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- Title
Functional recovery of the dentate gyrus after a focal lesion is accompanied by structural reorganization in the adult rat.
- Authors
Zepeda, Angélica; Aguilar-Arredondo, Andrea; Michel, Gabriela; Ramos-Languren, Laura; Escobar, Martha; Arias, Clorinda
- Abstract
The adult brain is highly plastic and tends to undergo substantial reorganization after injury to compensate for the lesion effects. It has been shown that such reorganization mainly relies on anatomical and biochemical modifications of the remaining cells which give rise to a network rewiring without reinstating the original morphology of the damaged region. However, few studies have analyzed the neurorepair potential of a neurogenic structure. Thus, the aim of this work was to analyze if the DG could restore its original morphology after a lesion and to establish if the structural reorganization is accompanied by behavioral and electrophysiological recovery. Using a subepileptogenic injection of kainic acid (KA), we induced a focal lesion in the DG and assessed in time (1) the loss and recovery of dependent and non dependent DG cognitive functions, (2) the anatomical reorganization of the DG using a stereological probe and immunohistochemical markers for different neuronal maturation stages and, (3) synaptic plasticity as assessed through the induction of in vivo long-term potentiation (LTP) in the mossy fiber pathway (CA3-DG). Our results show that a DG focal lesion with KA leads to a well delimited region of neuronal loss, disorganization of the structure, the loss of associated mnemonic functions and the impairment to elicit LTP. However, behavioral and synaptic plasticity expression occurs in a time dependent fashion and occurs along the morphological restoration of the DG. These results provide novel information on neural plasticity events associated to functional reorganization after damage.
- Subjects
DENTATE gyrus; LABORATORY rats; IMMUNOHISTOCHEMISTRY; NEUROPLASTICITY; HIPPOCAMPUS (Brain); ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY
- Publication
Brain Structure & Function, 2013, Vol 218, Issue 2, p437
- ISSN
1863-2653
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s00429-012-0407-4