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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 87 No. 4 April 2002, pp. 1924-1937
Copyright ©2002 by the American Physiological Society
Departments of Cell Biology, Neurobiology, and Surgery (Neurosurgery), Duke University Medical Center and Durham Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina 27710
Fayuk, Dmitriy,
Peter G. Aitken,
George G. Somjen, and
Dennis A. Turner.
Two Different Mechanisms Underlie Reversible, Intrinsic Optical
Signals in Rat Hippocampal Slices. J. Neurophysiol. 87: 1924-1937, 2002. Intrinsic optical signals
(IOSs) induced by synaptic stimulation and moderate hypotonic swelling
in brain tissue slices consist of reduced light scattering and are
usually attributed to cell swelling. During spreading depression (SD),
however, light-scattering increases even though SD has been shown to
cause strong cell swelling. To understand this phenomenon, we recorded
extracellular voltage, light transmission (LT), which is inversely
related to light scattering, and interstitial volume (ISV)
simultaneously from the same site (stratum radiatum of CA1) in both
interface and submerged hippocampal slices. As expected, moderate
lowering of bath osmolarity caused concentration-dependent shrinkage of
ISV and increase in LT, while increased osmolarity induced opposite
changes in both variables. During severe hypotonia, however, after an
initial increase of LT, the direction of the IOS reversed to a
progressive decrease in spite of continuing ISV shrinkage. SD caused by
hypotonia, by microinjection of high-K+ solution,
or by hypoxia, was associated with a pronounced LT decrease, during
which ISV shrinkage indicated maximal cell swelling. If most of the
extracellular Cl
was substituted by the
impermeant anion methylsulfate and also in strongly hypertonic medium,
the SD-related decrease in LT was suppressed and replaced by a
monotonic increase. Nevertheless, the degree of ISV shrinkage was
similar in low and in normal Cl
conditions. The
optical signals and ISV changes were qualitatively identical in
interface and submerged slices. We conclude that there are at least two
mechanisms that underlie reversible optical responses in hippocampal
slices. The first mechanism underlies light-scattering decrease (hence
enhancing LT) when ISV shrinks (cell swelling) under synaptic
stimulation and mild hypotonia. Similarly, as result of this mechanism,
expansion of ISV (cell shrinkage) during mild hypertonia leads to an
increased light scattering (and decreased LT). Thus optical signals
associated with this first mechanism show expected cell-volume changes
and are linked to either cell swelling or shrinkage. A different
mechanism causes the light-scattering increase (leading to a LT
decrease) during severe hypotonia and various forms of SD but with a
severely decreased ISV. This second mechanism may be due to organelle
swelling or dendritic beading but not to cell-volume increase. These
two mechanisms can summate, indicating that they are independent in origin. Suppression of the SD-related light-scattering increase by
lowering [Cl
]o or
severe hypertonia unmasks the underlying swelling-related scattering
decrease. The simultaneous IOS and ISV measurements clearly distinguish
these two mechanisms of optical signal generation.
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