This paper describes the procedures for tactile stimulation of rat pups and subsequent Golgi-Cox staining of neuronal morphology. Tactile stimulation is a positive experience that is administered in the perinatal period by stroking pups with a household duster. Golgi-cox staining is a reliable procedure permitting the visualization of entire neurons.
To generate longer-term changes in behavior, experiences must be producing stable changes in neuronal morphology and synaptic connectivity. Tactile stimulation is a positive early experience that mimics maternal licking and grooming in the rat. Exposing rat pups to this positive experience can be completed easily and cost-effectively by using highly accessible materials such as a household duster. Using a cross-litter design, pups are either stroked or left undisturbed, for 15 min, three times per day throughout the perinatal period. To measure the neuroplastic changes related to this positive early experience, Golgi-Cox staining of brain tissue is utilized. Owing to the fact that Golgi-Cox impregnation stains a discrete number of neurons rather than all of the cells, staining of the rodent brain with Golgi-Cox solution permits the visualization of entire neuronal elements, including the cell body, dendrites, axons, and dendritic spines. The staining procedure is carried out over several days and requires that the researcher pay close attention to detail. However, once staining is completed, the entire brain has been impregnated and can be preserved indefinitely for ongoing analysis. Therefore, Golgi-Cox staining is a valuable resource for studying experience-dependent plasticity.
Although there are many reported and utilized techniques for the examination of negative early experiences on brain maturation, such as perinatal stress 1,2, sensory deprivation 3, and drug toxicity 4, there are very few methodologies employed to examine the effects of positive experiences in this time period. Aside from environmental enrichment, tactile stimulation is one of a few brain enhancing treatments with demonstrated effects 5. Tactile stimulation is a method of sensory stimulation to the skin that mimics the maternal rat behavior, licking and grooming. Its general acceptance as a positive manipulation arises from studies indicating that tactile stimulation improved maturation of premature infants and newborn rats 6. In addition, research in the Meaney laboratory 7 has demonstrated that higher levels of maternal licking and grooming are linked to positive outcomes in offspring. Owing to these positive influences, tactile stimulation rapidly evolved into a remedial strategy aimed at reducing anxiety 8, improving outcomes associated with brain injury 9-11, and attenuating drug sensitization 12. As such, tactile stimulation is a valuable technique for the promotion of positive early experiences, with a proven ability to dramatically reorganize neuronal morphology and synaptic connectivity of the developing brain.
In order to examine and quantify changes in neuronal morphology, it is necessary to visualize intact neurons. The Golgi-Cox staining procedure is a modification of Camillo Golgi’s technique published in the late 1800s that provides discrete staining of a small number of complete neurons 13. Although the procedure appears to stain neurons at random and reproducibility is commonly cited as major flaw, the small impregnation rate permits visualization of the entire neuronal element, including cell bodies, dendrites, dendritic spines, and axons. Similarly, the time required to impregnate a given brain with Golgi solution has also been cited as a downfall. However, given that once staining is complete tissue can be preserved indefinitely, and the time between perfusion of the brain and visualization of neurons with a microscope can be completed in less than 21 days, the time period is not unreasonable. In addition, with minor modifications to the protocol, Golgi-Cox staining can be effectively used to impregnate brains of rodents from all age ranges. As changes at the structural level have been linked to persistent modifications to behavioral and psychological functioning, the Golgi-Cox staining technique provides researchers with a valuable tool to measure neuroplasticity.
All experiments were carried out in accordance with the Canadian Council of Animal Care and approved by the University of Lethbridge, Animal Care Committee.
1. Breeding and Tactile Stimulation
Tactile Stimulation
2. Sacrifice and Golgi-Cox Staining
Note: If brains cannot be sectioned within 14 days of transfer to the sucrose solution, the researcher needs to replace the sucrose with a new stock of 30% sucrose. The researcher may replace the sucrose every two weeks for 4 months with no adverse effects on staining.
* Xylene can be used in replace of HemoDe. In order to ensure consistent staining quality, fresh solutions should be used for each slide rack processed.
