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9521 - 9530 of 52809 results
  • Journal Article
    Early Inflammation Dysregulates Neuronal Circuit Formation In Vivo via Upregulation of IL-1β | Journal of Neuroscience
    Neuroimmune interaction during development is strongly implicated in the pathogenesis of neurodevelopmental disorders, but the mechanisms that cause neuronal circuit dysregulation are not well understood. We performed in vivo imaging of the developing retinotectal system in the larval zebrafish to characterize the effects of immune system activation on refinement of an archetypal sensory processing circuit. Acute inflammatory insult induced hyperdynamic remodeling of developing retinal axons in larval fish and increased axon arbor elaboration over days. Using calcium imaging in GCaMP6s transgenic fish, we showed that these morphologic changes were accompanied by a shift toward decreased visual acuity in tectal cells. This finding was supported by poorer performance in a visually guided behavioral task. We further found that the pro-inflammatory cytokine, interleukin-1β (IL-1β), is upregulated by the inflammatory insult, and that downregulation of IL-1β abrogated the effects of inflammation on axonal dynami...
    Jul 21, 2021 Cynthia M. Solek
  • Journal Article
    Anticipatory Energization Revealed by Pupil and Brain Activity Guides Human Effort-Based Decision Making | Journal of Neuroscience
    An organism's fitness is determined by how it chooses to adapt to effort in response to challenges. Exertion of effort correlates with activity in dorsomedial prefrontal cortex (dmPFC) and noradrenergic pupil dilation, but little is known about the role of these neurophysiological processes for decisions about future efforts, they may provide anticipatory energization to help us accept the challenge or a cost representation that is weighted against the expected rewards. Here, we provide evidence for the former, by measuring pupil and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) brain responses while 52 human participants (29 females) chose whether to exert efforts to obtain rewards. Both pupil-dilation rate and dmPFC fMRI activity increased with anticipated effort level, and these increases differ depending on the choice outcome: they were stronger when participants chose to accept the challenge compared with when the challenge was declined. Crucially, the choice-dependent modulation of pupil and brain-act...
    Jul 21, 2021 Irma T. Kurniawan
  • Journal Article
    Table of Contents — July 21, 2021, 41 (29) | Journal of Neuroscience
    Jul 21, 2021
  • Journal Article
    Multiple Adjoining Word- and Face-Selective Regions in Ventral Temporal Cortex Exhibit Distinct Dynamics | Journal of Neuroscience
    The map of category-selectivity in human ventral temporal cortex (VTC) provides organizational constraints to models of object recognition. One important principle is lateral-medial response biases to stimuli that are typically viewed in the center or periphery of the visual field. However, little is known about the relative temporal dynamics and location of regions that respond preferentially to stimulus classes that are centrally viewed, such as the face- and word-processing networks. Here, word- and face-selective regions within VTC were mapped using intracranial recordings from 36 patients. Partially overlapping, but also anatomically dissociable patches of face- and word-selectivity, were found in VTC. In addition to canonical word-selective regions along the left posterior occipitotemporal sulcus, selectivity was also located medial and anterior to face-selective regions on the fusiform gyrus at the group level and within individual male and female subjects. These regions were replicated using 7 Tesl...
    Jul 21, 2021 Matthew J. Boring
  • Journal Article
    Physiological Diversity Influences Detection of Stimulus Envelope and Fine Structure in Neurons of the Medial Superior Olive | Journal of Neuroscience
    The neurons of the medial superior olive (MSO) of mammals extract azimuthal information from the delays between sounds reaching the two ears [interaural time differences (ITDs)]. Traditionally, all models of sound localization have assumed that MSO neurons represent a single population of cells with specialized and homogeneous intrinsic and synaptic properties that enable the detection of synaptic coincidence on a timescale of tens to hundreds of microseconds. Here, using patch-clamp recordings from large populations of anatomically labeled neurons in brainstem slices from male and female Mongolian gerbils ( Meriones unguiculatu s), we show that MSO neurons are far more physiologically diverse than previously appreciated, with properties that depend regionally on cell position along the topographic map of frequency. Despite exhibiting a similar morphology, neurons in the MSO exhibit subthreshold oscillations of differing magnitudes that drive action potentials at rates between 100 and 800 Hz. These oscilla...
    Jul 21, 2021 Brian J. Bondy
  • Journal Article
    Stimulus Contrast Affects Spatial Integration in the Lateral Geniculate Nucleus of Macaque Monkeys | Journal of Neuroscience
    Gain-control mechanisms adjust neuronal responses to accommodate the wide range of stimulus conditions in the natural environment. Contrast gain control and extraclassical surround suppression are two manifestations of gain control that govern the responses of neurons in the early visual system. Understanding how these two forms of gain control interact has important implications for the detection and discrimination of stimuli across a range of contrast conditions. Here, we report that stimulus contrast affects spatial integration in the lateral geniculate nucleus of alert macaque monkeys (male and female), whereby neurons exhibit a reduction in the strength of extraclassical surround suppression and an expansion in the preferred stimulus size with low-contrast stimuli compared with high-contrast stimuli. Effects were greater for magnocellular neurons than for parvocellular neurons, indicating stream-specific interactions between stimulus contrast and stimulus size. Within the magnocellular pathway, contra...
