Relationship between oxygen consumption and neuronal activity in a defined neural circuit

Abstract Background Neuronal computations related to sensory and motor activity along with the maintenance of spike discharge, synaptic transmission, and associated housekeeping are energetically demanding. The most efficient metabolic process to provide large amounts of energy equivalents is oxidat...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Suzan Özugur, Lars Kunz, Hans Straka
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-07-01
Series:BMC Biology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12915-020-00811-6
id doaj-1598657a76ea49dcb6236e90515ecf75
record_format Article
spelling doaj-1598657a76ea49dcb6236e90515ecf752020-11-25T02:32:20ZengBMCBMC Biology1741-70072020-07-0118111610.1186/s12915-020-00811-6Relationship between oxygen consumption and neuronal activity in a defined neural circuitSuzan Özugur0Lars Kunz1Hans Straka2Department Biology II, Ludwig-Maximilians-University MunichDepartment Biology II, Ludwig-Maximilians-University MunichDepartment Biology II, Ludwig-Maximilians-University MunichAbstract Background Neuronal computations related to sensory and motor activity along with the maintenance of spike discharge, synaptic transmission, and associated housekeeping are energetically demanding. The most efficient metabolic process to provide large amounts of energy equivalents is oxidative phosphorylation and thus dependent on O2 consumption. Therefore, O2 levels in the brain are a critical parameter that influences neuronal function. Measurements of O2 consumption have been used to estimate the cost of neuronal activity; however, exploring these metabolic relationships in vivo and under defined experimental conditions has been limited by technical challenges. Results We used isolated preparations of Xenopus laevis tadpoles to perform a quantitative analysis of O2 levels in the brain under in vivo-like conditions. We measured O2 concentrations in the hindbrain in relation to the spike discharge of the superior oblique eye muscle-innervating trochlear nerve as proxy for central nervous activity. In air-saturated bath Ringer solution, O2 levels in the fourth ventricle and adjacent, functionally intact hindbrain were close to zero. Inhibition of mitochondrial activity with potassium cyanide or fixation of the tissue with ethanol raised the ventricular O2 concentration to bath levels, indicating that the brain tissue consumed the available O2. Gradually increasing oxygenation of the Ringer solution caused a concurrent increase of ventricular O2 concentrations. Blocking spike discharge with the local anesthetics tricaine methanesulfonate diminished the O2 consumption by ~ 50%, illustrating the substantial O2 amount related to neuronal activity. In contrast, episodes of spontaneous trochlear nerve spike bursts were accompanied by transient increases of the O2 consumption with parameters that correlated with burst magnitude and duration. Conclusions Controlled experimental manipulations of both the O2 level as well as the neuronal activity under in vivo-like conditions allowed to quantitatively relate spike discharge magnitudes in a particular neuronal circuitry with the O2 consumption in this area. Moreover, the possibility to distinctly manipulate various functional parameters will yield more insight in the coupling between metabolic and neuronal activity. Thus, apart from providing quantitative empiric evidence for the link between physiologically relevant spontaneous spike discharge in the brain and O2-dependent metabolism, isolated amphibian preparations are promising model systems to further dissociate the O2 dynamics in relation to neuronal computations.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12915-020-00811-6Xenopus laevisOxidative phosphorylationVentricleExtraocular motoneurons
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Suzan Özugur
Lars Kunz
Hans Straka
spellingShingle Suzan Özugur
Lars Kunz
Hans Straka
Relationship between oxygen consumption and neuronal activity in a defined neural circuit
BMC Biology
Xenopus laevis
Oxidative phosphorylation
Ventricle
Extraocular motoneurons
author_facet Suzan Özugur
Lars Kunz
Hans Straka
author_sort Suzan Özugur
title Relationship between oxygen consumption and neuronal activity in a defined neural circuit
title_short Relationship between oxygen consumption and neuronal activity in a defined neural circuit
title_full Relationship between oxygen consumption and neuronal activity in a defined neural circuit
title_fullStr Relationship between oxygen consumption and neuronal activity in a defined neural circuit
title_full_unstemmed Relationship between oxygen consumption and neuronal activity in a defined neural circuit
title_sort relationship between oxygen consumption and neuronal activity in a defined neural circuit
publisher BMC
series BMC Biology
issn 1741-7007
publishDate 2020-07-01
description Abstract Background Neuronal computations related to sensory and motor activity along with the maintenance of spike discharge, synaptic transmission, and associated housekeeping are energetically demanding. The most efficient metabolic process to provide large amounts of energy equivalents is oxidative phosphorylation and thus dependent on O2 consumption. Therefore, O2 levels in the brain are a critical parameter that influences neuronal function. Measurements of O2 consumption have been used to estimate the cost of neuronal activity; however, exploring these metabolic relationships in vivo and under defined experimental conditions has been limited by technical challenges. Results We used isolated preparations of Xenopus laevis tadpoles to perform a quantitative analysis of O2 levels in the brain under in vivo-like conditions. We measured O2 concentrations in the hindbrain in relation to the spike discharge of the superior oblique eye muscle-innervating trochlear nerve as proxy for central nervous activity. In air-saturated bath Ringer solution, O2 levels in the fourth ventricle and adjacent, functionally intact hindbrain were close to zero. Inhibition of mitochondrial activity with potassium cyanide or fixation of the tissue with ethanol raised the ventricular O2 concentration to bath levels, indicating that the brain tissue consumed the available O2. Gradually increasing oxygenation of the Ringer solution caused a concurrent increase of ventricular O2 concentrations. Blocking spike discharge with the local anesthetics tricaine methanesulfonate diminished the O2 consumption by ~ 50%, illustrating the substantial O2 amount related to neuronal activity. In contrast, episodes of spontaneous trochlear nerve spike bursts were accompanied by transient increases of the O2 consumption with parameters that correlated with burst magnitude and duration. Conclusions Controlled experimental manipulations of both the O2 level as well as the neuronal activity under in vivo-like conditions allowed to quantitatively relate spike discharge magnitudes in a particular neuronal circuitry with the O2 consumption in this area. Moreover, the possibility to distinctly manipulate various functional parameters will yield more insight in the coupling between metabolic and neuronal activity. Thus, apart from providing quantitative empiric evidence for the link between physiologically relevant spontaneous spike discharge in the brain and O2-dependent metabolism, isolated amphibian preparations are promising model systems to further dissociate the O2 dynamics in relation to neuronal computations.
topic Xenopus laevis
Oxidative phosphorylation
Ventricle
Extraocular motoneurons
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12915-020-00811-6
work_keys_str_mv AT suzanozugur relationshipbetweenoxygenconsumptionandneuronalactivityinadefinedneuralcircuit
AT larskunz relationshipbetweenoxygenconsumptionandneuronalactivityinadefinedneuralcircuit
AT hansstraka relationshipbetweenoxygenconsumptionandneuronalactivityinadefinedneuralcircuit
_version_ 1724819812641669120