Abstract

Astrocytes in nucleus magnocellularis (NM) of the chick respond to afferent activity blockade with increased immunoreactivity for glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP). NM neurons respond to the same manipulations with reduced protein synthesis, ribosomal dissociation, and subsequent death of a subset of these neurons. In the present study, we sought to evaluate the relationship between these neuronal and glial responses and to determine if similar activity-dependent mechanisms mediate them. We first examined the anatomical relationship between NM neurons and astrocytic processes by electron microscopy and GFAP immunostaining. Both methods showed that NM neurons deprived of activity for 6 hr were apposed by more glial processes than active NM neurons. However, we found no preferential positioning of GFAP-immunoreactive processes near neurons of the dying or surviving populations, and there were no differences in glial process apposition to dying versus surviving neurons at the EM level. To determine whether the astrocytic response is similar to the neuronal response in age dependence, GFAP immunoreactivity was analyzed in adult chickens following unilateral afferent activity blockade. Unlike the neuronal response to activity blockade, the astrocytic response is equally strong in adult animals. These results imply an independence of the neuronal and astrocytic responses to activity blockade, raising the possibility that these two cell types may be responding to different activity-related signals. This possibility was tested using an in vitro slice preparation. Unilateral stimulation of NM was provided in three ways: orthodromically, antidromically, and orthodromically in a low-calcium medium. The regulation of astrocytic GFAP immunoreactivity by these manipulations of activity was then analyzed. The results of these experiments show that, unlike neuronal protein synthesis, astrocytic GFAP immunoreactivity can be suppressed by either presynaptic or postsynaptic neuronal activity. Therefore, the astrocytes and neurons are regulated by different activity-dependent signals and, by the present measures, their responses to activity blockade appear independent of one another.

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