Emergence of dominant initiation sites for interictal spikes in rat neocortex

Author:

Vitantonio Daniel12,Xu Weifeng1,Geng Xinling3,Wolff Brian S.4,Takagaki Kentaroh5,Motamedi Gholam K.2,Wu Jian-young1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neuroscience, Georgetown University Medical Center, Washington, District of Columbia;

2. Department of Neurology, Georgetown University Medical Center, Washington, District of Columbia;

3. Department of Biomedical Engineering, Capital Medical University, Beijing, China;

4. Georgetown University Medical Center, Interdepartmental Program of Neuroscience, Washington, District of Columbia; and

5. Department of Systems Physiology of Learning, Leibniz Institute for Neurobiology, Magdeburg, Germany

Abstract

Neuronal populations with unbalanced inhibition can generate interictal spikes (ISs), where each IS starts from a small initiation site and then spreads activation across a larger area. We used in vivo voltage-sensitive dye imaging to map the initiation site of ISs in rat visual cortex disinhibited by epidural application of bicuculline methiodide. Immediately after the application of bicuculline, the IS initiation sites were widely distributed over the entire disinhibited area. After ∼10 min, a small number of sites became “dominant” and initiated the majority of the ISs throughout the course of imaging. Such domination also occurred in cortical slices, which lack long-range connections between the cortex and subcortical structures. This domination of IS initiation sites may allow timing-related plasticity mechanisms to provide a spatial organization where connections projecting outward from the dominant initiation site become strengthened. Understanding the spatiotemporal organization of IS initiation sites may contribute to our understanding of epileptogenesis in its very early stages, because a dominant IS initiation site with strengthened outward connectivity may ultimately develop into a seizure focus.

Funder

NIH

Chinese NSFC

Chinese high education

humboldt foundation

Epilepsy Foundation

NSF partnerships for international research and education

NIH training grant

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology,General Neuroscience

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