Abstract

Activity-related changes in extracellular K + concentration ([K +] e), pH (pH e) and extracellular volume were studied by means ofion-selective microelectrodes in the adult rat spinal cord in vivo and in neonatal rat spinal cords isolated from pups 3–14 days of age (P3–P14). Concomitantly with the ionic changes, the extracellular space (ECS) volume fraction (α), ECS tortuosity (λ) and non-specific uptake ( k′), three parameters affecting the diffusion of substances in nervous tissue, were studied in the rat spinal cord gray matter. In adult rats, repetitive electrical nerve stimulation (10–100 Hz) elicited increases in [K +] e of about 2.0–3.5 m m, followed by a post-stimulation K +-undershoot and triphasic alkaline-acid-alkaline changes in pH e with a dominating acid shift. The ECS volume in the adult rat occupies about 20% of the tissue, α = 0.20 ± 0.003, λ = 1.62 ± 0.02 and k′ = 4.6 ± 0.4 × 10 −3 s −1 ( n = 39). In contrast, in pups at P3–P6, the [K +] e increased by as much as 6.5 m m at a stimulation frequency of 10 Hz, i.e. K + ceiling level was elevated, and there was a dominating alkaline shift. An increase in [K +] e as large as 1.3–2.5 m m accompanied by an alkaline shift was evoked by a single electrical stimulus. The K + ceiling level and alkaline shifts decreased with age, while an acid shift, which was preceded by a small initial alkaline shift, appeared in the second postnatal week. In pups at P1–P2, the spinal cord was X-irradiated to block gliogenesis. The typical decrease in [K +] e ceiling level and the development of the acid shift in pH e at P10–P14 were blocked by X-irradiation. Concomitantly, continuous development of glial fibrillary acidic protein positive reaction was disrupted and densely stained astrocytes in gray matter at P10–P14 revealed astrogliosis. The alkaline, but not the acid, shift was blocked by Mg 2+ and picrotoxin (10 −6 m). Acetazolamide enhanced the alkaline but blocked the acid shift. Furthermore, the acid shift was blocked, and the alkaline shift enhanced, by Ba 2+, amiloride and SITS. Application of glutamate or gamma-aminobutyric acid evoked an alkaline shift in the pH e baseline at P3–P14 as well as after X-irradiation. The results suggest that the activity-related acid shifts in pH e are related to membrane transport processes in mature glia, while the alkaline shifts have a postsynaptic origin and are due to activation of ligand-gated ion channels. At P4–P6, the ECS volume was almost double that in adult rats, α = 0.37 ± 0.01 ( n = 17), the ECS tortuosity was significantly higher, λ = 1.78 ± 0.02, while the non-specific uptake was not significantly different, k′ = 3.61 ± 0.56 × 10 −3 s −1. The α gradually decreased to about 24% at P12. In adult rats, electrical or adequate stimulation evoked a shrinkage of the extracellular space by 20–50%, while no significant changes in ECS volume were found in P3–P6. We conclude that the [K +] e ceiling level, character of the pH e transients, the size of the ECS volume and the activity-related ECS shrinkage are closely related to gliogenesis.

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