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8591 - 8600
of 52804 results
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Journal ArticleG-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) coupled to Gi signaling, in particular downstream of monoaminergic neurotransmission, are posited to play a key role during developmental epochs (postnatal and juvenile) in shaping the emergence of adult anxiodepressive behaviors and sensorimotor gating. To address the role of Gi signaling in these developmental windows, we used a CaMKIIα-tTA::TRE hM4Di bigenic mouse line to express the hM4Di-DREADD (designer receptor exclusively activated by designer drugs) in forebrain excitatory neurons and enhanced Gi signaling via chronic administration of the DREADD agonist, clozapine- N -oxide (CNO) in the postnatal window (postnatal days 2–14) or the juvenile window (postnatal days 28–40). We confirmed that the expression of the HA-tagged hM4Di-DREADD was restricted to CaMKIIα-positive neurons in the forebrain, and that the administration of CNO in postnatal or juvenile windows evoked inhibition in forebrain circuits of the hippocampus and cortex, as indicated by a decline in exp...Jan 1, 2022
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Journal ArticleDespite significant progress in understanding neural coding, it remains unclear how the coordinated activity of large populations of neurons relates to what an observer actually perceives. Since neurophysiological differences must underlie differences among percepts, differentiation analysis —quantifying distinct patterns of neurophysiological activity—has been proposed as an “inside-out” approach that addresses this question. This methodology contrasts with “outside-in” approaches such as feature tuning and decoding analyses, which are defined in terms of extrinsic experimental variables. Here, we used two-photon calcium imaging in mice of both sexes to systematically survey stimulus-evoked neurophysiological differentiation (ND) in excitatory neuronal populations in layers (L)2/3, L4, and L5 across five visual cortical areas (primary, lateromedial, anterolateral, posteromedial, and anteromedial) in response to naturalistic and phase-scrambled movie stimuli. We find that unscrambled stimuli evoke greater ...Jan 1, 2022
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Journal ArticleHumans rely on precise proprioceptive feedback from our muscles, which is important in both the acquisition and execution of movements, to perform daily activities. Somatosensory input from the body shapes motor learning through central processes, as demonstrated for tasks using the arm, under active (self-generated) and passive conditions. Presently, we investigated whether passive movement training of the ankle increased proprioceptive acuity (psychophysical experiment) and whether it changed the peripheral proprioceptive afferent signal (microneurography experiment). In the psychophysical experiment, the ankle of 32 healthy human participants was moved passively using pairs of ramp-and-hold movements in different directions. In a pretraining test, participants made judgements about the movement direction in a two-alternative forced choice paradigm. Participants then underwent passive movement training, but only half were cued for learning, where a reference position was signaled by a sound and the parti...Jan 1, 2022
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Journal ArticleEmotional states provide an ever-present source of contextual information that should inform behavioral goals. Despite the ubiquity of emotional signals in our environment, the neural mechanisms underlying their influence on goal-directed action remains unclear. Prior work suggests that the lateral frontal pole (FPl) is uniquely positioned to integrate affective information into cognitive control representations. We used pattern similarity analysis to examine the content of representations in FPl and interconnected mid-lateral prefrontal and amygdala circuitry. Healthy participants (n=37; n=21 females) were scanned while undergoing an event-related Affective Go/No-Go task, which requires goal-oriented action selection during emotional processing. We found that FPl contained conjunctive emotion-action goal representations that were related to successful cognitive control during emotional processing. These representations differed from conjunctive emotion-action goal representations found in the basolateral ...Dec 30, 2021
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Journal ArticleEmploying postsynaptically tethered calcium sensor GCaMP, we investigated spontaneous synaptic transmission at individual active zones (AZs) at the Drosophila (both sexes) neuromuscular junction. Optical monitoring of GCaMP events coupled with focal electrical recordings of synaptic currents revealed “hot spots” of spontaneous transmission, which corresponded to transient states of elevated activity at selected AZs. The elevated spontaneous activity had two temporal components, one at a timescale of minutes and the other at a sub-second timescale. We developed a three-state model of AZ preparedness for spontaneous transmission and performed Monte-Carlo simulations of the release process, which produced an accurate quantitative description of the variability and time-course of spontaneous transmission at individual AZs. To investigate the mechanisms of elevated activity, we first focused on the protein complexin, which binds the SNARE protein complex and serves to clamp spontaneous fusion. Overexpression of...Dec 30, 2021
