| Literature DB >> 29311998 |
Abstract
The involvement of glial cells in the regulation of physiological functions is being increasingly recognized, yet their role in plasticity of neural oscillators has remained largely elusive. An excellent model system to address the latter function is the pacemaker nucleus of the weakly electric fish, Apteronotus leptorhynchus. This brainstem oscillator drives the fish's electric organ discharge in a one-to-one fashion, with median frequencies of 880 Hz in males and 740 Hz in females. Morphometric analysis of the pacemaker nucleus has shown that astrocytes outnumber mature neurons seven-fold, and oscillator neurons even 200-fold. A similar dominance of astrocytes occurs among the adult-born cells that differentiate into glia and neurons. The astrocytes form a dense meshwork of cells interconnected by gap junctions. The degree of association of astrocytic fibers with the neural oscillator cells, and the gap-junction coupling between individual astrocytes, exhibit a sexual dimorphism, which parallels the sexual dimorphisms in the output frequency of the pacemaker nucleus, and ultimately in the electric organ discharge of the fish. It is hypothesized that the dynamics in astroglial structure mediate differences in the capacity to buffer potassium, which increases during the generation of action potentials. These differences, in turn, affect the excitability of the neural oscillator cells, and thus the output frequency of the pacemaker nucleus. Comparison of the pacemaker nucleus with other brain oscillators suggests that modulation of the output activity is one of the chief functions of the interaction of glia with the neural oscillator cells.Entities:
Keywords: Apteronotus leptorhynchus; astrocytes; gliogenesis; neural oscillator; neuron-glia interaction; pacemaker nucleus; plasticity; structural reorganization
Year: 2017 PMID: 29311998 PMCID: PMC5744004 DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2017.01087
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Physiol ISSN: 1664-042X Impact factor: 4.566
Figure 1Sexual dimorphism of the electric organ discharge (EOD) of the weakly electric fish, Apteronotus leptorhynchus. (A) Box-and-whisker plot of the EOD frequencies of males (35) and females (48), adjusted to an ambient temperature of 26°C. Whiskers mark the minimum and maximum values in each group, and boxes indicate the interquartile ranges. Middle lines denote medians. The difference in the EOD frequency between males and females is highly significant (***). The inset shows a trace of the EOD signal. (B) Effect of β-estradiol on the EOD frequency of Apteronotus leptorhynchus. The EOD frequency was determined on 7 consecutive days before the operation (days −6 through 0) and on 8 days following the surgery (days 1 through 8). Fish received implants with (circles; n = 14) or without (triangles; n = 17) β-estradiol immediately following the measurement of the EOD frequency on day 0 (indicated by arrow). For each fish, the changes in EOD frequency were quantified relative to its average frequency over the 7-day pre-implantation period. The dashed line indicates no change from this baseline. Starting with day 4 after the implantation, the EOD frequencies of the β-estradiol-treated fish were significantly different from the discharge frequencies of the controls as well as from the pre-implantation frequencies (***) (From: Zupanc et al., 2014. Copyright permission not required due to author's own work).
Figure 2Cellular structure of the pacemaker nucleus of Apteronotus leptorhynchus. (A) Three-dimensional model of the neural organization of the pacemaker nucleus, based on a statistical-mapping approach. Neurons form three classes—relay cells, pacemaker cells, and small interneurons—distinguished by the sizes of their cell bodies. The small interneurons can be further divided into subtypes 1 and 2. Glial cells are not shown because, due to their abundance, they would cover essentially the entire area of the nucleus, making it impossible to visualize the neuronal cells in this representation. (B) Association of glia with neurons in the pacemaker nucleus. The image is based on a three-dimensional shadow projection of a z-stack of confocal images. Neurons expressing Hu C/D (blue) are embedded in a dense meshwork of GFAP-expressing astrocytes (green). The glia express the gap-junction protein connexin-43 in a punctate pattern (red). In the center of the image, a pacemaker cell (P), surrounded by a dense astrocytic syncytium, is shown. Scale bar = 5 μm (After: Sîrbulescu et al., 2014. Copyright permission not required due to author's own work).