Spatial integration of vascular changes with neural activity in mouse cortex

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Abstract

The authors evaluated representations of discretely activated, neighboring brain regions using real-time optical intrinsic signals by transcranial imaging with 540-nm and 610-nm broadband illumination of the mouse barrel cortex. Iron filings were glued to two neighboring whiskers (C2 + D2) that were stimulated magnetically, singly and together. Real-time images were collected, averaged, and analyzed statistically. Postmortem filling of arteries with fluorescent beads was shown in relation to histochemical staining of barrels to accurately relate surface changes to functional cortical columns. Significant optical intrinsic signal changes are related to overlapping distributions of arterioles that feed the two separate areas. Activation of adjacent and interacting cortical columns leads not only to increased magnitude of vascular responses in those columns, but also to wider spatial extent of absorption changes occurring principally in areas of cortex fed by vessels upstream of the active cortex. The localization of changing hemoglobin absorption around upstream blood vessels and their vascular domains suggests that propagated vasodilation of upstream parent vessels is greater when vasodilatory signals from separate areas of active cortex converge on common arterioles that feed them.

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Erinjeri, J. P., & Woolsey, T. A. (2002). Spatial integration of vascular changes with neural activity in mouse cortex. Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism, 22(3), 353–360. https://doi.org/10.1097/00004647-200203000-00013

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