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Whishaw IQ, Cassel JC, Majchrzak M, Cassel S, Will B. "Short-stops" in rats with fimbria-fornix lesions: evidence for change in the mobility gradient. Hippocampus 1994; 4:577-82. [PMID: 7889128 DOI: 10.1002/hipo.450040507] [Citation(s) in RCA: 46] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.5] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/27/2023]
Abstract
Rats with damage to the hippocampal formation and allied structures are hyperactive in many test situations but the cause of this hyperactivity is not known. Here the activity of control rats and rats with fimbria-fornix lesions is documented in tests of overnight activity. Details of activity are then characterized from video recordings of behavior in an open field. Rats with fimbria-fornix lesions make significantly more stops of shorter duration and thus more individual trips than control rats but they do not differ in the distance traveled on individual trips or in travel speed. It is suggested that the main difference between fimbria-fornix rats and control rats is that when fimbria-fornix rats stop they remain "still" for shorter durations than do control rats. This finding is discussed in relation to a theory of locomotor/exploratory behavior, and in relation to its implications with respect to the performance of fimbria-fornix rats in studies of learning and memory.
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Jeltsch H, Cassel JC, Jackisch R, Neufang B, Greene PL, Kelche C, Hertting G, Will B. Lesions of supracallosal or infracallosal hippocampal pathways in the rat: behavioral, neurochemical, and histochemical effects. BEHAVIORAL AND NEURAL BIOLOGY 1994; 62:121-33. [PMID: 7993302 DOI: 10.1016/s0163-1047(05)80033-0] [Citation(s) in RCA: 32] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.1] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/28/2023]
Abstract
Long-term behavioral and neurochemical effects of bilateral lesions to only the infracallosal component of the "so-called" septohippocampal pathways (cingular bundle, fimbria and fornix) have not been assessed. This experiment compared the behavioral, histochemical and neurochemical effects of supracallosal (SUPRA; cingular bundle) and infracallosal (INFRA; fimbria-fornix) hippocampal denervations in Long-Evans female rats. The rats were tested, over two periods (8-52 and 92-170 days postlesion), for open field locomotion, spontaneous alternation and radial-maze performance. Subsequently, histochemical or neurochemical determinations of cholinergic, serotonergic and noradrenergic hippocampal innervations were performed using acetylcholinesterase-staining, determination of high-affinity synaptosomal uptake of choline and serotonin, and measurement of hippocampal serotonin and noradrenaline concentrations by HPLC methods. Whatever behavioral test was considered, no significant effect was found in rats with SUPRA lesions, whereas rats with INFRA lesions were permanently impaired in all tests. Histochemical and neurochemical analyses showed hippocampal cholinergic as well as serotonergic markers to be substantially decreased in INFRA rats as compared to SHAM and SUPRA rats. The SUPRA rats exhibited a weak but significant reduction of both serotonergic and noradrenergic markers compared to SHAM and INFRA rats. These results suggest that lesions limited to the infracallosal pathway induce a hippocampal denervation sufficient to account for most of the behavioral, histochemical and neurochemical deficits classically reported following extensive lesions of the anterior hippocampal connections. Since the behavioral and neurochemical deficits were found to be lasting, it is suggested that bilateral infracallosal damage to the septohippocampal pathways might constitute an interesting paradigm of partial hippocampal deafferentation to investigate the effects of neural grafts or other treatments in an animal model of Alzheimer's disease.
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Hofferer E, Cassel JC, Kelche C, Millemann P, Will B. Morphological and behavioural effects of granule cell degeneration induced by intrahippocampal fluid injections in intact and fimbria-fornix lesioned rats. Behav Brain Res 1994; 63:167-76. [PMID: 7999300 DOI: 10.1016/0166-4328(94)90088-4] [Citation(s) in RCA: 6] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.2] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/28/2023]
Abstract
This study was aimed at determining whether granule cell degeneration induced by intragyral injections of a neutral fluid (0.9% NaCl with 0.6% glucose, pH 7.0, 2 sites per hippocampus, 2 microliters/site, 1 microliter/min) produced behavioural deficits in rats which, 2 weeks prior to the injections had received either fimbria-fornix lesions or sham-operations. In both sham-operated and lesioned rats, we found such injections to induce a comparable, topographically-limited loss of granule cells in the dorsal leaf of the dentate gyrus and, in the close vicinity of the degeneration area, a severe shrinkage of the molecular layer with concomitant morphological reorganizations (e.g. acetylcholinesterase reaction products were distributed uniformly throughout the molecular layers of sham-operated rats). While the fimbria-fornix lesions produced classically reported behavioural deficits (hyperactivity in both a familiar and an unfamiliar environment. reduced T-maze alternation rates and impaired radial-maze performance), we could not detect adversive effects of the granule cell degeneration on either of these variables in sham-operated and lesioned rats. Our data suggest that limited granule cell degeneration induced by intragyral fluid injections has no effect on locomotor activity, spontaneous alternation and spatial learning. Therefore, we may also infer that the granule cell damage observed after an intragyral implantation of a fetal neural cell suspension does probably not account for the behavioural deficits which, in some experiments, have been found in fimbria-fornix lesioned rats bearing intragyral cell suspension grafts.
