101 research outputs found
Mass-Related Traumatic Tissue Displacement and Behavior: A Screen for Treatments that Reduces Harm to Bystander Cells and Recovery of Function
In this study, we focused on a preclinical model of brain compression injury that has relevance to pathological conditions such as tumor, hematoma, blood clot, and intracerebral bony fragment. We investigated behavioral impairment as a result of rapid-onset small mass, and the factors involved in lesion formation and neuroplasticity. An epidural bead implantation method was adopted. Two sizes (1.5 mm and 2.0 mm thick) of hemisphere-shaped beads were used. The beads were implanted into various locations over the sensorimotor cortex (SMC—anterior, middle and posterior). The effects of early versus delayed bead removal were examined to model clinical neurosurgical or other treatment procedures. Forelimb and hind-limb behavioral deficits and recovery were observed, and histological changes were quantified to determine brain reaction to focal compression. Our results showed that the behavioral deficits of compression were influenced by the location, timing of compression release, and magnitude of compression. Even persistent compression by the thicker bead (2.0 mm) caused only minor behavioral deficits, followed by fast recovery within a week in most animals, suggesting a mild lesion pattern for this model. Brain tissue was compressed into a deformed shape under pressure with slight tissue damage, evidenced by pathological evaluation on hematoxylin and eosin (H&E)– and TUNEL–stained sections. Detectable but not severe behavioral dysfunction exhibited by this model makes it particularly suitable for direct assessment of adverse effects of interventions on neuroplasticity after brain compression injury. This model may permit development of treatment strategies to alleviate brain mass effects, without disrupting neuroplasticity.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/63138/1/neu.2006.23.721.pd
Non-paretic Forelimb Training Does Not Interfere with Recovery of Paretic Forelimb Strength After Experimental Middle Cerebral Artery Occlusion
Humans often compensate with their unimpaired (non-paretic) forelimb after surviving a stroke. Research in rats suggests that this can be maladaptive after focal motor cortical strokes. Forelimb weakness is understudied in rodent models of stroke.
The purpose of the study is to determine whether behavioral experience with the non-paretic forelimb differentially affects paretic forelimb strength recovery after ischemic injury caused by middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAo). Because behavioral manipulations can influence patterns of neural connectivity post-stroke, the present study also examined how training with non-paretic limb influenced corticostriatal projections.
After training to proficiency with the preferred forelimb on the Isometric Pull Task, rats underwent MCAo in the hemisphere contralateral to this limb. One week after MCAo, rats were probed for initial impairment level and then assigned to either Non-Paretic Limb Training (NPT) or non-training control conditions for 14 days. Paretic limb performance was probed one day later. All rats then received six weeks of Rehabilitative Training (RT). The anterograde tract tracer BDA was then injected into the lesioned hemisphere.
Training with the non-paretic limb (NPT) does not interfere with paretic limb recovery on the Isometric Pull Task, increase reliance on the impaired forelimb, or influence ipsi corticostriatal axon quantities after MCAo.
Compensatory use of the non-paretic forelimb after strokes involving subcortical damage or cortical damage primarily in the somatosensory region may not be maladaptive for strength. Understanding how behavioral recovery varies with lesion locus could influence clinical management of patients
Alcohol-preferring P rats emit spontaneous 22-28 kHz ultrasonic vocalizations that are altered by acute and chronic alcohol experience
BACKGROUND:
Emotional states are often thought to drive excessive alcohol intake and influence the development of alcohol use disorders. To gain insight into affective properties associated with excessive alcohol intake, we utilized ultrasonic vocalization (USV) detection and analyses to characterize the emotional phenotype of selectively bred alcohol-preferring (P) rats; an established animal model of excessive alcohol intake. USVs emitted by rodents have been convincingly associated with positive (50-55 kHz frequency-modulated [FM]) and negative (22-28 kHz) affective states. Therefore, we hypothesized that 50-55 and 22-28 kHz USV emission patterns in P rats would reveal a unique emotional phenotype sensitive to alcohol experience.
METHODS:
50-55 kHz FM and 22-28 kHz USVs elicited from male P rats were assessed during access to water, 15 and 30% EtOH (v/v). Ethanol (EtOH; n = 12) or water only (Control; n = 4) across 8 weeks of daily drinking-in-the-dark (DID) sessions.
