在出生后的大脑中,神经血管耦合与神经回路同时发展。

Neurogenesis (Austin, Tex.) Pub Date : 2016-10-28 eCollection Date: 2016-01-01 DOI:10.1080/23262133.2016.1244439
Mariel G Kozberg, Elizabeth M C Hillman
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在成人大脑中,局部神经活动的增加会伴随着区域血流的增加。神经活动与血流动力学之间的这种关系被称为神经血管耦合,并提供了功能磁共振成像(fMRI)中检测到的血流依赖性对比。神经血管耦合通常被认为从出生开始就是一致和可靠的;然而,大量研究表明,出生后早期大脑的血流动力学明显不同。我们最近在《神经科学杂志》(J. Neuroscience)上发表的研究考察了未成熟大脑中不同的血流动力学是否是由神经活动的潜在时空特性差异所驱动的,而这一时期正是神经回路蓬勃发展的时期。我们利用一种新的宽视场光学成像技术对小鼠大脑的神经活动和血液动力学进行了可视化,观察到随着时间的推移,大脑皮层连通性的发展,神经对刺激的反应持续时间更长,模式也越来越复杂。然而,对同一只小鼠的脑血流、氧合作用和新陈代谢进行成像后发现,新生大脑中缺乏血流耦合反应。这种血流耦合的缺乏被证明会导致神经激活后的氧耗竭--这种耗竭可能会影响持续神经反应的持续时间,并可能对快速发育的大脑的血管模式非常重要。这些结果为了解新生儿大脑独特的神经血管和神经代谢环境迈出了一步,并为解读早期大脑发育的 fMRI BOLD 研究提供了新的见解。
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Neurovascular coupling develops alongside neural circuits in the postnatal brain.

In the adult brain, increases in local neural activity are accompanied by increases in regional blood flow. This relationship between neural activity and hemodynamics is termed neurovascular coupling and provides the blood flow-dependent contrast detected in functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Neurovascular coupling is commonly assumed to be consistent and reliable from birth; however, numerous studies have demonstrated markedly different hemodynamics in the early postnatal brain. Our recent study in J. Neuroscience examined whether different hemodynamics in the immature brain are driven by differences in the underlying spatiotemporal properties of neural activity during this period of robust neural circuit expansion. Using a novel wide-field optical imaging technique to visualize both neural activity and hemodynamics in the mouse brain, we observed longer duration and increasingly complex patterns of neural responses to stimulus as cortical connectivity developed over time. However, imaging of brain blood flow, oxygenation, and metabolism in the same mice demonstrated an absence of coupled blood flow responses in the newborn brain. This lack of blood flow coupling was shown to lead to oxygen depletions following neural activations - depletions that may affect the duration of sustained neural responses and could be important to the vascular patterning of the rapidly developing brain. These results are a step toward understanding the unique neurovascular and neurometabolic environment of the newborn brain, and provide new insights for interpretation of fMRI BOLD studies of early brain development.

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