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Greene PL, Cassel JC, Kelche C, Jeltsch H, Bratt AM, Will BE. Differential behavioral effects of supracallosal and infracallosal lesions of the septohippocampal pathways: no ameliorative effects of oxotremorine or pilocarpine on radial-maze performance. BEHAVIORAL AND NEURAL BIOLOGY 1994; 62:4-14. [PMID: 7945143 DOI: 10.1016/s0163-1047(05)80053-6] [Citation(s) in RCA: 4] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.1] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/28/2023]
Abstract
We examined the effects in young adult female Long-Evans rats of single or combined lesions of the infracallosal and supracallosal septohippocampal pathways on a battery of behavioral tasks over two postoperative periods (14-65 and 75-150 days, respectively). During the first period, rats with lesions of the infracallosal pathways, whether given alone or in combination with lesions of the supracallosal pathways, were more active in the open field and in their home cage, and showed increased reactivity to novel extracage stimuli. Behavioral results during the second postoperative period were similar to those of the first except that rats with lesions of the infracallosal pathways (either alone or in combination with lesions of the supracallosal pathways) were no longer hyperactive in their home cage and rats with the infracallosal lesion alone were no longer hyperactive in the open field. We also observed in rats with lesions of the infracallosal pathways impaired performance in the radial-arm maze task, whether conducted under an uninterrupted protocol (first and second postoperative periods) or with a 1-min intratrial interruption (second postoperative period). Thus, behavioral deficits were observed only in rats with a lesion to the infracallosal component of the septohippocampal pathways, the behavior of rats with the combined lesions being similar to that of rats with single lesions of the infracallosal pathways in most measures. The behavior of rats with lesions of the supracallosal pathways did not differ from that of sham-operated controls in any measure at either postoperative period. Acute, systemic injections of oxotremorine (0.03 or 0.1 mg/kg, ip) or pilocarpine (0.32 or 1.0 mg/kg, ip), two muscarinic agonists, did not affect radial-arm maze performance under either the uninterrupted or interrupted protocol. The use of nonspecific muscarinic agonists does not appear to be sufficient to enhance radial-arm maze performance in rats with infracallosal septohippocampal lesions which, in contrast to supracallosal lesions, were shown to induce a deficit in this task.
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Cassel JC, Neufang B, Kelche C, Jeltsch H, Will BE, Hertting G, Jackisch R. Effects of grafts containing cholinergic and/or serotonergic neurons on cholinergic, serotonergic and noradrenergic markers in the denervated rat hippocampus. Brain Res 1993; 604:53-63. [PMID: 7681347 DOI: 10.1016/0006-8993(93)90351-m] [Citation(s) in RCA: 23] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.7] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/26/2023]
Abstract
Long-Evans female rats sustained aspirative lesions of the septohippocampal pathways and, 2 weeks later, received intrahippocampal suspension grafts prepared from the regions including either the medial septum and the diagonal band of Broca (group S), or the mesencephalic raphe (group R), or from both these regions together (group S + R). Sham-operated (group SHAM) and lesion-only (group LES) rats were used as controls. Six months after grafting, high affinity synaptosomal uptake of choline (HACU) and serotonin (HASU), choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) activity and, using HPLC, the content of serotonin ([5-HT]), 5-hydroxyindolacetic acid ([5-HIAA]) and noradrenaline ([NA]) were determined in three rostro-caudal segments of the hippocampus (designated hereafter as the dorsal, the 'middle' and the ventral segments). In all three segments of the dorsal hippocampus, septohippocampal lesions decreased HACU, ChAT activity, HASU and [5-HT]; [5-HIAA] was decreased only in the middle and ventral hippocampal segments. The lesions also resulted in an above normal increase of [NA]. Septal grafts increased HACU and ChAT in the three hippocampal regions, had no effect on serotonergic markers and attenuated the lesion-induced increase of [NA] in only the dorsal and middle hippocampal segments. Raphe grafts increased HASU, [5-HT] and [5-HIAA] in the dorsal and middle hippocampal segments, had no effects on cholinergic markers and did not affect the lesion-induced increase of [NA]. Co-grafts increased HACU, ChAT activity, HASU, [5-HT] and [5-HIAA], and attenuated the lesion-induced increase in [NA]. These data demonstrate that grafts of fetal neurons placed into the denervated hippocampus may induce a neurochemical recovery which depends upon the anatomical origin of the grafted cells. They also show that co-grafting allows to combine the neurochemical properties of two fetal brain regions grafted separately. Furthermore, our findings suggest that graft-derived cholinergic reinnervation of the hippocampus prevents the lesion-induced increase of noradrenaline concentration which is likely to result from sympathetic sprouting. Thus, our data confirm the results of a previous experiment carried out at a post-grafting delay of 10-11 months, and show that the graft-induced effects reported previously are already massively present by 6 months after surgery.
