Advantages of acute brain slices prepared at physiological temperature in the characterization of synaptic functions
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Author
Eguchi, KohgakuISTA
;
Velicky, PhilippISTA
;
Saeckl, ElenaISTA;
Itakura, Makoto;
Fukazawa, Yugo;
Danzl, Johann GISTA
;
Shigemoto, RyuichiISTA 




Corresponding author has ISTA affiliation
Department
Grant
Ultrastructural analysis of phosphoinositides in nerve terminals: distribution, dynamics and physiological roles in synaptic transmission
In situ analysis of single channel subunit composition in neurons: physiological implication in synaptic plasticity and behaviour
Optical control of synaptic function via adhesion molecules
IST Austria Open Access Fund
In situ analysis of single channel subunit composition in neurons: physiological implication in synaptic plasticity and behaviour
Optical control of synaptic function via adhesion molecules
IST Austria Open Access Fund
Abstract
Acute brain slice preparation is a powerful experimental model for investigating the characteristics of synaptic function in the brain. Although brain tissue is usually cut at ice-cold temperature (CT) to facilitate slicing and avoid neuronal damage, exposure to CT causes molecular and architectural changes of synapses. To address these issues, we investigated ultrastructural and electrophysiological features of synapses in mouse acute cerebellar slices prepared at ice-cold and physiological temperature (PT). In the slices prepared at CT, we found significant spine loss and reconstruction, synaptic vesicle rearrangement and decrease in synaptic proteins, all of which were not detected in slices prepared at PT. Consistent with these structural findings, slices prepared at PT showed higher release probability. Furthermore, preparation at PT allows electrophysiological recording immediately after slicing resulting in higher detectability of long-term depression (LTD) after motor learning compared with that at CT. These results indicate substantial advantages of the slice preparation at PT for investigating synaptic functions in different physiological conditions.
Publishing Year
Date Published
2020-03-19
Journal Title
Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience
Publisher
Frontiers Media
Volume
14
Article Number
63
ISSN
IST-REx-ID
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