When this staining procedure has been followed appropriately, consistent and uniform staining of dendrites and spines is generated. See Figure 1 for a representation of Golgi-Cox neuronal staining. This procedure produces staining that is comparable to the newly developed in vitro methods and may permit visualization of dendritic fields that are uninterruptable following tissue embedding. The vibratome based technique for Golgi-Cox staining has been found to produce more widespread staining of terminal branches and pyramidal neurons, than staining with either celloidin-embedded and cryostat-sectioned tissue, 15. Furthermore, because this method of staining impregnates the entire brain, all sections can be analyzed either immediately or in the future. As the location of morphological change is it is not always obvious when generating an original hypothesis, this process allows for the exploration of additional brain regions and prevents disposal of tissue that may be useful in the future.
This staining method can be used for reliable staining of any aged rat brains (P0-old age). However, when staining young brains (<1 gram), the brain should only remain in the Golgi-Cox solution for 6 days, rather than the 14 days recommended for adult brains; all other procedures are held constant. The main difficulty that may be encountered during this Golgi-Cox staining process is the inability to produce high-quality staining of central brain regions, including the thalamus. As the entire brain is impregnated at the same time, central regions may not receive ideal concentrations of stain. Despite this finding, the Golgi-Cox technique produces exceptional staining of subcortical regions such as the hippocampus and striatum. A final limitation of the procedure arises from incomplete removal of blood from the brain during the perfusion process. Blood may produce artifacts in the brain tissue that makes it difficult to photograph and trace the neurons.
Golgi-Cox staining techniques provide a reliable measure of dendritic morphology and neuroanatomy that is useful for an extensive range of studies designed to examine changes at the neuronal level. When examining neuronal structure in the prefrontal cortex following tactile stimulation in the early-postnatal period, Golgi-Cox staining revealed dramatic increases in dendritic complexity. Anatomical changes related to early tactile stimulation can be demonstrated visually by comparing spine density of pyramidal neurons from a control rat to pyramidal neurons from a rat that underwent tactile stimulation (see Figure 1). In addition, parameters such as dendritic arborization, dendritic length, and spine density can be calculated and statistically analyzed to generate continuous data that can be compared across animals. To generate reliable results, analysis should be carried out on a minimum of three animals per treatment group and approximately five neurons per hemisphere should be randomly selected for each brain region under analysis. Figure 2 demonstrates the dendritic complexity (spines/μm x μm of dendrite) of animals that received tactile stimulation and animals that did not. In both the apical and basilar fields of the neurons analyzed from the mPFC (Cg3), tactile stimulation resulted in proliferation of neuronal parameters.
Figure 1. A. Representative photograph of a Golgi-Cox stained pyramidal neuron from layer III of area Cg3 in a rat that received tactile stimulation during development. B. Representative magnified (1,000X) photograph of dendritic spines on the terminal dendrites in the basilar field of Cg3; the lighter image on the left is for a rat in the control group and the darker image on the right is from a rat who received tactile stimulation.
Figure 2. Illustrative representation of the average apical and basilar dendritic complexity (spines/μm x μm) for neurons in the Cg3 area from adult rats that either received tactile stimulation during development or did not (*p <0.01).
Owing to the overt plasticity of the developing brain, it is important that experimental procedures involving early experiences are thoroughly reviewed and attempts are made to control for all intervening variables. For this reason, a cross litter design is employed during the tactile stimulation procedure to ensure that pups are receiving similar experiences in all other domains of development. In addition, it is also important that multiple pups from multiple litters are selected for analysis to avoid the possibility that effects result from a bias in a single pup or litter.