RESULTS:
Spontaneous 22-28 kHz USVs are emitted by alcohol-naïve P rats and are enhanced by alcohol experience. During DID sessions when alcohol was not available (e.g., "EtOH OFF" intervals), significantly more 22-28 kHz than 50-55 kHz USVs were elicited, while significantly more 50-55 kHz FM than 22-28 kHz USVs were emitted when alcohol was available (e.g., "EtOH ON" intervals). In addition, USV acoustic property analyses revealed chronic effects of alcohol experience on 22-28 kHz USV mean frequency, indicative of lasting alcohol-mediated alterations to neural substrates underlying emotional response.
CONCLUSIONS:
Our findings demonstrate that acute and chronic effects of alcohol exposure are reflected in changes in 22-28 and 50-55 kHz FM USV counts and acoustic patterns. These data support the notion that initiation and maintenance of alcohol intake in P rats may be due to a unique, alcohol-responsive emotional phenotype and further suggest that spontaneous 22-28 kHz USVs serve as behavioral markers for excessive drinking vulnerability
Alcohol-Naïve USVs Distinguish Male HAD-1 from LAD-1 Rat Strains
Ultrasonic vocalizations (USVs) are mediated through specific dopaminergic and cholinergic neural pathways and serve as real-time measures of positive and negative emotional status in rodents. Although most USV studies focus primarily on USV counts, each USV possesses a number of characteristics shown to reflect activity in the associated neurotransmitter system. In the present study, we recorded spontaneously emitted USVs from alcohol-naïve high alcohol drinking (HAD-1) and low alcohol drinking (LAD-1) rats. Using our recently developed WAAVES algorithm we quantified four acoustic characteristics (mean frequency, duration, power and bandwidth) from each 22 – 28 kHz and 50 – 55 kHz frequency modulated (FM) USV. This rich USV representation allowed us to apply advanced statistical techniques to identify the USV acoustic characteristics that distinguished HAD-1 from LAD-1 rats. Linear mixed models (LMM) examined the predictability of each USV characteristic in isolation and linear discriminant analysis (LDA) and binomial logistic regression examined the predictability of linear combinations of the USV characteristics as a group. Results revealed significant differences in acoustic characteristics between HAD-1 and LAD-1 rats in both 22 – 28 kHz and 50 – 55 kHz FM USVs. In other words, these rats selectively bred for high- and low-alcohol consumption can be identified as HAD-1 or LAD-1 rats with high classification accuracy (approx. 92-100%) exclusively on the basis of their emitted 22-28 kHz and 50-55 kHz FM USV acoustic characteristics. In addition, acoustic characteristics of 22 – 28 kHz and 50 – 55 kHz FM USVs emitted by alcohol-naïve HAD-1 and LAD-1 rats significantly correlate with their future alcohol consumption. Our current findings provide novel evidence that USV acoustic characteristics can be used to discriminate between alcohol-naïve HAD-1 and LAD-1 rats, and may serve as biomarkers in rodents with a predisposition for, or against, excessive alcohol intake
Alcohol enhances unprovoked 22-28 kHz USVs and suppresses USV mean frequency in High Alcohol Drinking (HAD-1) male rats
Heightened emotional states increase impulsive behaviors such as excessive ethanol consumption in humans. Though positive and negative affective states in rodents can be monitored in real-time through ultrasonic vocalization (USV) emissions, few animal studies have focused on the role of emotional status as a stimulus for initial ethanol drinking. Our laboratory has recently developed reliable, high-speed analysis techniques to compile USV data during multiple-hour drinking sessions. Since High Alcohol Drinking (HAD-1) rats are selectively bred to voluntarily consume intoxicating levels of alcohol, we hypothesized that USVs emitted by HAD-1 rats would reveal unique emotional phenotypes predictive of alcohol intake and sensitive to alcohol experience. In this study, male HAD-1 rats had access to water, 15% and 30% EtOH or water only (i.e., Controls) during 8 weeks of daily 7-h drinking-in-the-dark (DID) sessions. USVs, associated with both positive (i.e., 50-55 kHz frequency-modulated or FM) and negative (i.e., 22-28 kHz) emotional states, emitted during these daily DID sessions were examined. Findings showed basal 22-28 kHz USVs were emitted by both EtOH-Naïve (Control) and EtOH-experienced rats, alcohol experience enhanced 22-28 kHz USV emissions, and USV acoustic parameters (i.e., mean frequency in kHz) of both positive and negative USVs were significantly suppressed by chronic alcohol experience. These data suggest that negative affective status initiates and maintains excessive alcohol intake in selectively bred HAD-1 rats and support the notion that unprovoked emissions of negative affect-associated USVs (i.e., 22-28 kHz) predict vulnerability to excessive alcohol intake in distinct rodent models