    Jul 21, 2021 Darlene R. Archer
  • Journal Article
    Substantia Nigra Integrity Correlates with Sequential Working Memory in Parkinson's Disease | Journal of Neuroscience
    Maintaining and manipulating sequences online is essential for daily activities such as scheduling a day. In Parkinson's disease (PD), sequential working memory deficits have been associated with altered regional activation and functional connectivity in the basal ganglia. This study demonstrates that the substantia nigra (SN) integrity correlated with basal ganglia function and sequencing performance in 29 patients with PD (17 women) and 29 healthy controls (HCs; 18 women). In neuromelanin-sensitive structural magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), PD patients showed smaller SNs than HCs. In a digit-ordering task with functional MRI (fMRI), participants either recalled sequential digits in the original order (pure recall) or rearranged the digits and recalled the new sequence (reorder and recall). PD patients performed less accurately than HCs, accompanied by the caudate and pallidal hypoactivation, subthalamic hyperactivation, and weakened functional connectivity between the bilateral SN and all three basal g...
    Jul 21, 2021 Wenyue Liu
  • Journal Article
    Distinct Neural Representations of Content and Ordinal Structure in Auditory Sequence Memory | Journal of Neuroscience
    Two forms of information, frequency (content) and ordinal position (structure), have to be stored when retaining a sequence of auditory tones in working memory (WM). However, the neural representations and coding characteristics of content and structure, particularly during WM maintenance, remain elusive. Here, in two EEG studies in human participants (both sexes), by transiently perturbing the “activity-silent” WM retention state and decoding the reactivated WM information, we demonstrate that content and structure are stored in a dissociative manner with distinct characteristics throughout WM process. First, each tone in the sequence is associated with two codes in parallel, characterizing its frequency and ordinal position, respectively. Second, during retention, a structural retrocue successfully reactivates structure but not content, whereas a following white noise triggers content but not structure. Third, structure representation remains stable, whereas content code undergoes a dynamic transformatio...
    Jul 21, 2021 Ying Fan
  • Journal Article
    Arcuate and Preoptic Kisspeptin neurons exhibit differential projections to hypothalamic nuclei and exert opposite postsynaptic effects on hypothalamic paraventricular and dorsomedial nuclei in the female mouse | eNeuro
    Kisspeptin (Kiss1) neurons provide indispensable excitatory input to GnRH neurons, which is important for the coordinated release of gonadotropins, estrous cyclicity and ovulation. However, Kiss1 neurons also send projections to many other brain regions within and outside the hypothalamus. Two different populations of Kiss1 neurons, one in the arcuate nucleus (Kiss1ARH) and another in the anteroventral periventricular and periventricular nucleus (Kiss1AVPV/PeN) of the hypothalamus are differentially regulated by ovarian steroids, and are believed to form direct contacts with GnRH neurons as well as other neurons. To investigate the projection fields from Kiss1AVPV/PeN and Kiss1ARH neurons in female mice, we used anterograde projection analysis, and channelrhodopsin-assisted circuit mapping (CRACM) to explore their functional input to select target neurons within the paraventricular (PVH) and dorsomedial (DMH) hypothalamus, key pre-autonomic nuclei. Cre-dependent viral (AAV1-DIO-ChR2 mCherry) vectors were i...
    Jul 19, 2021 Todd L. Stincic
  • Journal Article
    Within-trial persistence of learned behavior as a dissociable behavioral component in hippocampus-dependent memory tasks: a potential post-learning role of immature neurons in the adult dentate gyrus | eNeuro
    The term “memory strength” generally refers to how well one remembers something but more precisely it contains multiple modalities, such as how easily, how accurately, how confidently and how vividly we remember it. In human, these modalities of memory strength are dissociable. In this study, we asked whether we can isolate a behavioral component that is dissociable from others in hippocampus-dependent memory tasks in mice, which potentially reflect a modality of memory strength. Using a virus-mediated inducible method, we ablated immature neurons in the dentate gyrus in mice after we trained the mice with hippocampus-dependent memory tasks normally. In memory retrieval tests, these ablated mice initially show intact performance. However, the ablated mice ceased learned behavior prematurely within a trial compared with control mice. In addition, the ablated mice showed shorter duration of individual episodes of learned behavior. Both affected behavioral measurements point to persistence of learned behavior...
    Jul 19, 2021 Alessandro Luchetti
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