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Cassel JC, Ballough GP, Kelche C, Hofferer E, Cassel S, Will B. Injections of fluid or septal cell suspension grafts into the dentate gyrus of rats induce granule cell degeneration. Neurosci Lett 1993; 150:89-94. [PMID: 8469407 DOI: 10.1016/0304-3940(93)90115-2] [Citation(s) in RCA: 7] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.2] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/30/2023]
Abstract
This study was originally aimed at investigating the effects of intragyral cell suspension grafts which had been enriched in basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) before being implanted into the rat hippocampus denervated by aspiration of the septohippocampal pathways. Whether treated with vehicle alone, vehicle + bFGF, cell suspension with or without bFGF, and irrespective of the surgical treatment (sham-operation, lesions or lesions + grafts), we unexpectedly found approximately 80% of the rats to show morphological alterations in the dentate gyrus (20 weeks post-grafting). These alterations consisted of loss of a part of the granule cells; this loss was most often located in the dorsal leaf of the dentate gyrus. Also, in the close vicinity of the degeneration area, we found severe shrinkage of the molecular layer and disappearance of the typical laminae pattern of acetylcholinesterase distribution. These observations confirm previous findings which showed that fluid injections into the dentate gyrus, a widely used technique for intracerebral administration of drugs, trophic factors or neural grafts, may induce undesirable granule cell necrosis.
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Cassel JC, Neufang B, Kelche C, Aiple F, Will BE, Hertting G, Jackisch R. Effects of septal and/or raphe cell suspension grafts on hippocampal choline acetyltransferase activity, high affinity synaptosomal uptake of choline and serotonin, and behavior in rats with extensive septohippocampal lesions. Brain Res 1992; 585:243-54. [PMID: 1511308 DOI: 10.1016/0006-8993(92)91213-x] [Citation(s) in RCA: 57] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.8] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/27/2022]
Abstract
At 31 days of age, Long-Evans female rats sustained aspirative lesions of the septohippocampal pathways and, 14 days later, received intrahippocampal suspension grafts prepared from the region including the medial septum and the diagonal band of Broca (Group S, n = 11), from the region including the mesencephalic raphe (Group R, n = 11) or from both regions together (Group S+R, n = 11). Sham-operated (Group Sham, n = 9) and lesion-only (Group Les, n = 11) rats served as non-grafted controls. Seven Sham, 7 Les and 8 rats from each transplant group were tested for home cage activity (6 months after grafting) and radial maze performance (between 7.5 and 8.5 months post-grafting). One month after completion of behavioral testing, the dorsal hippocampi of these rats were prepared for measuring choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) activity and high affinity synaptosomal uptake of both [3H]choline and [3H]serotonin. The remaining rats were used for histological verifications on brain sections stained for acetylcholinesterase (AChE). The lesions increased locomotor activity, impaired radial maze learning and, in the dorsal hippocampus, reduced AChE positive staining, decreased ChAT activity (-73%) as well as high affinity uptake of both choline (-81%) and serotonin (-82%). Neither type of transplant produced any significant behavioral recovery. However, septal transplants increased hippocampal AChE positivity, restored ChAT activity and enhanced choline uptake to 116% and 70% of the values found in sham-operated rats, respectively; they had no significant effect on uptake of serotonin. Transplants from the raphe region had weak effects on hippocampal AChE positivity, increased both the ChAT activity and the choline uptake to 70% ad 38% of the sham-operated rats, respectively, and produced an (over)compensation of the serotonin uptake which reached 324% of the values found in sham-operated rats. The co-transplantation of both regions resulted in restoration of ChAT activity (113% of sham-operated rats values), choline uptake (83% of sham-operated rats) and serotonin uptake (129% of sham-operated rats). Our neurochemical data show that after extensive denervation of the hippocampus, intrahippocampal grafts of fetal neurons may foster a neurotransmitter-specific recovery which depends upon the anatomical origin of the grafted cells: a graft rich in serotonergic neurons overcompensates the serotonergic deficit, a graft rich in cholinergic neurons attenuates the cholinergic deficit, whereas a mixture of both types of grafts produces recovery from both types of deficits. Thereby, both the feasibility and the interest of the co-grafting technique are confirmed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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Cassel JC, Kelche C, Neufang B, Will BE, Hertting G, Jackisch R. Graft-derived cholinergic reinnervation of the hippocampus prevents a lasting increase of hippocampal noradrenaline concentration induced by septohippocampal damage in rats. Neurosci Lett 1992; 138:32-6. [PMID: 1407663 DOI: 10.1016/0304-3940(92)90465-j] [Citation(s) in RCA: 44] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.4] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/26/2022]
