Abstract

Valproic acid (VPA) treatment is associated with autism spectrum disorder in humans, and ferrets can be used as a model to test this; so far, it is not known whether ferrets react to developmental VPA exposure with gyrencephalic abnormalities. The current study characterized gyrification abnormalities in ferrets following VPA exposure during neonatal periods, corresponding to the late stage of cortical neurogenesis as well as the early stage of sulcogyrogenesis. Ferret pups received intraperitoneal VPA injections (200 μg/g of body weight) on postnatal days (PD) 6 and 7. BrdU was administered simultaneously at the last VPA injection. Ex vivo MRI-based morphometry demonstrated significantly lower gyrification index (GI) throughout the cortex in VPA-treated ferrets (1.265 ± 0.027) than in control ferrets (1.327 ± 0.018) on PD 20, when primary sulcogyrogenesis is complete. VPA-treated ferrets showed significantly smaller sulcal-GIs in the rostral suprasylvian sulcus and splenial sulcus but a larger lateral sulcus surface area than control ferrets. The floor cortex of the inner stratum of both the rostral suprasylvian and splenial sulci and the outer stratum of the lateral sulcus showed a relatively prominent expansion. Parvalbumin-positive neuron density was significantly greater in the expanded cortical strata of sulcal floors in VPA-treated ferrets, regardless of the BrdU-labeled status. Thus, VPA exposure during the late stage of cortical neurogenesis may alter gyrification, primarily in the frontal and parietotemporal cortical divisions. Altered gyrification may thicken the outer or inner stratum of the cerebral cortex by increasing parvalbumin-positive neuron density.

Highlights

  • Sulcogyral development has been documented in the cerebrum of several mammalian species, including humans [1], baboons [2], cynomolgus monkeys [3,4,5,6,7], common marmosets [8], bovine [9], dogs [10], and ferrets [11,12,13]

  • There was no significant difference in cerebral hemisphere FO length between Valproic acid (VPA)-treated and control ferrets (S1 Fig), repeated measures two-way ANOVA revealed a significant effect of region [F(2,28) = 121.926; P < 0.001] and a region × treatment interaction [F(1,14) = 3.9492; P < 0.05] on cerebral width and Scheffe’s test revealed a significantly smaller cerebral width at the level of the posterior commissure (P < 0.001) (S1 Fig)

  • No differences in cortical volume were observed between VPA-treated and control ferrets (Fig 1B), even though the mean cortical thickness was greater throughout the cerebral hemisphere in VPA-treated ferrets than in control ferrets (P < 0.01) (Fig 1C)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Sulcogyral development has been documented in the cerebrum of several mammalian species, including humans [1], baboons [2], cynomolgus monkeys [3,4,5,6,7], common marmosets [8], bovine [9], dogs [10], and ferrets [11,12,13]. The cerebral cortex can be roughly differentiated into four types of surface morphology.

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call