Temporal profiles and 2-dimensional oxy-, deoxy-, and total-hemoglobin somatosensory maps in rat versus mouse cortex
Source: NeuroImage
2007 Oct;37:S27-S36.
Author: Prakash N, Biag JD, Sheth SA, Mitsuyama S, Theriot J, Ramachandra C, Toga AW PubMed ID: 17574868
Abstract:
Background: Mechanisms of neurovascular coupling—the relationship
between neuronal chemoelectrical activity and compensatory metabolic
and hemodynamic changes—appear to be preserved across species
from rats to humans despite differences in scale. However, previous
work suggests that the highly cellular dense mouse somatosensory
cortex has different functional hemodynamic changes compared to
other species.
Methods: We developed novel hardware and software for 2-dimensional
optical spectroscopy (2DOS). Optical changes at four simultaneously
recorded wavelengths were measured in both rat and mouse
primary somatosensory cortex (S1) evoked by forepaw stimulation to
create four spectral maps. The spectral maps were converted to maps
of deoxy-, oxy-, and total-hemoglobin (HbR, HbO, and HbT)
concentration changes using the modified Beer–Lambert law and
phantom HbR and HbO absorption spectra.
Results: Functional hemodynamics were different in mouse versus rat
neocortex. On average, hemodynamics were as expected in rat primary
somatosensory cortex (S1): the fractional change in the log of HbT
concentration increased monophasically 2 s after stimulus, whereas
HbO changes mirrored HbR changes, with HbO showing a small initial
dip at 0.5 s followed by a large increase 3.0 s post stimulus. In contrast,
mouse S1 showed a novel type of stimulus-evoked hemodynamic
response, with prolonged, concurrent, monophasic increases in HbR
and HbT and a parallel decrease in HbO that all peaked 3.5–4.5 s post
stimulus onset. For rats, at any given time point, the average size and
shape of HbO and HbR forepaw maps were the same, whereas surface
veins distorted the shape of the HbT map. For mice, HbO, HbR, and
HbT forepaw maps were generally the same size and shape at any poststimulus
time point.
Conclusions: 2DOS using image splitting optics is feasible across
species for brain mapping and quantifying the map topography of
cortical hemodynamics. These results suggest that during physiologic
stimulation, different species and/or cortical architecture may give rise
to different hemodynamic changes during neurovascular coupling.
Published by Elsevier Inc.