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Abstract
Stroke is a devastating brain disorder. The pathophysiology of stroke is associated
with an impaired excitation-inhibition balance in the area that surrounds the infarct
core after the insult, the peri-infarct zone. Here we exposed slices from adult mouse
prefrontal cortex to oxygen-glucose deprivation and reoxygenation (OGD-RO) to study
ischemia-induced changes in the activity of excitatory pyramidal neurons and inhibitory
parvalbumin (PV)-positive interneurons. We found that during current-clamp recordings,
PV-positive interneurons were more vulnerable to OGD-RO than pyramidal neurons as
indicated by the lower percentage of recovery of PV-positive interneurons. However,
neither the amplitude of OGD-induced depolarization observed in current-clamp mode
nor the OGD-associated current observed in voltage-clamp mode differed between the
two cell types. Large amplitude, presumably action-potential dependent, spontaneous
postsynaptic inhibitory currents recorded from pyramidal neurons were less frequent
after OGD-RO than in control condition. Disynaptic inhibitory postsynaptic currents
(dIPSCs) in pyramidal neurons produced predominantly by PV-positive interneurons were
reduced by OGD-RO. Following OGD-RO, dendrites of PV-positive interneurons exhibited
more pathological beading than those of pyramidal neurons. Our data support the hypothesis
that the differential vulnerability to ischemia-like conditions of excitatory and
inhibitory neurons leads to the altered excitation-inhibition balance associated with
stroke pathophysiology.