JoVE Logo

サインイン

このコンテンツを視聴するには、JoVE 購読が必要です。 サインイン又は無料トライアルを申し込む。

この記事について

  • Overview
  • プロトコル
  • 結果
  • 開示事項
  • 資料

Overview

This video demonstrates a method to record CA3-CA1 synaptic responses in a rat hippocampal slice. It outlines the steps involved in placing the stimulating and recording electrodes on the hippocampal slice and measuring the field excitatory postsynaptic potential (fEPSP) to assess synaptic response strength.

プロトコル

All procedures involving animal samples have been reviewed and approved by the appropriate animal ethical review committee.

1. Recording of CA3-CA1 Synaptic Responses

NOTE: The electrophysiology set-up used for field potential recording is shown in Figure 1A. A Faraday cage is strongly recommended if the electrical interference is beyond the control after the proper grounding of the electrical settings. Many different types of submerged and interface chambers are commercially available. However, interface chambers are preferred as slices exhibit more robust synaptic responses in them.

  1. Positioning of electrodes
    1. Turn on the electrical apparatus (stimulators and amplifiers) to be used. Mount and secure the stimulating and recording electrodes in the plexiglass holders of the micromanipulators.  
      NOTE: We use monopolar, lacquer-coated, stainless-steel electrodes of 5 MΩ resistance for both stimulating and recording purposes.
    2. Before use, insert these electrodes inside the pulled glass capillaries and secure with epoxy glue, exposing only small portion of the electrode tip (Figure 1E). This gives strength to the otherwise slender electrodes and helps to secure them firmly in the electrode holders.
    3. Guided under the microscope, position the stimulating electrode(s) in the stratum radiatum of the CA1 region to stimulate the Schaffer collateral fibers and the recording electrode in the apical dendritic region of CA1 to record field-EPSP (fEPSP) responses.  
      NOTE: Approaching the liquid surface above the slice with the electrodes gives a sound that helps to locate the surface of the slice quickly (provided, the amplifier is connected to a loudspeaker).
    4. In synaptic tagging and capture experiments, according to the need of the experiment, position two or three stimulating electrodes (S1, S2, or S3) on either side of the recording electrode to stimulate two or more independent but overlapping inputs. Position the stimulating and recording electrodes about 200 µm apart.
    5. If necessary, locate another recording electrode in the stratum pyramidale layer for recording population spike (Figure 2A). When both electrodes have touched the slice, using the acquisition software, give a test stimulation to ensure a proper fEPSP signal.  
      NOTE: We use biphasic, constant-current pulses (impulse duration 0.1 msec/half-wave) for test stimulation.
    6. Once a proper fEPSP signal is obtained, carefully lower the electrodes about 200 µm deep using fine movement knobs of the manipulators. Allow 20 min for the slices to recover.
  2. Input-output relation
    1. Determine the input-output relation (afferent stimulation vs fEPSP slope) for each input by measuring the slope value at a range of current intensities. Perform this between 20 µA to 100 µA. Then set the stimulation intensity for each input to obtain 40% of the maximum fEPSP slope. Keep this constant throughout the experiment.
    2. After 15-20 min, start recording the baseline. Monitor the fEPSP slope closely during this period and reset the stimulus intensity if the slope fluctuates more than 10% from the set value and start a new baseline. Record at least 30 min or 1 hr stable baseline before proceeding.  
      NOTE: For the test or the baseline stimulation, we use four sweeps of 0.2 Hz biphasic, constant current pulses (0.1 msec per polarity) given every 5 min. An average slope of these four responses is then considered as one repeat. The signals are filtered and amplified by a differential amplifier, digitized using an analog-to-digital converter and monitored online with custom-made software.

結果

figure-results-58
Figure 1. Electrophysiology set-up for field-potential recordings consisting of (A) stimulators (b) a differential amplifier (c) an analog-to-digital converter (d) Oscilloscope (e) computer with acquisition software (f) Vibration-resistant table-top (g) microscope with >4x magnification (h) interface brain-slice chamber (i) a perfusion system for ACSF and carbo...

開示事項

No conflicts of interest declared.

資料

NameCompanyCatalog NumberComments
I. ACSF component chemicals
1. Sodium chloride (NaCl)Sigma-AldrichS5886
2. Potassium chloride (KCl)Sigma-AldrichP9541
3. Magnesium sulphate heptahydrate (MgSO4.7H20)Sigma-AldrichM1880
4. Calcium chloride dihydrate (CaCl2.2H2O)Sigma-AldrichC3881
5. Potassium phosphate monobasic (KH2PO4)Sigma-AldrichP9791
6. Sodium bicarbonate (NaHCO3)Sigma-AldrichS5761
7. D-Glucose anhydrous (C6H12O6)Sigma-AldrichG7021
II. Electrophysiology Instruments
1. MicroscopeOlympus, JapanModel SZ61
2. Temperature ControllerScientific Systems Design Inc. CanadaPTC03
3. Differential AC AmplifierAM Systems, USAModel 1700
4. Isolated Pulse StimulatorAM Systems, USAModel 2100
5. OscilloscopeRhode & SchwarzHM0722
6. Digital-Analog ConverterCambridge Electronic Design Ltd. Cambridge, UKCED-Power 1401-3
7. Interface Brain Slice ChamberScientific Systems Design Inc. CanadaBSC01
8. Tubing PumpIsmatec, Idex Health & Science, GermanyREGLO-Analog
9. Carbogen FlowmeterCole-Parmer03220-44
10. Fiber Light IlluminatorDolan-Jenner IndustriesFiber Lite MI-150
11. MicromanipulatorsMarzhauser Wetzlar, Germany00-42-101-0000 (MM-33)
00-42-102-0000 (MM-32)
12. ElectrodesAM Systems, USA571000 (Stainless steel; 0.010, 5MΩ, 8 degree)

This article has been published

Video Coming Soon

JoVE Logo

個人情報保護方針

利用規約

一般データ保護規則

研究

教育

JoVEについて

Copyright © 2023 MyJoVE Corporation. All rights reserved