Abstract
Long-Evans female rats sustained aspirative lesions of the septohippocampal pathways and, 2 weeks later, received into the dorsal hippocampus grafts prepared from the septal area (rich in cholinergic neurons; Group Sep) or from the mesencephalic raphe (poor in cholinergic neurons; Group Rap) of rat fetuses. Lesion-only (Group Les) and virtually intact (Group Sham) rats served as controls. Between 9.5 and 10.5 months after grafting surgery, we found the lesions to decrease choline acetyltransferase activity (ChAT), high affinity synaptosomal uptake of [3H]choline (HACU) and serotonin concentration ([5-HT]), as well as to increase the noradrenaline concentration ([NA]) in the dorsal hippocampus. Raphe grafts increased [5-HT] to 456% of normal, but had only weak or no effects on the other lesion-induced modifications in brain neurochemistry. Septal grafts dramatically increased ChAT activity and HACU, enhanced [5-HT], and reduced [NA] to near-normal levels. We also found a significant negative correlation between HACU and [NA] in rats with lesions, whether grafted or not. These data show that grafts providing the denervated hippocampus with a new cholinergic innervation might be able to exert inhibitory effects on the lesion-induced increase of [NA]. Since such an increase is indicative of sympathetic sprouting, the finding of reduced [NA] in rats with graft-derived cholinergic reinnervation of the hippocampus is in line with the hypothesis that hippocampal cholinergic denervation plays a crucial role in the induction of sympathetic sprouting. However, our data do not allow to distinguish whether grafts rich in cholinergic neurons inhibited the sympathetic sprouting itself, or rather reduced the NA content of sprouted fibers.
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Cassel JC, Jackisch R, Duschek M, Hornsperger JM, Richards MH, Kelche C, Hertting G, Will B. Long term effects of septohippocampal lesions and intrahippocampal grafts on acetylcholine concentration, muscarinic stimulated formation of inositol phospholipids and electrically evoked release of neurotransmitters in the rat hippocampus. Exp Brain Res 1991; 83:633-42. [PMID: 2026203 DOI: 10.1007/bf00229841] [Citation(s) in RCA: 9] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/29/2022]
Abstract
Long Evans female rats sustained aspirative lesions of the septohippocampal pathways; subsequently, they received intrahippocampal suspension grafts of fetal septal-diagonal band or hippocampal tissue. The long term (8-10 months post-surgery) effects of these treatments were examined in the hippocampus for the following variables: concentration of hippocampal acetylcholine (ACh), muscarinic-stimulated (carbachol) formation of inositol monophosphate, accumulation of tritiated choline, noradrenaline (3H-NA) and serotonin (3H-5-HT), electrically evoked release of 3H-acetylcholine (3H-ACh), 3H-NA and 3H-5-HT, and choline acetyltransferase (ChAT) activity. The lesions decreased the levels of endogenous ACh, the accumulation of 3H-choline and 3H-5-HT and the evoked release of both 3H-ACh and 3H-5-HT as well as the ChAT activity, but they failed to significantly affect the muscarinic-stimulated formation of inositol monophosphate and the accumulation and release of 3H-NA. Grafts of hippocampal cells were found to be ineffective on all lesion-induced effects. In contrast, grafts of septal-diagonal band origin attenuated the deficit of hippocampal concentrations of ACh and accumulation of 3H-choline without, however, improving release of 3H-ACh, accumulation and release of 3H-5-HT, and ChAT activity. These observations suggest that: (i) denervation-induced hippocampal muscarinic supersensitivity might not be long-lasting or the lesions, which in some cases spared the lateral edges of the fimbria, failed to induce any muscarinic supersensitivity, (ii) intrahippocampal grafts rich in cholinergic neurons do not foster recovery from the lesion-induced noncholinergic deficits we assessed, (iii) recovery of function may be expressed by some but not all biochemical or pharmacological cholinergic variables and (iv) graft-derived hippocampal reinnervation may be less efficient than the endogenous innervation of intact rats as indicated by the restoration of only some of the variables related to cholinergic function by intrahippocampal septal-diagonal band grafts.
