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Changes of neuronal activity in areas CA1 and CA3 during anoxia and normoxic or hyperoxic reoxygenation in juvenile rat organotypic hippocampal slice cultures

Authors :
Hoffmann, Ulrike
Pomper, Jörn
Graulich, Johannes
Zeller, Melanie
Schuchmann, Sebastian
Gabriel, Siegrun
Maier, Rolf F.
Heinemann, Uwe
Source :
Brain Research. Jan2006, Vol. 1069 Issue 1, p207-215. 9p.
Publication Year :
2006

Abstract

Abstract: In neonates, asphyxia is usually followed by hyperoxic treatment. In order to study whether hyperoxic reoxygenation might cause additional impairment of neuronal function, we subjected organotypic hippocampal slice cultures of juvenile rats (7 DIV, P6–8) to 30 min anoxia followed by 60 min hyperoxic or normoxic reoxygenation (95% or 19% O2, respectively). Spontaneous and evoked field potentials as well as [Ca2+]o were recorded in the pyramidal layer of area CA1 or area CA3. In area CA1, 30 min of anoxia led to decline of evoked field potential amplitudes by on average 67% and to profound changes in field potential characteristics and Ca2+ homeostasis which were not related to outcome after reoxygenation. Hyperoxic reoxygenation resulted first in a fast recovery of the field potential amplitude to 82% of the control value and then, in 75% of slice cultures, in a large negative field potential shift accompanied by a prolonged decrease of [Ca2+]o and loss of excitability outlasting the experiment. Recovery of field potential amplitude under normoxic conditions stayed poor, with a first increase to 51% and a second decrease to 22%. In contrast, field potential amplitude in area CA3 recovered to 80% of the initial amplitude, irrespective of the reoxygenation mode. The selective loss of function during hyperoxic reoxygenation in area CA1 might be a first sign of neuronal injury that we observed 1 h after end of hyperoxic reoxygenation in a previous study. Whether the poor outcome after normoxic reoxygenation would favour long-term recovery remains to be determined. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00068993
Volume :
1069
Issue :
1
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Brain Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
19597768
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.brainres.2005.11.025