Literature DB >> 16829068

Long-term recording on multi-electrode array reveals degraded inhibitory connection in neuronal network development.

Xiangning Li1, Wei Zhou, Shaoqun Zeng, Man Liu, Qingming Luo.   

Abstract

Spontaneous neuronal activity plays an important role in development. However, the mechanism that underlies the long-term spontaneous developmental change of cultured neuronal networks in vitro is not well understood. To investigate the contribution of inhibitory and excitatory connections to the development of neuronal networks, dissociated neurons from an embryonic rat hippocampal formation were cultured on a multi-electrode array plate and spontaneous activities were recorded by multi-channel system. These spontaneous activities were compared to bicuculline-induced firings, which were recorded by 60 electrodes simultaneously from 1 to 14 weeks in vitro (WIV). The phenomena showed that the spontaneous firing activities changed from an initial pattern of synchronized bursts to a later pattern of high frequency random spikes. The bicuculline-induced firing activities transformed from a pattern of synchronized bursts throughout all active sites in 3 WIV, to a pattern of local synchronized or random spikes appearing in the intervals of synchronized bursts after 11 WIV, while the firing rate hardly changed. Kynurenic acid, a broad-spectrum glutamate receptor antagonist, blocked all activities while CNQX inhibited only the local synchronized or random spikes. These suggest that the inhibitory connection was age-dependent degraded in vitro and the developmental spontaneous firing pattern was built by the homeostatic balance of the excitatory-inhibitory connection networks. Long-term cultures on MEA provided a useful tool to measure the relationship between spontaneous developmental change and pharmacological influence in vitro.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16829068     DOI: 10.1016/j.bios.2006.05.030

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biosens Bioelectron        ISSN: 0956-5663            Impact factor:   10.618


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