Litcius/Paper detail

Barrel cortex plasticity after photothrombotic stroke involves potentiating responses of pre-existing circuits but not functional remapping to new circuits

William Zeiger, Máté Marosi, Satvir Saggi, Natalie Noble, Isa Samad, Carlos Portera‐Cailliau

2021Nature Communications30 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Recovery after stroke is thought to be mediated by adaptive circuit plasticity, whereby surviving neurons assume the roles of those that died. However, definitive longitudinal evidence of neurons changing their response selectivity after stroke is lacking. We sought to directly test whether such functional "remapping" occurs within mouse primary somatosensory cortex after a stroke that destroys the C1 barrel. Using in vivo calcium imaging to longitudinally record sensory-evoked activity under light anesthesia, we did not find any increase in the number of C1 whisker-responsive neurons in the adjacent, spared D3 barrel after stroke. To promote plasticity after stroke, we also plucked all whiskers except C1 (forced use therapy). This led to an increase in the reliability of sensory-evoked responses in C1 whisker-responsive neurons but did not increase the number of C1 whisker-responsive neurons in spared surround barrels over baseline levels. Our results argue against remapping of functionality after barrel cortex stroke, but support a circuit-based mechanism for how rehabilitation may improve recovery.

Topics & Concepts

Somatosensory systemBarrel cortexNeuroscienceStroke (engine)NeuroplasticityBarrel (horology)Sensory systemCalcium imagingPlasticityMedicinePsychologyCalciumInternal medicineMaterials sciencePhysicsThermodynamicsComposite materialNeural dynamics and brain functionNeuroscience and Neural EngineeringNeuroscience and Neuropharmacology Research