Scientific Reports (Oct 2024)
Ex vivo propagation of synaptically-evoked cortical depolarizations in a mouse model of Alzheimer’s disease at 20 Hz, 40 Hz, or 83 Hz
Abstract
Abstract Sensory stimulations at 40 Hz gamma (but not any other frequency), have shown promise in reversing Alzheimer’s disease (AD)-related pathologies. What distinguishes 40 Hz? We hypothesized that stimuli at 40 Hz might summate more efficiently (temporal summation) or propagate more efficiently between cortical layers (vertically), or along cortical laminas (horizontally), compared to inputs at 20 or 83 Hz. To investigate these hypotheses, we used brain slices from AD mouse model animals (5xFAD). Extracellular (synaptic) stimuli were delivered in cortical layer 4 (L4). Leveraging a fluorescent voltage indicator (VSFP) expressed in cortical pyramidal neurons, we simultaneously monitored evoked cortical depolarizations at multiple sites, at 1 kHz sampling frequency. Experimental groups (AD-Female, CTRL-Female, AD-Male, and CTRL-Male) were tested at three stimulation frequencies (20, 40, and 83 Hz). Despite our initial hypothesis, two parameters—temporal summation of voltage waveforms and the strength of propagation through the cortical neuropil—did not reveal any distinct advantage of 40 Hz stimulation. Significant physiological differences between AD and Control mice were found at all stimulation frequencies tested, while the 40 Hz stimulation frequency was not remarkable.
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