Identifying neuronal correlates of dying and resuscitation in a model of reversible brain anoxia

•Anoxia-triggered silencing of ECoG is preceded by surges of fast then slow activities.•Neocortical neurons at near-death undergo a massive membrane depolarizing shift.•This neuronal anoxic depolarization is identifiable as a polyphasic wave in the ECoG.•A timely re-oxygenation can rescue transmembr...

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Veröffentlicht in:Progress in neurobiology 2020-02, Vol.185, p.101733-101733, Article 101733
Hauptverfasser: Schramm, Adrien E., Carton-Leclercq, Antoine, Diallo, Shana, Navarro, Vincent, Chavez, Mario, Mahon, Séverine, Charpier, Stéphane
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Anoxia-triggered silencing of ECoG is preceded by surges of fast then slow activities.•Neocortical neurons at near-death undergo a massive membrane depolarizing shift.•This neuronal anoxic depolarization is identifiable as a polyphasic wave in the ECoG.•A timely re-oxygenation can rescue transmembrane potential and cellular excitability.•A second ECoG wave marks the regaining of neuronal functions upon reanimation. We developed a new rodent model of reversible brain anoxia and performed continuous electrocorticographic (ECoG) and intracellular recordings of neocortical neurons to identify in real-time the cellular and network dynamics that successively emerge throughout the dying-to-recovery process. Along with a global decrease in ECoG amplitude, deprivation of oxygen supply resulted in an early surge of beta-gamma activities, accompanied by rhythmic membrane depolarizations and regular firing in pyramidal neurons. ECoG and intracellular signals were then dominated by low-frequency activities which progressively declined towards isoelectric levels. Cortical neurons during the isoelectric state underwent a massive membrane potential depolarizing shift, captured in the ECoG as a large amplitude triphasic wave known as the “wave-of-death” (WoD). This neuronal anoxic depolarization, associated with a block of action potentials and a loss of cell integrative properties, could however be reversed if brain re-oxygenation was rapidly restored (within 2–3.5 min). The subsequent slow repolarization of neocortical neurons resulted in a second identifiable ECoG wave we termed “wave-of-resuscitation” since it inaugurated the progressive regaining of pre-anoxic synaptic and firing activities. These results demonstrate that the WoD is not a biomarker of an irremediable death and unveil the cellular correlates of a novel ECoG wave that may be predictive of a successful recovery. The identification of real-time biomarkers of onset and termination of cell anoxic insult could benefit research on interventional strategies to optimize resuscitation procedures.
ISSN:0301-0082
1873-5118
DOI:10.1016/j.pneurobio.2019.101733