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3321 - 3330 of 52763 results
  • Journal Article
    Circadian regulation of the rod contribution to mesopic vision in mice | Journal of Neuroscience
    At intermediate (‘mesopic’) light levels, rods and cones are both active and can contribute to vision. This presents a challenge to the retina, since the visual responses originating with rods and cones are distinct, yet their visual responses must be seamlessly combined. The current study aimed to establish how the circadian clock regulates rod and/or cone vision in these conditions, given the strong time-of-day change in the reliance on each photoreceptor. Visual responses were recorded in the retina and visual thalamus of anaesthetised male mice at distinct circadian time points, and the method of receptor silent substitution was used to selectively stimulate different photoreceptor types. With stimuli designed to only activate rods, responses in the mesopic range were highly rhythmic, and peaked in amplitude in the subjective night. This rhythm was abolished following intravitreal injection of the gap junction blocker MFA, consistent with a circadian variation in the strength of electrical coupling of ...
    Oct 10, 2022 Annette E Allen
  • Journal Article
    Perinatal morphine exposure leads to sex-dependent executive function deficits and microglial changes in mice | eNeuro
    Children exposed prenatally to opioids are at an increased risk for behavioral problems and executive function deficits. The prefrontal cortex (PFC) and amygdala (AMG) regulate executive function and social behavior and are sensitive to opioids prenatally. Opioids can bind to toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) to activate microglia, which may be developmentally important for synaptic pruning. Therefore, we tested the effects of perinatal morphine exposure on executive function and social behavior in male and female mouse offspring, along with microglial and synaptic-related outcomes. Dams were injected once daily s.c. with saline (SAL, n = 8) or morphine (MO, 10 mg/kg, n = 12) throughout pre-gestation, gestation, and lactation until offspring were weaned on postnatal day (P)21. Male MO offspring had impairments in attention and accuracy in the 5-choice serial reaction time task (5CSRTT), while female MO offspring were less affected. Targeted gene expression analysis at P21 in the PFC identified alterations in mic...
    Oct 10, 2022 Brittany L. Smith
  • Journal Article
    Single nuclei analyses reveal transcriptional profiles and marker genes for diverse supraspinal populations | Journal of Neuroscience
    The mammalian brain contains numerous neurons distributed across forebrain, midbrain, and hindbrain that project axons to the lower spinal cord and work in concert to control movement and achieve homeostasis. Extensive work has mapped the anatomical location of supraspinal cell types and continues to establish specific physiological functions. The patterns of gene expression that typify and distinguish these disparate populations, however, are mostly unknown. Here, using adult mice of mixed sex, we combined retrograde labeling of supraspinal cell nuclei with fluorescence activated nuclei sorting and single nuclei RNA sequencing analyses to transcriptionally profile neurons that project axons from the brain to lumbar spinal cord. We identified fourteen transcriptionally distinct cell types and used a combination of established and newly identified marker genes to assign an anatomical location to each. To validate the putative marker genes, we visualized selected transcripts and confirmed selective expressio...
    Oct 6, 2022 Zachary Beine
  • Journal Article
    The theta paradox: 4-8 Hz EEG oscillations reflect both sleep pressure and cognitive control | Journal of Neuroscience
    Human electroencephalographic (EEG) oscillations characterize specific behavioral and vigilance states. The frequency of these oscillations is typically sufficient to distinguish a given state, however theta oscillations (4-8 Hz) have instead been found in near-opposite conditions of drowsiness during sleep deprivation and alert cognitive control. While the latter has been extensively studied and is often referred to as “frontal midline theta”, the former has been investigated far less but is considered a marker for sleep pressure during wake. In this study we investigated to what extent theta oscillations differed during cognitive tasks and sleep deprivation. We measured high-density EEG in 18 young healthy adults (9 female) performing 6 tasks under 3 levels of sleep deprivation. We found both cognitive load and sleep deprivation increased theta power in medial prefrontal cortical areas, however sleep deprivation caused additional increases in theta in many other, predominantly frontal, areas. The sources...
    Oct 6, 2022 Sophia Snipes
  • Journal Article
    Attentional enhancement of tracked stimuli in early visual cortex has limited capacity | Journal of Neuroscience
    Keeping track of the location of multiple moving objects is one of the well documented functions of visual attention. However, the mechanism of attentional selection that supports such continuous tracking is unclear. In particular, it has been proposed that target selection in early visual cortex occurs in parallel, with tracking errors arising due to attentional limitations at later processing stages. Here we examine whether, instead, total attentional capacity for enhancement of early visual processing of tracked targets is shared between all attended stimuli. If the magnitude of attentional facilitation of multiple tracked targets was a key limiting factor of tracking ability, then one should expect it to drop systematically with increasing set-size of tracked targets. Human observers (male and female) were instructed to track two, four, or six moving objects among a pool of identical distractors. Steady-state visual evoked potentials (SSVEPs) recorded during the tracking period revealed that the proces...