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Journal ArticleA main characteristic of dyslexia is poor use of sound categories. We now studied within-session learning of new sound categories in dyslexia – behaviorally and neurally, using fMRI. Human participants (males and females) with and without dyslexia were asked to discriminate which of two serially-presented tones had a higher pitch. The task was administered in two protocols, with and without a repeated reference frequency. The reference condition introduces regularity, and enhances frequency sensitivity in typically developing (TD) individuals. Enhanced sensitivity facilitates the formation of “high” and “low” pitch categories above and below this reference, respectively. We found that in TDs, learning was paralleled by a gradual decrease in activation of the primary auditory cortex, and reduced activation of the superior temporal gyrus and left posterior parietal cortex, which are important for utilizing sensory history. No such sensitivity was found among individuals with dyslexia (IDDs). Rather, IDDs sho...Dec 30, 2021
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Journal ArticleMechanisms underlying the initial accumulation of tau pathology across the human brain are largely unknown. We examined whether baseline factors including age, amyloid-β, and neural activity predicted longitudinal tau accumulation in temporal lobe regions that reflect distinct stages of tau pathogenesis. Seventy cognitively normal human older adults (77±6 years, 59% female) received ≥2 18F-Flortaucipir (FTP) and 11C-Pittsburgh Compound B (PiB) PET scans (2.5±1.1 years follow-up) to quantify tau and amyloid-β. Linear mixed effects models were used to calculate slopes of FTP change in entorhinal cortex (EC), parahippocampal cortex (PHC), and inferior temporal gyrus (IT), and slopes of global PiB change. Thirty-seven participants received functional MRI to measure baseline activation. Older age predicted EC tau accumulation, and baseline EC tau predicted subsequent tau accumulation in EC and PHC. In IT, however, baseline EC tau interacted with Aβ to predict IT tau accumulation. Higher baseline local activatio...Dec 29, 2021
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Journal ArticleIn the mammalian brain perivascular astrocytes (PAs) closely juxtapose blood vessels and are postulated to have important roles in the control of vascular physiology, including regulation of the blood-brain barrier (BBB). Deciphering specific functions for PAs in BBB biology, however, has been limited by the ability to distinguish these cells from other astrocyte populations. In order to characterize selective roles for PAs in vivo, a new mouse model has been generated in which the endogenous megalencephalic leukoencephalopathy with subcortical cysts 1 (Mlc1) gene drives expression of Cre fused to a mutated estrogen ligand-binding domain (Mlc1-T2A-CreERT2). This knock-in mouse model, which we term MLCT, allows for selective identification and tracking of PAs in the post-natal brain. We also demonstrate that MLCT-mediated ablation of PAs causes severe defects in BBB integrity, resulting in premature death. PA loss results in aberrant localization of Claudin 5 and VE-Cadherin in endothelial cell junctions as...Dec 29, 2021
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Journal ArticleWhile opioids produce both analgesia and side-effects by action at mu-opioid receptors (MOR), at spinal and supraspinal sites, potency of different opioids to produce these effects vary. While it has been suggested that these differences might be due to bias for signaling via β-arrestin versus G protein alpha (Gα), recent studies suggest that G protein biased MOR agonists still produce clinically important side-effects. Since bias also exists in the role of Gα subunits, we evaluated the role of Gαi/o subunits in analgesia, hyperalgesia, and hyperalgesic priming produced by fentanyl and morphine, in male rats. We found that intrathecal treatment with oligodeoxynucleotides antisense (AS-ODN) for Gαi2, Gαi3 and Gαo markedly attenuated hyperalgesia induced by sub-analgesic dose (sub-AD) fentanyl, while AS-ODN for Gαi1, as well as Gαi2 and Gαi3, but not Gαo, prevented hyperalgesia induced by sub-AD morphine. AS-ODN for Gαi1 and Gαi2 unexpectedly enhanced analgesia induced by analgesic dose (AD) fentanyl, while ...Dec 29, 2021
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Journal ArticleThe physical interaction and functional cross-talk among the different subtypes of neuronal nicotinic receptors (nAChRs) expressed in the various tissues is unknown. Here we have investigated this issue between the only two nAChRs subtypes expressed, the α7 and α3β4 subtypes, in a human native neuroendocrine cell (the chromaffin cell) using electrophysiological patch-clamp, fluorescence, and FRET techniques. Our data show that α7 and α3β4 receptor subtypes require their mutual and maximal efficacy of activation to increase their expression, to avoid their desensitization, and therefore, to increase their activity. In this way, after repetitive stimulation with acetylcholine (ACh), α7 and α3β4 receptor subtypes do not desensitize, but they do with choline. The nicotinic current increase associated with the α3β4 subtype is dependent on Ca2+. In addition, both receptor subtypes physically interact. Interaction and expression of both subtypes are reversibly reduced by tyrosine and serine/threonine phosphatases...Dec 28, 2021








