Frontiers in Neural Circuits (Aug 2016)

Cardiac arrest-induced global brain hypoxia-ischemia during development affects spontaneous activity organization in rat sensory and motor thalamocortical circuits during adulthood

  • Michael Shoykhet,
  • Michael Shoykhet,
  • Jason William Middleton,
  • Jason William Middleton

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fncir.2016.00068
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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Normal maturation of sensory information processing in the cortex requires patterned synaptic activity during developmentally regulated critical periods. During early development, spontaneous synaptic activity establishes required patterns of synaptic input, and during later development, it influences patterns of sensory experience-dependent neuronal firing. Thalamocortical neurons occupy a critical position in regulating flow of patterned sensory information from the periphery to the cortex. Abnormal thalamocortical inputs may permanently affect the organization and function of cortical neuronal circuits, especially if they occur during a critical developmental window. We examined the effect of cardiac arrest-associated global brain hypoxia-ischemia in developing rats on spontaneous and evoked firing of somatosensory thalamocortical neurons and on large-scale correlations in the motor thalamocortical circuit. The mean spontaneous and sensory-evoked firing rate activity and variability were higher in cardiac arrest (CA) injured rats. Furthermore, spontaneous and sensory-evoked activity and variability were correlated in uninjured rats but not correlated in neurons from CA rats. Abnormal activity patterns of VPm neurons persisted into adulthood. Additionally, we found that neurons in the entopeduncular nucleus (EPN) in the basal ganglia had lower firing rates yet had higher variability and higher levels of burst firing after injury. Correlated levels of power in local field potentials between the EPN and the motor cortex (MCx) were also disrupted with injury. Our findings indicate that hypoxic-ischemic injury during development leads to abnormal spontaneous and sensory stimulus-evoked input patterns from thalamus to cortex. Abnormal thalamic inputs likely permanently and detrimentally affect organization of cortical circuitry and processing of sensory information. Hypoxic-ischemic injury also leads to abnormal single neuron and population level activity in the basal ganglia that may contribute to motor dysfunction after injury. Combination of deficits in sensory and motor thalamocortical circuit function may negatively impact sensorimotor integration in cardiac arrest survivors. Modulation of abnormal activity patterns post-injury may represent a novel therapeutic target to improve neurologic function in survivors.

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