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1801 - 1810 of 52753 results
  • Video Annual Meeting Professional Development
    Making the Most of Your International Experience
    Hear how you can best use your international experience as a graduate student, postdoctoral trainee, or your sabbatical to move your career forward. Speakers talk from personal experience and pay careful attention to individuals from developing countries who spend time in a developed country.
    May 10, 2016
  • Article Scientific Research
    A Receptor-Like Function of Sema4B in Injury Induced Astrogliosis
    Astrocyte activation (reactive gliosis) accompanies most central nervous system pathologies (CNS), including brain injury conditions. During astrocyte activation, the expression of many genes is modified, thus changing the cells’ protein expression profile and behavior. A well-known feature of the process is the increased production of intermediate filament proteins.
    May 5, 2016 Oded Behar, PhD
  • Video Annual Meeting Career Paths
    A Behind-the-Scenes Look at Editing and Journal Publishing
    At the Neuroscience 2013 Careers Beyond the Bench workshop, Katja Brose, the editor of Neuron, explains how she transitioned from research to science publishing. While she is not behind the bench, Brose’s role in publishing keeps her involved and active within the neuroscience community.
    May 3, 2016
  • Article Professional Development
    On Leading Undergraduates to Discovery Through Mentorship
    Mentoring advances the field of neuroscience by ensuring that trainees begin their careers with the necessary skills, scientific understanding, and other support to achieve success. Julio Ramirez, professor and chair of the psychology department at Davidson College, is leading efforts to improve mentoring for undergraduates studying neuroscience. He received the Bernice Grafstein Award for Outstanding Accomplishments in Mentoring in 2015 for his contributions. Here, Ramirez discusses his mentoring approach.
    May 3, 2016
  • Journal Article
    Normal Pressure Hydrocephalus in Adult Mice Causes Gait Impairment, Cognitive Deficits, and Urinary Frequency with Incontinence | eNeuro
    Normal pressure hydrocephalus (NPH) is marked by enlarged cerebral ventricles with normal intracranial pressure, plus three stereotypical symptoms: gait impairment, cognitive dysfunction, and urinary frequency with urge incontinence. The neural circuit dysfunction responsible for each of these symptoms remains unknown, and an adult mouse model would expand opportunities to explore these mechanisms in preclinical experiments. Here, we describe the first mouse model of chronic, communicating hydrocephalus with normal intracranial pressure. Hydrocephalic male and female mice had unsteady gait and reduced maximum velocity. Despite performing well on a variety of behavioral tests, they exhibited subtle learning impairments. Hydrocephalic mice also developed urinary frequency, and many became incontinent. This mouse model, with symptoms resembling human NPH, can be combined with molecular-genetic tools in any mouse strain to explore the neural circuit mechanisms of these symptoms. Preclinical work using this hyd...
    Nov 1, 2024 Margaret M. Tish
  • Journal Article
    Erratum: Lakhani et al., “Homeostatic Regulation of Spike Rate within Bursts in Two Distinct Preparations” | eNeuro
    In the article “Homeostatic Regulation of Spike Rate within Bursts in Two Distinct Preparations,” by Alishah Lakhani, Carlos Gonzalez-Islas, Zahraa Sabra, Nicholas Au …
    Nov 1, 2024
  • Journal Article
    Chronic Aromatase Inhibition Attenuates Synaptic Plasticity in Ovariectomized Mice | eNeuro
    Brain-derived estrogen (17β-estradiol, E2) is a neuromodulator that plays important roles in neural plasticity and network excitability. Chronic inhibition of estrogen synthesis is used in adjuvant breast cancer therapy for estrogen receptor-positive tumors and may have been associated with cognitive and affective side effects. Here, we have developed a model of adjuvant therapy in female ovariectomized mice in which the E2 biosynthetic enzyme aromatase is inhibited by letrozole (1 mg/kg/day, i.p., for up to 3 weeks), Using two-photon longitudinal in vivo imaging in Thy1-GFP-M mice, we found that spine density in the apical dendrites of neocortical layer 5 pyramidal cells was unaffected by letrozole treatment but spine turnover was reduced. LTP in layer 4 to layer 2/3 synapses in the somatosensory cortex was also reduced in slices from letrozole-treated mice, showing deficits in structural and functional plasticity resulting from aromatase inhibition. Ovariectomized mice performed worse than intact control...
    Nov 1, 2024 Julia Brill
  • Journal Article
    Estrogen Receptor Alpha–Expressing Neurons in Bed Nucleus of the Stria Terminalis and Hypothalamus Encoding Aggression and Mating | eNeuro
    Aggression and mating of male mice are strongly associated with Esr1-expressing neurons in the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (BNSTpr) and hypothalamus in the vomeronasal pathway. By projecting to the downstream hypothalamus, the upstream BNSTprEsr1 gates mating and aggression of male mice and maternal behavior of female mice. The medial preoptic area (MPOA) and ventrolateral subdivision of the ventromedial hypothalamus (VMHvl) are two subdivisions of the hypothalamus downstream. In addition to receiving projections from upstream BNSTpr, there is also a mutual projection between MPOA and VMHvl. In the process of transforming sex information into mating and aggression, Esr1-expressing neurons in BNSTpr, MPOA, and VMHvl act as messengers of information, finally producing inhibitory or excitatory projection. These projections are different in direction, but they all work together to control the behavior selection that is most conducive to defense and reproduction when male mice encounter female or male m...
    Nov 1, 2024 Wen-Qiu Wang
  • Journal Article
    New Vistas for the Relationship between Empathy and Political Ideology | eNeuro
    The study of ideological asymmetries in empathy has consistently yielded inconclusive findings. Yet, until recently these inconsistencies relied exclusively on self-reports, which are known to be prone to biases and inaccuracies when evaluating empathy levels. Very recently, we reported ideological asymmetries in cognitive-affective empathy while relying on neuroimaging for the first time to address this question. In the present investigation which sampled a large cohort of human individuals from two distant countries and neuroimaging sites, we re-examine this question, but this time from the perspective of empathy to physical pain. The results are unambiguous at the neural and behavioral levels and showcase no asymmetry. This finding raises a novel premise: the question of whether empathy is ideologically asymmetrical depends on the targeted component of empathy (e.g., physical pain vs cognitive-affective) and requires explicit but also unobtrusive techniques for the measure of empathy. Moreover, the find...
    Nov 1, 2024 Niloufar Zebarjadi
  • Journal Article
    Distinct Modulation of Ih by Synaptic Potentiation in Excitatory and Inhibitory Neurons | eNeuro
    Selective modifications in the expression or function of dendritic ion channels regulate the propagation of synaptic inputs and determine the intrinsic excitability of a neuron. Hyperpolarization-activated cyclic nucleotide–gated (HCN) channels open upon membrane hyperpolarization and conduct a depolarizing inward current ( I h). HCN channels are enriched in the dendrites of hippocampal pyramidal neurons where they regulate the integration of synaptic inputs. Synaptic plasticity can bidirectionally modify dendritic HCN channels in excitatory neurons depending on the strength of synaptic potentiation. In inhibitory neurons, however, the dendritic expression and modulation of HCN channels are largely unknown. In this study, we systematically compared the modulation of I h by synaptic potentiation in hippocampal CA1 pyramidal neurons and stratum radiatum (sRad) interneurons in mouse organotypic cultures. I h properties were similar in inhibitory and excitatory neurons and contributed to resting membrane poten...
    Nov 1, 2024 Lotte J. Herstel
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