1014-1029. doi: 10.1152/jn.00638.2016. Epub 2016 Dec 14.
Midcervical spinal interneurons form a complex and diffuse network and may be involved in modulating phrenic motor output. The intent of the current work was to enable a better understanding of midcervical "network-level" connectivity by pairing the neurophysiological multielectrode array (MEA) data with histological verification of the recording locations. We first developed a method to deliver 100-nA currents to electroplate silver onto and subsequently deposit silver from electrode tips after obtaining midcervical (C3-C5) recordings using an MEA in anesthetized and ventilated adult rats. Spinal tissue was then fixed, harvested, and histologically processed to "develop" the deposited silver. Histological studies verified that the silver deposition method discretely labeled (50-μm resolution) spinal recording locations between laminae IV and X in cervical segments C3-C5. Using correlative techniques, we next tested the hypothesis that midcervical neuronal discharge patterns are temporally linked. Cross-correlation histograms produced few positive peaks (5.3%) in the range of 0-0.4 ms, but 21.4% of neuronal pairs had correlogram peaks with a lag of ≥0.6 ms. These results are consistent with synchronous discharge involving mono- and polysynaptic connections among midcervical neurons. We conclude that there is a high degree of synaptic connectivity in the midcervical spinal cord and that the silver-labeling method can reliably mark metal electrode recording sites and "map" interneuron populations, thereby providing a low-cost and effective tool for use in MEA experiments. We suggest that this method will be useful for further exploration of midcervical network connectivity. We describe a method that reliably identifies the locations of multielectrode array (MEA) recording sites while preserving the surrounding tissue for immunohistochemistry. To our knowledge, this is the first cost-effective method to identify the anatomic locations of neuronal ensembles recorded with a MEA during acute preparations without the requirement of specialized array electrodes. In addition, evaluation of activity recorded from silver-labeled sites revealed a previously unappreciated degree of connectivity between midcervical interneurons.
颈髓中段的脊髓中间神经元形成一个复杂且弥散的网络,可能参与调节膈神经运动输出。当前这项工作的目的是通过将神经生理学多电极阵列(MEA)数据与记录位置的组织学验证相结合,以便更好地理解颈髓中段的“网络水平”连接性。我们首先开发了一种方法,在使用MEA对麻醉且通气的成年大鼠进行颈髓中段(C3 - C5)记录后,施加100 - nA电流以在电极尖端电镀银并随后沉积银。然后将脊髓组织固定、取材并进行组织学处理以“显影”沉积的银。组织学研究证实,银沉积方法以离散方式标记(分辨率为50μm)了颈段C3 - C5中IV层和X层之间的脊髓记录位置。使用相关技术,我们接下来检验了颈髓中段神经元放电模式在时间上相关的假设。互相关直方图在0 - 0.4 ms范围内产生的正峰很少(5.3%),但21.4%的神经元对具有滞后≥0.6 ms的相关图峰值。这些结果与颈髓中段神经元之间涉及单突触和多突触连接的同步放电一致。我们得出结论,颈髓中段脊髓存在高度的突触连接性,并且银标记方法可以可靠地标记金属电极记录位点并“绘制”中间神经元群体,从而为MEA实验提供一种低成本且有效的工具。我们认为这种方法将有助于进一步探索颈髓中段网络连接性。我们描述了一种方法,该方法能够可靠地识别多电极阵列(MEA)记录位点的位置,同时保留周围组织用于免疫组织化学。据我们所知,这是第一种在急性实验准备过程中无需特殊阵列电极即可识别用MEA记录的神经元群解剖位置的经济有效的方法。此外,对从银标记位点记录的活动进行评估揭示了颈髓中段中间神经元之间此前未被认识到的连接程度。