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Cassel JC, Kelche C, Peterson GM, Ballough GP, Goepp I, Will B. Graft-induced behavioral recovery from subcallosal septohippocampal damage in rats depends on maturity stage of donor tissue. Neuroscience 1991; 45:571-86. [PMID: 1775234 DOI: 10.1016/0306-4522(91)90272-p] [Citation(s) in RCA: 72] [Impact Index Per Article: 2.2] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/28/2022]
Abstract
Long-Evans female rats sustained electrolytic lesions of the fimbria and the dorsal fornix and, 10-14 days later, received intrahippocampal suspension grafts of septal-diagonal band tissue from either 14-day-old (Group S14, n = 8) or 16-day-old fetuses (Group S16, n = 10), or of parietal cortex from 16-day-old fetuses (Group Cx, n = 10). Sham-operated (Group S, n = 10) and lesion-only (Group Fifo, n = 21) rats served as non-grafted controls. Spontaneous alternation was assessed in a T-maze at three weeks and two months post-grafting. Home cage and open field activity as well as radial maze learning were assessed from two months post-grafting onwards. Fimbria-fornix lesions induced lasting hyperactivity in both the open field and the home cage, impaired radial maze learning and transiently reduced spontaneous alternation rates. Neither type of graft significantly affected home cage activity. Septal-diagonal band grafts improved open field habituation (within trial decline of ambulatory activity) and radial maze learning; the former was observed only in S16 rats, whereas the latter was observed only in S14 rats. Acetylcholinesterase histochemistry revealed an initial lesion-induced depletion of hippocampal acetylcholinesterase (eight days post-surgery) which was no longer observed at the end of the experiment. Acetylcholinesterase positivity was similar in S14 and S16 grafts, which also contained many choline acetyltransferase-positive neurons. Cortical grafts were found to be almost devoid of acetylcholinesterase positivity and no well-stained choline acetyltransferase-positive neurons could be identified. Septal-diagonal band grafts from 14-day-old fetuses and cortical grafts contained more parvalbumin-positive neurons than septal-diagonal band grafts provided by 16-day-old fetuses. These results suggest that grafts rich in cholinergic neurons may promote behavioral recovery from fimbria-fornix lesion-induced deficits. However, such a recovery may concern different behavioral deficits as a function of the age of the implanted tissue, suggesting that the maturity stage of the donor may critically influence the functional expression in the lesioned recipient. Also, such a recovery does not appear to be related solely to cholinergic hippocampal (re)innervation and might depend on the presence, not only of cholinergic neurons, but also of non-cholinergic neuronal populations, such as parvalbumin-positive (probably GABAergic) neurons.
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Cassel JC, Kelche C, Hornsperger JM, Jackisch R, Hertting G, Will BE. Graft-induced learning impairment despite graft-enhanced cholinergic functions in the hippocampus of rats with septohippocampal lesions. Brain Res 1990; 534:295-8. [PMID: 2073591 DOI: 10.1016/0006-8993(90)90143-y] [Citation(s) in RCA: 10] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/30/2022]
Abstract
Effects of aspirative fimbria-fornix lesions and intrahippocampal grafts of fetal septal-diagonal band or hippocampal tissue were examined, in Long Evans female rats, on spontaneous alternation, radial maze learning, hippocampal acetylcholine concentrations and [3H]choline accumulation by hippocampal slices. Septohippocampal damage decreased all of these variables. Septal-diagonal band grafts increased hippocampal acetylcholine levels as well as [3H]choline accumulation of tissue (when incubated for 45 min), but they had no effect on alternation rates and further impaired radial maze performances. No such behavioral and neurochemical effects were observed in rats with hippocampal grafts. Our data suggest that factors other than graft-induced improvement of cholinergic functions in the denervated hippocampus may be involved in the expression of behavioral effects by intrahippocampal acetylcholine-rich grafts.
