The functional properties of neurons in the mammalian cerebral cortex depend on the selective termination of afferent axons and the stereotyped dendritic morphology of the neurons, themselves. An interaction between afferents and neurons appears to regulate the morphology of cortical cells, such that alterations in afferent distribution produces changes in the shape and extent of dendritic fields and, through them, changes in the physiological properties of cortical neurons. In this project, the proposed studies will examine the normal development of neurons in the rat first somatic sensory cortex (SI) and primary visual cortex (V1) and determine how manipulations of the sensory periphery change the normal developmental processes. To accomplish these tasks, the fixed-slice preparation will be used to identify, inject, examine and classify neurons of the rodent cerebral cortex. The experimental strategy is made up of three parts: 1) Identification of neurons in the aldehyde fixed slice. Neurons will be selected in the slice preparation either by their position alone, which will require determination of laminar borders in rat V1 and barrel borders in rat SI, or by their position plus the expression of cell surface markers which allows specific classes of cells to be targeted. The pre-selected neurons will then be injected intracellularly so as to reveal their entire dendritic fields. 2) Detailed light and electron microscopic examination of intracellularly injected cortical neurons. Injected neurons will be reconstructed with a laser confocal microscope to follow the pattern of morphological development of large neuronal populations. Histochemical methods will be used to convert the injected dye into an electron dense reaction product so that the development of synaptic patterns, particularly the innervation of cortical neurons by thalamocortical axons, can be traced. Both normal animals and animals that have undergone manipulations of the sensory periphery will be examined so that the response of cortical neurons to an altered afferent innervation can be determined. 3) Chemical characterization of the injected neurons. Immunocytochemical methods will be used to simultaneously identify the injected neurons and to characterize them as belonging to a particular neurotransmitter-specific or other neurochemically-characterized neuronal class. These studies address one of the fundamental aspects of cortical development, that of the process whereby the morphology of individual neurons and of entire neuronal populations develops and changes in response to events that occur in the sensory periphery. They are relevant to situations, including genetic defects and environmental perturbations such as the introduction of toxins, which may change the morphological characteristics and physiological properties of cortical cells.

Project Start
Project End
Budget Start
Budget End
Support Year
4
Fiscal Year
1995
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of California Irvine
Department
Type
DUNS #
161202122
City
Irvine
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
92697
Robertson, R T; Baratta, J; Yu, J et al. (2009) Amyloid-beta expression in retrosplenial cortex of triple transgenic mice: relationship to cholinergic axonal afferents from medial septum. Neuroscience 164:1334-46
Robertson, R T; Baratta, J; Yu, J et al. (2006) A role for neurotrophin-3 in targeting developing cholinergic axon projections to cerebral cortex. Neuroscience 143:523-39
Guthrie, Kathleen M; Tran, Amy; Baratta, Janie et al. (2005) Patterns of afferent projections to the dentate gyrus studied in organotypic co-cultures. Brain Res Dev Brain Res 157:162-71
Bunney, William E; Bunney, Blynn G; Vawter, Marquis P et al. (2003) Microarray technology: a review of new strategies to discover candidate vulnerability genes in psychiatric disorders. Am J Psychiatry 160:657-66
Arias, Marianela S; Baratta, Janie; Yu, Jen et al. (2002) Absence of selectivity in the loss of neurons from the developing cortical subplate of the rat. Brain Res Dev Brain Res 139:331-5
Eliason, David A; Cohen, Seth A; Baratta, Janie et al. (2002) Local proliferation of microglia cells in response to neocortical injury in vitro. Brain Res Dev Brain Res 137:75-9
Lee, Yu-Shang; Baratta, Janie; Yu, Jen et al. (2002) AFGF promotes axonal growth in rat spinal cord organotypic slice co-cultures. J Neurotrauma 19:357-67
Tsai, E S; Haraldson, S J; Baratta, J et al. (2002) Basal forebrain cholinergic cell attachment and neurite outgrowth on organotypic slice cultures of hippocampal formation. Neuroscience 115:815-27
Baratta, J; Ha, D H; Yu, J et al. (2001) Evidence for target preferences by cholinergic axons originating from different subdivisions of the basal forebrain. Brain Res Dev Brain Res 132:15-21
Robertson, R T; Annis, C M; Baratta, J et al. (2000) Do subplate neurons comprise a transient population of cells in developing neocortex of rats? J Comp Neurol 426:632-50

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