4.0 Article

Acetazolamide potentiates the afferent drive to prefrontal cortex in vivo

Journal

PHYSIOLOGICAL REPORTS
Volume 5, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.14814/phy2.13066

Keywords

Carbonic anhydrase; hippocampus; prefrontal cortex; single-unit activity; synaptic plasticity

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Funding

  1. Coordination for the Improvement of Higher Education Personnel (CAPES) [PVE a034-2013]
  2. Sao Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP) [2012/06123-4, 2012/23918-0, 2016/17882-4]
  3. National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq) [142451/2014-2]

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The knowledge on real-time neurophysiological effects of acetazolamide is still far behind the wide clinical use of this drug. Acetazolamide - a carbonic anhydrase inhibitor - has been shown to affect the neuromuscular transmission, implying a pH-mediated influence on the central synaptic transmission. To start filling such a gap, we chose a central substrate: hippocampal-prefrontal cortical projections; and a synaptic phenomenon: paired-pulse facilitation (a form of synaptic plasticity) to probe this drug's effects on interareal brain communication in chronically implanted rats. We observed that systemic acetazolamide potentiates the hippocampal-prefrontal paired-pulse facilitation. In addition to this field electrophysiology data, we found that acetazolamide exerts a net inhibitory effect on prefrontal cortical single-unit firing. We propose that systemic acetazolamide reduces the basal neuronal activity of the prefrontal cortex, whereas increasing the afferent drive it receives from the hippocampus. In addition to being relevant to the clinical and side effects of acetazolamide, these results suggest that exogenous pH regulation can have diverse impacts on afferent signaling across the neocortex.

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