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Cassel JC, Kelche C, Will B. Time-dependent effects of intrahippocampal grafts in rats with fimbria-fornix lesions. Exp Brain Res 1990; 81:179-90. [PMID: 2394224 DOI: 10.1007/bf00230114] [Citation(s) in RCA: 15] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.4] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/31/2022]
Abstract
Based on three experiments, this study examined whether behavioral and histological effects of fetal septal or hippocampal grafts placed in the denervated hippocampus depend on the duration of post-grafting delays. Each experiment included four groups of rats: sham-operated rats (Sham), rats with aspirative lesions of the fimbria-fornix (Fifo) and rats given both Fifo lesions and intrahippocampal fetal suspension grafts of either septal (Fifo.ST) or hippocampal (Fifo.HT) origin. All rats were tested (i) for home cage activity, (ii) for activity and reactivity in an open field and (iii) for learning ability in a 8-arm radial maze. Except for home cage activity which was also monitored preoperatively, behavioral tests were conducted between 1-2 months postgrafting in Experiment 1 (EXP1), 5-6 months post-grafting in Experiment 2 (EXP2) and 10-11 months post-grafting in Experiment 3 (EXP3). Each test period lasted 3 weeks. Histological controls consisted of acetylcholinesterase (AChE) and cresyl violet staining. Graft size was estimated by computerized image analysis. Normal rats performed well in each experiment. In all experiments, rats with fimbria-fornix lesions showed increased activity in both their familiar (home cage) and unfamiliar (open field) environments, and their performances in the radial maze task were impaired. In no experiment did grafts, whether hippocampal or septal, affect "noncognitive" behavioral variables. However, maze performance was improved by hippocampal grafts in EXP1 (short delay) and by septal grafts in EXP2 (intermediate delay). No graft-induced effect was found in EXP3 (long delay). Concerning AChE-positivity in the dorsal hippocampus, fimbria-fornix lesions reduced staining densities by at least 60%. Both types of grafts were undiscernably AChE-positive, but only septal grafts provided the denervated hippocampus with a significant AChE-positive fiber ingrowth. Differences among groups in density of hippocampal AChE staining were comparable in all three experiments and no correlation between hippocampal AChE-positivity and maze performance was found. Our results suggest that graft-induced recovery from behavioral effects of fimbria-fornix lesions may depend on both the type of tissue implanted (hippocampal vs septal) and the post-grafting delay (1-2, 5-6 and 10-11 months). The recovery observed at a short post-grafting delay with hippocampal grafts and at a longer post-grafting delay with septal grafts was not persistent and concerned only cognitive function as assessed by radial maze performance.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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Cassel JC, Kelche C. Scopolamine treatment and fimbria-fornix lesions: mimetic effects on radial maze performance. Physiol Behav 1989; 46:347-53. [PMID: 2623054 DOI: 10.1016/0031-9384(89)90002-4] [Citation(s) in RCA: 38] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.1] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/01/2023]
Abstract
Long-Evans female rats were "trained" in an 8-arm radial maze and subsequently tested under systemic treatment with physostigmine (0.05 mg/kg, IP), scopolamine methylbromide (MBr) and scopolamine hydrobromide (HBr; 0.5 mg/kg, IP), whose effects were compared to those of aspirative lesions of the fimbria-fornix pathways. During the predrug trials, rats with lesions showed impaired performances compared to those of intact rats. Whereas physostigmine had no significant effect in either group, scopolamine HBr impaired performances of intact rats in a manner closely parallel to all measured behavioral effects of the lesions (errors, "correct arms" and strategies). The scopolamine HBr-induced deficits were not correlated with the percentage of "spatial" strategies. Under scopolamine HBr treatment the performances of rats showing preferences for "spatial" strategies did not differ significantly from those of rats showing preferences for "orientation" strategies. These results provide further support for the involvement of cholinergic processes in working memory and suggest that scopolamine-induced central cholinergic disruption may mimic the effects of fimbria-fornix lesions in an 8-arm radial maze. They also somewhat qualify previous reports on 1) the poor sensitivity of an uninterrupted radial maze testing procedure to pharmacological treatment and 2) the abilities of rats to resist muscarinic blockade depending on the strategies they use in the maze.