Tactile stimulation is believed to mimic the naturally occurring maternal behavior, licking and grooming, which is thought to be beneficial to offspring development. Although prior research has emphasized the first week of life (P0-P7) to be a critical period for licking and grooming 16, the sheer magnitude of change identified following 18 days of tactile stimulation may imply that although sensitive times exist, longer exposure is superior. It is also important to note that pups receiving tactile stimulation in this experimental paradigm also experience licking and grooming by their mothers, hence the tactile stimulation is in addition to normal stimulation administered by the mother. Finally, one must also be cognizant of region-dependent changes. Although tactile stimulation during development increased dendritic complexity in the prefrontal cortex, this does not guarantee that structural changes of this nature will be evident in all brain regions. It is possible that neuronal morphology in other brain regions such as the parietal cortex, would respond in a strikingly different manner to the same experience. However, because the tactile stimulation procedure is easily administered and poses no risk to the offspring or dams, it has the potential to serve as a valuable tool for many research studies aimed at improving developmental outcomes.
With respect to Golgi-Cox staining of brain tissue, the critical steps for successful visualization of neuronal cells are as follows: 1) there must be adequate perfusion of the brain with saline solution. Improper or insufficient perfusion of the brain tissue results in blood vessel artifacts that make it difficult to actually visualize neuronal cells through the maze of blood vessels, while also complicating the ability to photograph stained neurons. 2) Perfused brains should be stored in Golgi-Cox solution and sucrose solution in the dark. Storing the brain tissue in the dark reduces the background staining of the tissue, again increasing the chance of successfully visualizing quality neuronal cells. 3) Brain tissue is stored in sucrose solution following the 14 day storage in Golgi-Cox solution. When the tissue is immersed in the 30% sucrose solution for 2-5 days, brains are more pliable which prevents shattering and tearing of sections when cutting. It is important to prevent brain tissue from remaining in the sucrose solution for increased time periods (unless the sucrose solution is continuously replaced with fresh solution) because prolonged storage in sucrose reduces the staining quality. 4) Finally, once slides have been stained and cover slipped, they should be given adequate time to dry before visualization with a microscope. If slides are not permitted to adequately air dry, the tissue may darken, reducing successful visualization of cortical neurons.
Stable changes in psychological functioning and behavioral responses that occur in response to experiences are believed to be facilitated by reorganization of neuronal morphology and synaptic connectivity 17. As these structural changes provide a measurable resource for experience-dependent plasticity, the use of a reliable staining procedure is important. This vibratome based Golgi-Cox staining procedure provides reliable staining of fine branches and dendritic spines that may not be evident with other protocols such as celloidin-embedding. The distinctiveness of the Golgi-Cox procedure stems from its capacity to only stain a small fraction of neuronal elements (1-10%), which permits tracing of single neurons for long distances. Despite the fact that only a small fraction of neurons are impregnated with the stain, cells that are rendered visible, maintain all features including cell body, dendrites, dendritic spines and axons. Moreover, when the staining procedure is carried out correctly, the stained cells stand out clearly and distinctly against a transparent background because other cortical structures remain unstained and transparent. Owing to the realization that persistent changes in outward functioning must be related to the plasticity of the nervous system, i.e. the capability of neurons to modify their structure and connectivity, the Golgi-Cox staining procedure provides researchers with a reliable technique to visualize and quantify this plasticity.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
This work is funded by NSERC grants to BK and RG. The authors would also like to thank Kehe Xie and Russell Hosain for their Golgi-Cox staining expertise.
Name of Material/ Equipment | Company | Catalog Number | Comments/Description |
Potassium Dichromate | Fisher | P188 | |
Mercuric Chloride | Fisher | M1561 | |
Potassium Chromate | Fisher | P220 | |
Ammonium Hydroxide | Fisher | A669-500 | |
Kodak Rapid Fix | Vistek | Kodak 146 4016 | |
EtOH-95 & Anhydrous | Commercial Alcohols | No Cat Numbers | All other Et-OH are dilutions |
Swiffers- Soft Feather-Like dusters | Safeway | Can be found at most grocery stores | |
Sucrose | Sigma-Aldrich | S-9378 | |
HemoDe | Electron Microscopy Sciences | 23410 | |
Permount | Fisher | Sp15 | |
Slides | VWR | 160004-365 | |
Coverslips | VWR | 062011-9 |