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2911 - 2920 of 52756 results
  • Journal Article
    Evaluation and Validation of Commercially Available Dopamine Transporter Antibodies | eNeuro
    With a wide variety of dopamine transporter (DAT) antibodies available commercially, it is important to validate which antibodies provide sufficient immunodetection for reproducibility purpose and for accurate analysis of DAT levels and/or location. Commercially available DAT antibodies that are commonly used were tested in western blotting (WB) on wild-type (WT) and DAT-knock-out (DAT-KO) brain tissue and with immunohistology (IH) techniques against coronal slices of unilaterally lesioned 6-OHDA rats, in addition to wild-type and DAT-knock-out mice. DAT-KO mice and unilateral 6-OHDA lesions in rats were used as a negative control for DAT antibody specificity. Antibodies were tested at various concentrations and rated based on signal detection varying from no signal to optimal signal detection. Commonly used antibodies, including AB2231 and PT-22 524-1-AP, did not provide specific DAT signals in WB and IH. Although certain antibodies provided a good DAT signal, such as SC-32258, D6944, and MA5-24796, they ...
    May 1, 2023 Emma E. Russo
  • Journal Article
    Addressing the Needs of Preclinical Student Researchers in the SCI Community to Advance Communication and Education | eNeuro
    As basic and preclinical scientists, graduate students and trainees emphatically support the importance of both hearing and understanding the perspectives of individuals living with spinal cord injury (SCI); however, it is much more complex than most realize. Establishing avenues of communication among individuals with SCI, caretakers, and/or researchers is paramount to the success of our efforts in becoming well rounded researchers that are knowledgeable about principles of human well being. Here, we discuss the divides between researchers and individuals living with SCI that often create misunderstandings. By expanding on two topics within these divides, we seek to highlight the main message of this commentary from the student perspective: there is a need within the SCI research community for better data-sharing practices and communication among preclinical researchers, clinicians, and individuals living with SCI. First, we will discuss the diversity of data collection and sharing within the research rea...
    May 1, 2023 Shayna Singh
  • Journal Article
    Novel Evoked Synaptic Activity Potentials (ESAPs) elicited by Spinal Cord Stimulation | eNeuro
    Spinal cord stimulation (SCS) evokes fast epidural Evoked Compound Action Potential (ECAPs) that represent activity of dorsal column axons, but not necessarily a spinal circuit response. Using a multimodal approach, we identified and characterized a delayed and slower potential evoked by SCS that reflects synaptic activity within the spinal cord. Anesthetized female Sprague Dawley rats were implanted with an epidural SCS lead, epidural motor cortex stimulation electrodes, an epidural spinal cord recording lead, an intraspinal penetrating recording electrode array, and intramuscular electromyography (EMG) electrodes in the hindlimb and trunk. We stimulated the motor cortex or the epidural spinal cord and recorded epidural, intraspinal, and EMG responses. SCS pulses produced characteristic propagating ECAPs (composed of P1, N1, and P2 waves with latencies <2 ms) and an additional wave (“S1”) starting after the N2. We verified the S1-wave was not a stimulation artifact and was not a reflection of hindlimb/tru...
    Apr 27, 2023 Mahima Sharma
  • Journal Article
    PyMouseTracks: flexible computer vision and RFID based system for multiple mouse tracking and behavioral assessment | eNeuro
    PyMouseTracks (PMT) is a scalable and customizable computer vision and RFID-based system for multiple rodent tracking and behavior assessment that can be set up within minutes in any user-defined arena at minimal cost. PMT is composed of the online Raspberry Pi-based video and RFID acquisition with subsequent offline analysis tools. The system is capable of tracking up to 6 mice in experiments ranging from minutes to days. PMT maintained a minimum of 88% detections tracked with an overall accuracy >85% when compared to manual validation of videos containing 1-4 mice in a modified home-cage. As expected, chronic recording in home-cage revealed diurnal activity patterns. In open-field, it was observed that novel non-cagemate mouse pairs exhibit more similarity in travel trajectory patterns than cagemate pairs over a 10-minute period. Therefore, shared features within travel trajectories between animals may be a measure of sociability that has not been previously reported. Moreover, PMT can interface with ope...