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Cassel JC, Kelche CR, Dalrymple-Alford JC, Will BE. Effects of physostigmine and d-amphetamine on the behavior of rats with selective fimbria-fornix lesions and intrahippocampal fetal septal cell transplants. BEHAVIORAL AND NEURAL BIOLOGY 1988; 50:229-39. [PMID: 3228422 DOI: 10.1016/s0163-1047(88)90901-6] [Citation(s) in RCA: 4] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.1] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/04/2023]
Abstract
Female Long-Evans rats were given electrolytic lesions of either the medial fimbria bilaterally (Fi, n = 24), the dorsal fornix (Fo, n = 24), or both structures (FF, n = 24) at 31 days of age. Ten rats were given sham-operations. Ten days later, half the rats with lesions received bilateral intrahippocampal grafts of embryonic septal cell suspensions (FiT, FoT, FFT, respectively). As already reported in a separate publication (J.C. Dalrymple-Alford, C.R. Kelche, J.C. Cassel, G. Toniolo, V. Pallage, & B.E. Will, 1987, Experimental Brain Research, 210, 115-128), 7 months after transplant surgery, grafted rats were found to be more impaired in an eight-arm radial maze than nongrafted rats. The present report concerns a pharmacological study carried out in the same rats 11 months after grafting. We examined the effects of ip injections of physostigmine (0.01, 0.05, 0.10 mg/kg) and then of d-amphetamine (1.6 mg/kg), as compared with baseline control injections of saline. Just prior to the drug treatments, performances of grafted and nongrafted rats did not differ significantly, but impairments in grafted rats reappeared during subsequent no-injection and saline control trials. Physostigmine failed to affect significantly the performances in rats of any group. d-Amphetamine improved performances in grafted rats with medial fimbria lesions, impaired performances in grafted rats with dorsal fornix lesions, and did not change performances in grafted rats with both lesions, as compared with their respective nongrafted counterparts. Histological analysis revealed variable reinnervation of the host structure and substantial graft-induced lesions of the hippocampus.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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Dalrymple-Alford JC, Kelche C, Cassel JC, Toniolo G, Pallage V, Will BE. Behavioral deficits after intrahippocampal fetal septal grafts in rats with selective fimbria-fornix lesions. Exp Brain Res 1988; 69:545-58. [PMID: 3371437 DOI: 10.1007/bf00247308] [Citation(s) in RCA: 66] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.8] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/05/2023]
Abstract
Fetal septal transplants have been shown to promote behavioral recovery in young adult rats with aspiration fimbria-fornix lesions, rats with septal lesions and in intact aged rats. The present study examined the behavioral impact of intrahippocampal septal cell suspension transplants (T) in young female rats that had received, 10 days earlier, either medial fimbria lesions (Group FI.T), dorsal (subcallosal) fornix lesions (Group FO.T) or these two lesions together (Group FIFO.T). Relative to rats with lesions only (groups FI, FO and FIFO), grafted rats, irrespective of lesion locus, displayed unexpected impairments in (i) a serial alternation learning task, 5 weeks and 6 months after transplantation, and (ii) in a radial maze, 7 months after transplantation. In the first alternation test, Group FIFO showed impaired performance relative to Groups FI, FO and the sham-operated controls (Group S). In the second alternation test, Groups FO.T and FO showed impaired performance relative to Groups FI.T and FI, and only the performance of Group FI did not differ from that of Group S. In the radial maze, Groups FI, FO and FIFO all showed impaired performance relative to Group S. By contrast, there were no deleterious effects of lesions or of grafts in the acquisition and retention of a step-through passive avoidance task, 10 weeks after transplantation. Our findings on the effects of selective fimbria-fornix lesions did not confirm the report that rats with FI lesions but not those with FO lesions are unable to learn a serial alternation task, nor the report that FO lesions impair passive avoidance retention. Acetylcholinesterase (AChE) histochemistry revealed that grafts were present but graft-derived innervation of the host hippocampus varied from extensive to almost non-existent in all transplant groups. AChE-positivity in the dorsal hippocampus (DH) was not related to behavioral performance. However, the grafts often grew to a considerable size within the host brain and in many rats, especially those in Group FI.T, produced moderate to extreme damage of the host DH. There was a significant positive correlation between errors in the radial maze and graft-induced DH damage but no relationship between errors and graft size. The results indicate that, after partial lesions of the fimbria-fornix, intrahippocampal septal grafts survive well but are likely to damage recipient structures and result in behavioral impairments.
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Cassel JC, Kelche C, Will BE. Susceptibility to pentylenetetrazol-induced and audiogenic seizures in rats with selective fimbria-fornix lesions and intrahippocampal septal grafts. Exp Neurol 1987; 97:564-76. [PMID: 3622710 DOI: 10.1016/0014-4886(87)90114-2] [Citation(s) in RCA: 21] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.6] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/06/2023]
Abstract
At the age of 31 days, Long-Evans female rats received electrolytic lesions either of the medial fimbria (N = 24), of the dorsal subcallosal fornix (N = 24), or of both structures (N = 24). Ten rats were used as sham-operated controls. Ten days later, half the rats of each lesion group received intrahippocampal grafts of acetylcholine-rich fetal basal forebrain cell suspensions. Twelve months after grafting, all surviving rats, except six grafted rats which became very difficult to handle (because they developed convulsive behavior) were tested for reactivity to pentylenetetrazol (30 mg/kg, i.p.) and to sound (120 dB, 90 s). Grafted rats were found to be more reactive to the drug and less reactive to sound than their nongrafted counterparts with similar lesions. Reactivity to pentylenetetrazol of grafted rats was correlated with body weight and extent of graft-induced hippocampal damage, but not with graft size. Reactivity to sound, which was apparently not dependent on hippocampal damage or graft size, might be related to enhanced graft-derived cholinergic activity in the hippocampus. Our results show that intrahippocampal septal grafts interfere in opposite directions with the seizure-inducing treatments used, so that it can be assumed that the physiologic mechanisms by which grafts do so and by which these treatments induce seizures are likely to be different.