    Oct 6, 2022 Nika Adamian
  • Journal Article
    Modulation of hippocampal network oscillation by PICK1-dependent cell surface expression of mGlu3 receptors | Journal of Neuroscience
    Metabotropic glutamate receptor type 3 (mGlu3) controls the sleep/wake architecture which plays a role in the glutamatergic pathophysiology of schizophrenia. Interestingly, mGlu3 receptors expression is decreased in the brain of schizophrenic patients. However, little is known about the molecular mechanisms regulating mGlu3 receptors at the cell membrane. Subcellular receptor localization is strongly dependent on protein-protein interactions. Here we show that mGlu3 interacts with PICK1 and that this scaffolding protein is important for mGlu3 surface expression and function in hippocampal primary cultures. Disruption of their interaction via an mGlu3 C-terminal mimicking peptide or an inhibitor of the PDZ domain of PICK1 altered the functional expression of mGlu3 receptors in neurons. We next investigated the impact of disrupting the mGlu3-PICK1 interaction on hippocampal theta oscillations in vitro and in vivo in wild-type male mice. We found a decreased frequency of theta oscillations in organotypic hipp...
    Oct 6, 2022 Pola Tuduri
  • Journal Article
    Interdigitated Columnar Representation of Personal Space and Visual Space in Human Parietal Cortex | Journal of Neuroscience
    Personal space is the space around the body that people prefer to maintain between themselves and unfamiliar others. Intrusion into a given person’s personal space evokes discomfort and an urge to move away. Physiological studies in non-human primates suggest that defensive responses to intruding stimuli involve the parietal cortex. We hypothesized that the spatial encoding of interpersonal distance is initially transformed from purely sensory to more egocentric (e.g. related to personal space) within human parietal cortex. This hypothesis was tested using 7T fMRI at high spatial resolution (1.1 mm isotropic), in 7 subjects (4 female, 3 male). In response to visual stimuli presented at a range of virtual distances, we found two categories of distance encoding in two corresponding radially-extending columns of activity within parietal cortex. One set of columns (P columns) responded selectively to moving and stationary face images presented at virtual distances that were nearer (but not further) than each s...
    Oct 5, 2022 Roger B. H. Tootell
  • Journal Article
    Temporal Dynamics of Neural Responses in Human Visual Cortex | Journal of Neuroscience
    Neural responses to visual stimuli exhibit complex temporal dynamics, including subadditive temporal summation, response reduction with repeated or sustained stimuli (adaptation), and slower dynamics at low contrast. These phenomena are often studied independently. Here, we demonstrate these phenomena within the same experiment and model the underlying neural computations with a single computational model. We extracted time-varying responses from electrocorticographic recordings from patients presented with stimuli that varied in duration, interstimulus interval (ISI) and contrast. Aggregating data across patients from both sexes yielded 98 electrodes with robust visual responses, covering both earlier (V1–V3) and higher-order (V3a/b, LO, TO, IPS) retinotopic maps. In all regions, the temporal dynamics of neural responses exhibit several nonlinear features. Peak response amplitude saturates with high contrast and longer stimulus durations, the response to a second stimulus is suppressed for short ISIs and ...
    Oct 5, 2022 Iris I. A. Groen
  • Journal Article
    HCN2 Ion Channels Drive Pain in Rodent Models of Migraine | Journal of Neuroscience
    Migraine is believed to be initiated by neuronal activity in the CNS, that triggers excitation of nociceptive trigeminal ganglion (TG) nerve fibers innervating the meninges and thus causes a unilateral throbbing headache. Drugs that precipitate or potentiate migraine are known to elevate intracellular levels of the cyclic nucleotides cAMP or cGMP, while anti-migraine treatments couple to signaling pathways that reduce cAMP or cGMP, suggesting an involvement of these cyclic nucleotides in migraine. Members of the HCN ion channel family are activated by direct binding of cAMP or cGMP, suggesting in turn that a member of this family may be a critical trigger of migraine. Here, we show that pharmacological block or targeted genetic deletion of HCN2 abolishes migraine-like pain in three rodent migraine models (in both sexes). Induction of migraine-like pain in these models triggered expression of the protein C-FOS, a marker of neuronal activity, in neurons of the trigeminocervical complex (TCC), where TG neuron...
    Oct 5, 2022 Christoforos Tsantoulas
  • Journal Article
    Neuronal Encoding of Emotional Valence and Intensity in the Monkey Amygdala | Journal of Neuroscience
    Neuropsychological and neuroimaging studies have suggested that the primate amygdala plays an essential role in processing the emotional valence and intensity of visual stimuli, which is necessary for determining whether to approach or avoid a stimulus. However, the neuronal mechanisms underlying the evaluation of emotional value remain unknown. In the present study, we trained male macaque monkeys to perform an operant conditioning task in which fractal visual patterns were associated with three different amounts of air puff delivered to the cheek (negative) or liquid reward (positive). After confirming that the monkeys successfully differentiated the emotional valence and intensity of the visual stimuli, we analyzed neuronal responses to the stimuli in the amygdala. Most amygdala neurons conveyed information concerning the emotional valence and/or intensity of the visual stimuli, and the majority of those conveying information about emotional valence responded optimally to negative stimuli. Further, some...
    Oct 5, 2022 Haruhiko Iwaoki
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