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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 81 No. 4 April 1999, pp. 1889-1902
Copyright ©1999 by the American Physiological Society
Department of Physiology, Tokyo Medical and Dental University School of Medicine, Tokyo 113-8519, Japan
Arai, Yoshiyasu,
Yoko Momose-Sato,
Katsushige Sato, and
Kohtaro Kamino.
Optical mapping of neural network activity in chick spinal cord at an
intermediate stage of embryonic development. We have applied
multiple-site optical recording of transmembrane potential changes to
recording of neuronal pathway/network activity from embryonic chick
spinal cord slice preparations. Spinal cord preparations were dissected
from 8-day-old chick embryos at Hamburger-Hamilton stage 33, and
transverse slice preparations were prepared with the 13th cervical
spinal nerve or with the 2nd or 5th lumbosacral spinal nerve intact.
The slice preparations were stained with a voltage-sensitive
merocyanine-rhodanine dye (NK2761). Transmembrane voltage-related
optical (dye-absorbance) changes evoked by spinal nerve stimulation
with positive square-current pulses using a suction electrode were
recorded simultaneously from many loci in the preparation, using a 128- or 1,020-element photodiode array. Optical responses were detected from
dorsal and ventral regions corresponding to the posterior (dorsal) and
anterior (ventral) gray horns. The optical signals were composed of two
components, fast spike-like and slow signals. In the dorsal region, the
fast spike-like signal was identified as the presynaptic action
potential in the sensory nerve and the slow signal as the postsynaptic
potential. In the ventral region, the fast spike-like signal reflects
the antidromic action potential in motoneurons, and the slow signal is
related to the postsynaptic potential evoked in the motoneuron. In
preparations in which the ventral root was cut microsurgically, the
antidromic action potential-related optical signals were eliminated. The areas of the maximal amplitude of the evoked signals in the dorsal
and ventral regions were located near the dorsal root entry zone and
the ventral root outlet zone, respectively. Quasiconcentric contour-line maps were obtained in the dorsal and ventral regions, suggesting the functional arrangement of the dorsal and ventral synaptic connections. Synaptic fatigue induced by repetitive stimuli in
the ventral synapses was more rapid than in the dorsal synapses. The
distribution patterns of the signals were essentially similar among
C13, LS2, and LS5 preparations, suggesting that there is no difference
in the spatiotemporal pattern of the neural responses along the
rostrocaudal axis of the spinal cord at this developmental stage. In
the ventral root-cut preparations, comparing the delay times between
the ventral slow optical signals, we have been able to demonstrate that
neural network-related synaptic connections are generated functionally
in the embryonic spinal cord at Hamburger-Hamilton stage 33.
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