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Cassel JC, Pacteau C, Will BE. Ethanol intoxication fails to affect sprouting induced by entorhinal cortex lesions. Alcohol 1987; 4:367-72. [PMID: 3675857 DOI: 10.1016/0741-8329(87)90068-1] [Citation(s) in RCA: 4] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.1] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/06/2023]
Abstract
After unilateral entorhinal cortex lesions, acute ethanol exposure (mean daily intake = 16.3 +/- 0.3 g/kg for 15 days) of juvenile rats failed to alter lesion-induced axonal sprouting in the dentate gyrus. The distribution of acetylcholinesterase in the dentate gyrus was identified histochemically as an indicator of axonal sprouting. Comparisons between operated and intact sides were based on qualitative observations and quantitative morphometry techniques using a computerized image analyser to evaluate the widths of the bands of the molecular layer. Whether ethanol-exposed or not, rats with unilateral entorhinal cortex lesions exhibited substantial qualitative and quantitative evidence of axonal sprouting. These results indicate that a 15-day post-operative ethanol exposure had no effect on axonal sprouting in juvenile rats and thus qualify previous findings about ethanol-mediated effects on axonal sprouting.
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Szczeklik A, Dischinger P, Kueppers F, Tyroler HA, Hames CG, Cassel JC, Creagan S. Blood fibrinolytic activity, social class and habitual physical activity--II. A study of black and white men in Southern Georgia. JOURNAL OF CHRONIC DISEASES 1980; 33:291-9. [PMID: 6154717 DOI: 10.1016/0021-9681(80)90024-7] [Citation(s) in RCA: 21] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.5] [Reference Citation Analysis] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/18/2023]
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Beaglehole R, Salmond CE, Hooper A, Huntsman J, Stanhope JM, Cassel JC, Prior IA. Blood pressure and social interaction in Tokelauan migrants in New Zealand. JOURNAL OF CHRONIC DISEASES 1977; 30:803-12. [PMID: 591607 DOI: 10.1016/0021-9681(77)90008-x] [Citation(s) in RCA: 42] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.9] [Reference Citation Analysis] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/23/2022]
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Boyce WT, Jensen EW, Cassel JC, Collier AM, Smith AH, Ramey CT. Influence of life events and family routines on childhood respiratory tract illness. Pediatrics 1977; 60:609-15. [PMID: 263274] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/14/2022] Open
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Liptak GS, Hulka BS, Cassel JC. Effectiveness of physician-mother interactions during infancy. Pediatrics 1977; 60:186-92. [PMID: 887332] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [MESH Headings] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/24/2022] Open
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Smith AH, Kark JD, Cassel JC, Spears GF. Analysis of prospective epidemiologic studies by minimum distance case-control matching. Am J Epidemiol 1977; 105:567-74. [PMID: 868861 DOI: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.aje.a112421] [Citation(s) in RCA: 27] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.6] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/24/2022] Open
Abstract
This paper presents the use of a matching method for analysis of prospective epidemiologic studies which generate a relatively small number of cases of a given disease. In such studies, matching in the manner presented may be of a given disease. In such studies, matching in the manner presented may be superior to other methods of analysis in removing bias due to confounding. A multivariate minimum-distance matching algorithm is used for computer selection of controls for the cases and the method is illustrated by application to a prospective cardiovascular disease study. The main advantages are that the results are easy to understand and interpret, and that there is no possibiligy of bias due to confounding variables when close matches are obtained. In contrast, the results of multivariate analysis may be difficult to understand and interpret, and the removal of bias due to confounding is dependent on the assumptions of the mode. It is recommended that the matching method should be used in addition to and at times stead of other methods of analysis whenever a study involves a relatively small number of cases and a large source of controls of controls on whom relevant study variables have already been documented.
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Abstract
Minimal explicit consensus criteria in the management of patients with four indicator conditions were established by an ad hoc committee of primary care physicians practicing in different locations. These criteria were then applied to the practices of primary care physicians located in a single community by abstracting medical records and obtaining questionnaire data about patients with the indicator conditions. A standardized management score for each physician was used as the dependent variable in stepwise regression analysis with physician/practice and patient/disease characteristics as the candidate independent variables. For all physicians combined, the mean management scores were high, ranging from .78 to .93 for the four conditions. For two of the conditions, care of the normal infant and pregnant woman, the management scores were better for pediatricians and obstetricians respectively than for family physicians. For the other two conditions, adult onset diabetes and congestive heart failure, there were no differences between the management scores of family physicians and internists. Patient/disease characteristics did not contribute significantly to explaining the variation in the standardized management scores.
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