Xenon pressure dependence on the synchronized burst inhibition of rat cortical neuronal network cultured on multi-electrode arrays.

Tsutomu Uchida, Koichiro Shimada, Ryutaro Tanabe, Tatsuya Kubota,Daisuke Ito,Kenji Yamazaki,Kazutoshi Gohara

IBRO Reports(2017)

Cited 2|Views4
No score
Abstract
Mature rat cortical neuronal networks cultured on multi-electrode arrays (MEAs) are known to show spontaneous synchronized bursts accompanied by independent single spikes. The spontaneous synchronized bursts can be inhibited by Xe gas. In this study, we adjust the Xe gas pressure to control the amount of Xe in a neuron-cultured MEA medium. We show that the synchronized bursts cease completely within several minutes by applying Xe gas at partial pressures above 0.3MPa. After depressurizing and purging with fresh air, the synchronized bursts recover to their original frequency. Thus, we confirmed that Xe acts as a network-activity inhibitor of the cultured neuronal network on MEAs. But below 0.3MPa, the synchronized bursts are inhibited only partially, depending on the Xe partial pressure. Based on the partial-pressure influence on the change of the neuronal network activities, we find the critical concentration of Xe for the inhibition effect to be approximately 9.5mM, a value above which more than 90% of the synchronized burst activity is inhibited. Further systematic observations with Xe-air mixed gases show that pressurized air with a small amount of Xe suppresses the inhibition of synchronized bursts, suggesting an air component that can accelerate the synchronized bursts.
More
Translated text
Key words
Xenon,Oxygen,Partial pressure,General anesthesia,Multi-electrode array,Synchronized burst
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined