This protocol shows how to set up a reliable HFS method in mice. Neurons throughout the hippocampal dentate gyrus are electrically stimulated by HFS directly and indirectly in vivo. Neuronal activity and molecular signaling are examined by c-fos and Notch1 immunofluorescent staining, respectively; neurogenesis is quantified by bromodeoxyuridine labeling assay.
Electrical high-frequency stimulation (HFS), using implanted electrodes targeting various brain regions, has been proven as an effective treatment for various neurological and psychiatric disorders. HFS in the deep region of the brain, also named deep-brain stimulation (DBS), is becoming increasingly important in clinical trials. Recent progress in the field of high-frequency DBS (HF-DBS) surgery has begun to spread the possibility of utilizing this invasive technique to other situations, such as treatment for major depression disorder (MDD), obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), and so on.
Despite these expanding indications, the underlying mechanisms of the beneficial effects of HF-DBS remain enigmatic. To address this question, one approach is to use implanted electrodes that sparsely activate distributed subpopulations of neurons by HFS. It has been reported that HFS in the anterior nucleus of the thalamus could be used for the treatment of refractory epilepsy in the clinic. The underlying mechanisms might be related to the increased neurogenesis and altered neuronal activity. Therefore, we are interested in exploring the physiological alterations by the detection of neuronal activity as well as neurogenesis in the mouse dentate gyrus (DG) before and after HFS treatment.
In this manuscript, we describe methodologies for HFS to target the activation of the DG in mice, directly or indirectly and in an acute or chronic manner. In addition, we describe a detailed protocol for the preparation of brain slices for c-fos and Notch1 immunofluorescent staining to monitor the neuronal activity and signaling activation and for bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) labeling to determine the neurogenesis after the HF-DBS induction. The activation of the neuronal activity and neurogenesis after the HF-DBS treatment provides direct neurobiological evidence and potential therapeutic benefits. Particularly, this methodology can be modified and applied to target other interested brain regions such as the basal ganglia and subthalamic regions for specific brain disorders in the clinic.
HF-DBS is a neurosurgical technology for electrical stimulation in the brain, which has been developed since the 1870s1. In the late 1980s, HFS was first used as a potential therapeutic intervention for Parkinson's disease and other movement disorders2. In the past few decades, HF-DBS has been more and more widely used in the treatment of brain disorders which are currently untreatable by a traditional therapeutic strategy. Particularly, due to the accuracy improvement of the HFS electrode, the highly effective outcomes, and minimal side effects, the number of brain disorders treated by HF-DBS has significantly increased over the past decades3,4,5. For example, HF-DBS has been approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for the treatment of Parkinson's disease (PD), Alzheimer's type dementia, essential tremor, and other types of movement disorders2,6,7. In PD patients, the dopaminergic medication is reduced up to 50% during HF-DBS8. In addition to the successful treatment of movement disorders, HF-DBS has also demonstrated its powerful effects in the treatment of psychiatric diseases in the clinic, and for cognitive augmentation as well2,9,10,11. It should be noted that the research of HFS for the treatment of other psychiatric disorders are in various stages, offering much promise to patients12.
Although many studies have demonstrated that a focal HFS has both local and remote effects throughout the brain13, the neurological and molecular mechanisms of the effects remain elusive2,14. In the clinic, therapeutic HF-DBS is usually applied in a long-term manner for the treatment of Parkinson's disease and chronic pain, etc. Many opinions are raised to explain the improvement generated by an HF-DBS treatment, among which one possibility that the HFS current modulates the neuronal network activity, probably by a repetitive depolarization of the axons in the vicinity of the implanted HFS electrode. Or, HF-DBS may change the discharge rate of the output neurons and the projected targets. Also, HF-DBS may lead to long-term synaptic changes, including long-term potentiation (LTP) and long-term depression (LTD), which may contribute to a symptomatic improvement. So far, it is still unclear whether HFS influences the key molecular events that regulate cellular processes such as adult neurogenesis in vivo. Several lines of studies have demonstrated that HFS in rodents could mimic similar neural responses of clinically applied DBS15,16. To understand the underlying cellular mechanisms of HF-DBS, in this study, we first set up an in vivo HFS methodology in mice in an acute (one day) or chronic (five days) manner. Secondly, we set up an activation analysis methodology to determine the alteration of the neuronal activity and neurogenesis after an HF-DBS delivery.
Given that the neuronal production from neural stem cells is abundant during the embryonic development but continues throughout adult life, the hippocampal subgranular zone is one of the major areas where the neurogenesis occurs. The process of neurogenesis is influenced by many physiological and pathological factors. In certain epileptic cases, the hippocampal neurogenesis is dramatically decreased17,18. In addition, a single electroconvulsive therapy could significantly increase the neuronal production in the dentate gyrus19. These observations suggest that the electrophysiological activity plays a critical role in the regulation of adult neurogenesis and synaptic plasticity in hippocampal neurons. Therefore, to further demonstrate the effects of HF-DBS on neuronal activity and neurogenesis, we first carry out an immunostaining assay of the immediate early gene (IEG) c-fos which is a well-known marker of short-term neuronal activity resulting from experience20. Notch1 signaling is also detected to monitor the signaling activation after the HFS delivery21,22. Moreover, we also detect the neuronal production by a BrdU labeling analysis after the HF-DBS induction in various manners, though BrdU staining can also be a marker for gliogenesis.
In the present study, two HFS methodologies are adapted to target the activation of the hippocampal DG directly and indirectly. The electrode is implanted into the DG directly or implanted into the medial perforant path (PP) which sends projections to activate the DG neurons. For the HF-DBS induction, a programmable stimulator is presented for a continuous stimulation via the fixed electrode onto the mouse head. To determine the effects of HFS on neuronal activation and neurogenesis, we detect the expression of c-fos and Notch1 by immunofluorescent staining and the number of BrdU-incorporated positive neurons in the hippocampal DG region, respectively, after the HFS treatment. Particularly, the effects of the HF-DBS on the neurogenesis in the DG are compared between an acute and a chronic stimulation manner, or between a direct and an indirect stimulation manner, respectively.
Animal experimental procedures followed the institutional guidelines of the Beijing Institute of Basic Medical Sciences (Beijing, China) and the Chinese governmental regulations for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals. The mice (adult male, 26 ~ 30 g) were housed and kept at a constant temperature of 23 °C, with water and food ad libitum, under a 12-h light/12-h dark cycle (lights on at 7:00 a.m.). All experimental procedures were performed during the light cycle.
1. Surgical Preparation
NOTE: A custom electrode was homemade using the method modified from Halpern's report23.
2. High-Frequency Stimulation Surgery25,26
NOTE: In this step, an electrode is unilaterally implanted into the dorsal DG or medial PP area, a part of the hippocampus with critical roles in episodic learning and memory.
3. Immunofluorescence Staining and Bromodeoxyuridine Labeling29
Following the HF-DBS stimulation to the hippocampal DG subregion directly or the PP subregion to activate the DG indirectly via inserted electrodes using the stereotactic adjustments, the rodents were anesthetized with pentobarbital and sampled 3 h after the last HF-DBS stimulation for the c-fos and Notch1 immunostaining. For the BrdU staining, 36 h after the last BrdU injection after 1 day or 5 days of HF-DBS stimulation, the rodents were anesthetized with pentobarbital for the preparation of brain sections. Figure 3 shows that the expression of c-fos was significantly increased in the ipsilateral side of the DG. In addition, the c-fos expression in the contralateral side of the DG was also upregulated compared to the no-HF-DBS stimulation controls who showed almost no expression of a c-fos signal. Based on the Notch1-specific immunofluorescent staining in brain slices, as shown in Supplementary Figure 1, we further demonstrated that the Notch1 signaling could also be activated in the adult hippocampal DG after the HFS stimulation by an induction of the depolarization of neurons in the PP (also refer to the raw data supplied as Supplementary File 1).
In addition to the direct HF-DBS stimulation in the DG subregion, Figure 4A shows the position and the HF-DBS stimulation site of the electrode tip, which was installed in the medial PP. Figure 4B demonstrated that the HF-DBS stimulation in the PP not only significantly increased the level of the c-fos expression in the ipsilateral side of the DG, but also increased the expression of c-fos in the contralateral side of the DG compared to the no-HF-DBS stimulation controls.
Based on the BrdU labeling analysis of the brain slices, as shown in Figures 5A – 5C, we further demonstrated that neurogenesis can also be activated in the adult hippocampal DG after a chronic (5 days) HF-DBS stimulation in the DG directly. A chronic HF-DBS stimulation in the DG not only significantly upregulated the neurogenesis in the ipsilateral side but also increased the neurogenesis in the contralateral side compared to the no-HF-DBS stimulation controls. However, the acute (1 day) stimulation failed to induce an upregulation of the neurogenesis either in ipsilateral side or in the contralateral side of the DG. As shown in Figure 5D, either in the acute stimulation group or in the chronic stimulation group, an indirect HF-DBS in the PP could not change the neurogenesis level in the hippocampal DG.
Figure 1. Schematic representation of the brain targets of the electrode tip and parameters of the HFS. (A) The neuronal projection of the medial perforant path into an inferior blade of the dentate gyrus is indicated. The position of the inserted electrodes (in purple) to stimulate either the DG directly or the PP subregion are indicated. (B) The HFS parameter is indicated as 6 series of 6 trains of 6 pulses at 400 Hz, with 100 ms between the trains and 20 s between the series. CA = the Cornu Ammonis; DG = the dentate gyrus; PP = the perforant path. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 2. Interface and parameters of the multistimulator. The stimulator was connected to a digital-analog converter and activated by proprietary software. The stimulus type of the HFS was monophasic. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 3. Neuronal activation in the DG in response to the HF-DBS treatment directly. (A) The electrode tip (the white unfilled box) was positioned above the DG region directly (AP -2.1/ML ±1.0/ DV +1.8) with or without the HFS. This panel shows the immunostaining of the coronal section of the brain slices witha c-fos antibody in the control and the HFS groups. DAPI blue staining was used to indicate the location of the hippocampal nuclei. The scale bar = 100 µm. (B) This panel shows a quantitative analysis of the immunofluorescence signal density. In the ipsilateral side of the DG, the neurons were significantly activated with a high expression of c-fos, and the c-fos expression in the contralateral side of the DG is also relatively increased compared to the c-fos expression of control mice without an HFS treatment. Means ± SEM, one-way ANOVA, F2,24 = 216, P < 0.0001, Bonferroni post hoc test, ***P < 0.001, nno-sti = 9 (3 slices from 3 mice), nHFS Contra = 9 (3 slices/mouse from 3 mice), nHFS IPS = 9 (3 slices/mouse from 3 mice). Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 4. Neuronal activation in the DG in response to the HFS in the PP subregion. (A) The electrode tip (the white unfilled box) was positioned in the medial PP at the position of AP -3.8, ML ±3.0, and DV +3.0, with or without the HFS. (B) This panel shows the immunostaining of the coronal section of the brain slices witha c-fos antibody in the control and the HFS groups. DAPI blue staining was used to indicate the location of the hippocampal nuclei. The scale bar = 100 µm. (C) This panel shows a quantitative analysis of the immunofluorescent density. The HFS treatment in the PP could significantly activate ipsilateral neurons in the DG with a high expression of c-fos. The expression of c-fos in the contralateral DG is also relatively increased compared to the c-fos expression of the control mice without an HFS treatment. Means ± SEM, one-way ANOVA, F2,24 = 189.3, P < 0.0001, Bonferroni post hoc test, ***P < 0.001, nno-sti = 9 (3 slices from 3 mice), nHFS Contra = 9 (3 slices/mouse from 3 mice), nHFS IPS = 9 (3 slices/mouse from 3 mice). Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 5. Distinct activation of neurogenesis in the DG in response to HFS in DG and PP respectively. (A) This panel shows an experimental paradigm for the HFS treatment and the generation of BrdU-labeled proliferating neurons in the DG. The animals were divided into an acute and a chronic group. In the acute group, the mice were subjected to an HFS treatment 2x on day 5. In the chronic group, the mice were subjected to an HFS treatment for 5 days (from day 1 to day 5, 2x per day). Then, the animals in both groups were injected with BrdU (50 mg/kg, 6x by 2-h intervals) on day 6. On day 8, the animals were anesthetized and perfused for the preparation of cryostat sections. (B) This panel shows the immunofluorescent staining of BrdU (in green) post-HF-DBS in the DG. (C) A quantitative analysis of the neuronal production indicated that the acute (2x in 1 day) stimulation in the DG could not enhance the neurogenesis, while the chronic (10x within 5 days) stimulation in the DG significantly upregulated the neurogenesis. Compared to the control group, the number of BrdU labeling cells increased significantly in the chronic group both in the ipsilateral and contralateral hemisphere. The scale bar = 100 µm. Means ± SEM, two-way ANOVA, stimulation type effect F2, 14 = 97.09, P < 0.0001, hemisphere effect F1, 14 = 1.137, P = 0.3044, Bonferroni post hoc test, ***P < 0.001, nControl = 3 (3 slices from 3 mice), n1 day = 4 (4 slices from 3 mice), n5 days = 3 (3 slices from 3 mice). (D) This panel shows the immunofluorescence staining of BrdU (in green) post-HF-DBS in the PP subregion. (E) A quantitative analysis of the neuronal production indicated that either the acute (twice in one day) or chronic (10x in 5 days) stimulation in the PP could not enhance the neurogenesis significantly. The number of BrdU labeling cells was relatively stable with or without the HFS treatment. The scale bar = 100 µm. Means ± SEM, two-way ANOVA, stimulation type effect F2, 16 = 0.9025, P = 0.4252, hemisphere effect F1, 16 = 1.402, P = 0.2537, Bonferroni post hoc test, P > 0.05, nControl = 3 (3 slices from 3 mice), n1 day = 3 (3 slices from 3 mice), n5 days = 5 (5 slices from 3 mice). Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Supplementary Figure 1. Expression of Notch1 in the DG in response to HF-DBS treatment. (A) This panel shows the immunofluorescent staining of Notch1 (in green) 3 h after the HF-DBS in the DG. This figure was cited and modified from Feng's report21. (B) A quantitative analysis of the fluorescence indicated that the HFS in the DG could enhance the expression of Notch1. The scale bar = 100 µm. Means ± SEM, student t-test, t = 12, ***P < 0.001, nno-sti = 9 (3 slices/mouse from 3 mice), nHFS = 9 (3 slices/mouse from 3 mice). Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Supplementary File 1. Raw Data. Please click here to download this file.
The HF-DBS technique has been widely used as a powerful tool for the treatment of many neurological disorders since the 1990s. So far, the landmark work of HF-DBS is for the treatment of Parkinson's disease and essential tremor, which has attracted much attention and interest both in the clinic and scientific community. There are various types of ongoing HF-DBS studies by many groups for HF-DBS's therapeutic application in certain neurological and psychiatric disorders32,33. Some of these studies are currently in various stages of clinical trials2,34. Although HF-DBS should bring significant benefit, stimulation side effects can occur even with a perfect placement in the brain, such as negative changes in mood and thinking, etc., which are reversible and can be avoided with modifications of the stimulation settings.
In addition to the significant progress of the HF-DBS technology accumulated from the clinical trials over the past decades, the studies of HF-DBS in live animals also presents the opportunity to understand the physiological changes and neurobiological mechanisms induced by the electrical stimulation. In this manuscript, we have described a modified HF-DBS methodology performed in mice to stimulate the hippocampal DG subregion with an HFS directly or indirectly. Although the described protocol is performed in rodents, HFS response studies have also been successfully conducted in other model organisms, including pigs35. For this technique, stereotactic surgery can also be used for a potential nucleus-targeted stimulation to test out the efficacy of the HFS using certain animal models with neurological and psychiatric disorders. The conclusions drawn from such studies should readily translate to the clinic, specifically for the refinement of the HFS at existing targets. Note that in contrast to the series of multiple exposures of HF-DBS in the clinic, in this methodological study, we chose a single and short-term exposure of HFS to stimulate and induce the neuronal activity in the hippocampal DG, the parameter and part of the paradigm of HFS that was previously reported to induce LTP in the hippocampus slices21,28.
General limitations of HF-DBS have been extensively reviewed elsewhere24,25. One of the challenges for the experiment here is also the need for an excellent surgical technique and for the ongoing care of surgical anatomical locus. To correctly and precisely implant the electrode into the target nucleus for stimulation, one of the key processes is a successful surgery by a skilled technician to avoid unnecessary blood vessel injury and the misplacement of the electrode. Moreover, further anatomical and histological analysis of the brain specimen is also needed to confirm the proper targeting of the electrode after an HFS. This is also one of the advantages of this approach, to clearly demonstrate the corrected targeting of the electrode after the operation in an intact animal brain. Many of the details provided in this protocol can be readily adapted for a long-term stimulation via an implanted stimulator in the animal. It should be noted that it is also amenable to alternate stimulation parameters in potential therapeutic brain targets with different HFS delivery patterns. However, this article reported on a single-unit acute HFS delivered by a programmable stimulator unit to understand the cellular changes after the electrical stimulation.
Although HF-DBS serves as an alternative option for the treatment of neurological and psychiatric disorders in the clinic for several years, the mechanisms underlying its effectiveness remain poorly understood. Considering the use and future improvements of HF-DBS, a more pragmatic approach is required. As a developing tool, the HFS technique needs further technical innovation and mechanistic discovery. To study the cellular and molecular mechanisms of HF-DBS, a global transcriptome analysis based on high-throughput sequencing technologies will provide important information to understand the molecular events and signaling changes after an HF-DBS induction36. In addition to the unbiased screening strategy, based on the examination of existing molecular candidates which have been proven to respond to neuronal depolarization, it will probably also provide important clues to identify the key effectors responsible for HFS with. C-fos is upregulated in response to intrinsic neuronal activity, so looking at its expression would at least provide us a landscape of neurons fired recently37. However, c-fos should not only be used to just reflect activities since it also appears to mark neurons undergoing LTP37. Previous works, including ours, have demonstrated that Notch1 plays a critical role in the synaptic plasticity in mature hippocampal neurons and is essential for adult neurogenesis in vivo21,22. In terms of this situation, a detailed quantitative and spatiotemporal localization of key candidates should be carefully characterized and described pre- and post-HFS induction by an immunohistochemical analysis of the c-fos expression. Studies like this will provide direct evidence to demonstrate the changes of gene expression patterns in various brain regions in response to an HFS21, which will also be beneficial to reveal the cellular changes such as neuronal activation, neurogenesis, or neurodegeneration.
It should also be noted that despite the advantages of an HF-DBS application in the clinic, due to the fact that the outcomes of the stimulation effect are tightly associated with the stimulation parameters and target location in the brain, the cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying HFS's effects might be very complicated. In this study, we further carried out BrdU labeling to investigate the acute and chronic effects of HFS on adult neurogenesis. Although BrdU staining can be a marker for both neurogenesis and gliogenesis, based on previous reports, the majority of increased BrdU positive neurons observed at the SGZ after an HF-DBS treatment should be the proliferative adult neural progenitors21,38,39. Regardless of the complexity of the mechanisms underlying the HFS treatment, the methods and results we described in this manuscript provide direct evidence that repetitive high-frequency electrical stimulation to activate the hippocampal DG could significantly induce the activation of neuronal activity and neurogenesis in vivo.
In summary, we demonstrated that an HF-DBS can improve the neuronal activity and neurogenesis of mice, compared to the neuronal activity and neurogenesis of control mice who did not undergo an HF-DBS. This may advance the scientific understanding regarding cognitive effects and stimulation patterning of HFS in vivo. The identification of neuronal activation after an acute HF-DBS treatment directly or indirectly in vivo demonstrates that an HFS treatment has significant effects on the synaptic transmission of local and long-range connections. The rapid induction of neuronal activation after an HF-DBS treatment provides a powerful tool to manipulate the impaired synaptic transmission or desynchronization in many neurological and psychiatric disorders such as MDD. On the other hand, the induction of neurogenesis after a chronic and direct, but not acute or indirect HF-DBS treatment suggests the distinct efficacy and functional variability between different electrical stimulation manners. Such findings provide direct evidence for the neural modulation and potential therapeutic benefits of HFS in the future. Taken together, HF-DBS will present substantial advantages for the treatment of neurological and psychiatric disorders by integrating the technological advances made in the clinic and the mechanistic progress made in the laboratory.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
Supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China Grants 31522029, 31770929 and 31371149 (to Haitao Wu), Program 973 (2014CB542203) from the State Key Development Program for Basic Research of China (to Haitao Wu), and Grant Z161100000216154 from the Beijing Municipal Science and Technology Commission (to Haitao Wu). The authors thank all the members of the Haitao Wu laboratory for their encouragement and discussions. The authors are extremely grateful to Zhenwei Liu for his help with debugging the apparatus.
Brain stereotaxic instrument | Stoelting | 51730D | Stereotactic intracranial implantation for mouse |
Stimulator | A-M systems | Model 3800 | MultiStim 8-Channel programmable stimulator |
Dental driller | Saeshin Precision Co., Ltd | STRONG 90 | For drilling and crainiotomy |
Burr | Meisinger | HM1 005# | For drilling and crainiotomy |
Digidata 1550 Digitizer | Molecular Devices | AXON 1550 | High-resolution data acquisition |
Cryotome | Thermo Fisher Scientific | Thermo Cryotome FSE | Cutting frozen sections of specimens |
Confocal microscope | Olympus | FV-1200 | Japan, with 20x Objective (NA 0.45) |
Mouse surgery tools | F.S.T. | 14084-08,11254-20,16109-14 | Scissors, forceps, bone cutter, holders etc. |
Pentobarbital sodium | R&D systems | 4579 | 20-50mg/kg for i.p. injection |
Penicillin G | Sigma-Aldrich | P3032 | 75,000 U for i.m. injection |
Carprofen | Sigma-Aldrich | SML1713 | 5-10mg/kg, for s.c. injection |
4% Paraformaldehyde (PFA) | Beijing Solarbio Sci-Tech Co. | P1110 | stocking solution for tissue fixation |
Phosphate buffer (PBS) | Invitrogen | 10010023 | pH7.4, 500ml in stocking |
Tissue-Tek O.C.T. compound | Sakura | 4583 | Formulation of water-soluble glycols and resins |
anti-BrdU antibody | Abcam | ab6326 | Dilutions:1/800 |
anti-c-fos antibody | Abcam | ab209794 | Dilutions:1/500 |
Goat Anti-Rabbit IgG (Alexa Fluor 568) | Thermo Fisher Scientific | A11036 | Dilutions:1/500 |
Donkey Anti-Rat IgG (Alexa Fluor 488) | Jackson ImmunoResearch | 712-546-150 | Dilutions:1/500 |
Antifade mounting medium with DAPI | Vector Laboratories | H-1200 | Counterstaining with DAPI |
anti-Notch1 antibody (C-20) | Santa Cruz Biotech | sc-6014 | Dilutions:1/50 |
Donkey Anti-Goat IgG (Alexa Fluor 488) | Abcam | ab150073 | Dilutions:1/1000 |