Novel Humanized Recombinant T Cell Receptor Ligands Protect the Female Brain After Experimental Stroke
Transmigration of peripheral leukocytes to the brain is a major contributor to cerebral ischemic cell death mechanisms. Humanized partial major histocompatibility complex class II constructs (pMHC), covalently linked to myelin peptides, are effective for treating experimental stroke in males, but new evidence suggests that some inflammatory cell death mechanisms after brain injury are sex-specific. We here demonstrate that treatment with pMHC constructs also improves outcomes in female mice with middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO). HLA-DR2 transgenic female mice with MCAO were treated with RTL1000 (HLA-DR2 moiety linked to human MOG-35-55 peptide), HLA-DRa1-MOG-35-55, or vehicle (VEH) at 3, 24, 48, and 72 h after reperfusion and were recovered for 96 h or 2 weeks post-injury for measurement of histology (TTC staining) or behavioral testing. RTL1000- and DRa1-MOG-treated mice had profoundly reduced infarct volumes as compared to the VEH group, although higher doses of DRa1-MOG were needed for females vs. males evaluated previously. RTL1000-treated females also exhibited strongly improved functional recovery in a standard cylinder test. In novel studies of post-ischemic ultrasonic vocalization (USV), as measured by animal calls to their cage mates, we modeled in mice the post-stroke speech deficits common in human stroke survivors. The number of calls was reduced in injured animals relative to pre-MCAO baseline regardless of RTL1000 treatment status. However, call duration was significantly improved by RTL1000 treatment, suggesting benefit to the animal’s recovery of vocalization capability. We conclude that both the parent RTL1000 molecule and the novel non-polymorphic DRα1-MOG-35-55 construct were highly effective immunotherapies for treatment of transient cerebral ischemia in females
Long-Lasting Neural and Behavioral Effects of Iron Deficiency in Infancy
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/72379/1/j.1753-4887.2006.tb00243.x.pd
Hippocampus specific iron deficiency alters competition and cooperation between developing memory systems
Iron deficiency (ID) is the most common gestational micronutrient deficiency in the world, targets the fetal hippocampus and striatum and results in long-term behavioral abnormalities. These structures primarily mediate spatial and procedural memory, respectively, in the rodent but have interconnections that result in competition or cooperation during cognitive tasks. We determined whether ID-induced impairment of one alters the function of the other by genetically inducing a 40% reduction of hippocampus iron content in late fetal life in mice and measuring dorsal striatal gene expression and metabolism and the behavioral balance between the two memory systems in adulthood. Slc11a2hipp/hipp mice had similar striatum iron content, but 18% lower glucose and 44% lower lactate levels, a 30% higher phosphocreatine:creatine ratio, and reduced iron transporter gene expression compared to wild type (WT) littermates, implying reduced striatal metabolic function. Slc11a2hipp/hipp mice had longer mean escape times on a cued task paradigm implying impaired procedural memory. Nevertheless, when hippocampal and striatal memory systems were placed in competition using a Morris Water Maze task that alternates spatial navigation and visual cued responses during training, and forces a choice between hippocampal and striatal strategies during probe trials, Slc11a2hipp/hipp mice used the hippocampus-dependent response less often (25%) and the visual cued response more often (75%) compared to WT littermates that used both strategies approximately equally. Hippocampal ID not only reduces spatial recognition memory performance but also affects systems that support procedural memory, suggesting an altered balance between memory systems
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