    Apr 26, 2023 Tony Fong
  • Journal Article
    A targeted, low-throughput compound screen in a Drosophila model of neurofibromatosis type 1 identifies simvastatin and BMS-204352 as potential therapies for autism spectrum disorder (ASD). | eNeuro
    Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is a common neurodevelopmental condition for which there are no pharmacological therapies that effectively target its core symptomatology. Animal models of syndromic forms of ASD, such as neurofibromatosis type 1, may be of use in screening for such treatments. Drosophila larvae lacking Nf1 expression exhibit tactile hypersensitivity following mechanical stimulation, proposed to mirror the sensory sensitivity issues comprising part of the ASD diagnostic criteria. Such behavior is associated with synaptic dysfunction at the neuromuscular junction (NMJ). Both phenotypes may thus provide tractable outputs with which to screen for potential ASD therapies. In this study, we demonstrate that, while loss of Nf1 expression within the embryo is sufficient to impair NMJ synaptic transmission in the larva, constitutive Nf1 knockdown is required to induce tactile hypersensitivity, suggesting that a compound must be administered throughout development to rescue this behavior. With such a ...
    Apr 26, 2023 Alex Dyson
  • Journal Article
    Correlated somatosensory input in parvalbumin/pyramidal cells in mouse motor cortex | eNeuro
    In mammalian cortex, feedforward excitatory connections recruit feedforward inhibition. This is often carried by parvalbumin (PV+) interneurons, which may densely connect to local pyramidal (Pyr) neurons. Whether this inhibition affects all local excitatory cells indiscriminately or is targeted to specific subnetworks is unknown. Here, we test how feedforward inhibition is recruited by using 2-channel circuit mapping to excite cortical and thalamic inputs to PV+ interneurons and Pyr neurons to mouse motor cortex. Single Pyr and PV+ neurons receive input from both cortex and thalamus. Connected pairs of PV+ interneurons and excitatory Pyr neurons receive correlated cortical and thalamic inputs. While PV+ interneurons are more likely to form local connections to Pyr neurons, Pyr neurons are much more likely to form reciprocal connections with PV+ interneurons that inhibit them. This suggests that Pyr and PV ensembles may be organized based on their local and long-range connections, an organization that suppo...
    Apr 24, 2023 Roman U. Goz
  • Journal Article
    Rescue of long-term spatial memory by 7,8-dihydroxyflavone in mice with reduced oligodendrogenesis | eNeuro
    Oligodendrogenesis is the process by which new oligodendrocytes are produced in the central nervous system. Oligodendrocytes form myelin, which has a vital role in neural signal transmission and integration. Here we tested mice with reduced adult oligodendrogenesis in the Morris watermaze, a test of spatial learning. These mice were found to have impaired long-term (28-day) spatial memory. However, when 7,8-dihydroxyflavone (7,8-DHF) was administered immediately after each training session, their long-term spatial memory impairment was rescued. An increase in the number of newly formed oligodendrocytes in the corpus callosum was also observed. 7,8-DHF has previously been shown to improve spatial memory in animal models of Alzheimer’s diseases, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), Wolfran and Down syndrome, as well as in normal aging. Understanding the underlying mechanisms of this drug on spatial memory is therefore helpful in assessing it for clinical relevance and development. Significance Statement ...
    Apr 21, 2023 Florence Rawlings-Mortimer
  • Journal Article
    Running throughout middle-age keeps old adult-born neurons wired | eNeuro
    Exercise may prevent or delay aging-related memory loss and neurodegeneration. In rodents, running increases the number of adult-born neurons in the dentate gyrus (DG) of the hippocampus, in association with improved synaptic plasticity and memory function. However, it is unclear if adult-born neurons remain fully integrated into the hippocampal network during aging and whether long-term running affects their connectivity. To address this issue we labeled proliferating DG neural progenitor cells with retrovirus expressing the avian TVA receptor in 2-month-old sedentary and running male C57Bl/6 mice. More than six months later, we injected EnvA-pseudotyped rabies virus into the DG as a monosynaptic retrograde tracer, to selectively infect TVA expressing ‘old’ new neurons. We identified and quantified the direct afferent inputs to the adult-born neurons within the hippocampus and (sub)cortical areas. Here we show that long-term running substantially modifies the network of the neurons generated in young adul...
    Apr 20, 2023 Carmen Vivar
  • Journal Article
    Effects of Cannabidiol, Hypothermia, and Their Combination in Newborn Rats With Hypoxic-Ischemic Encephalopathy | eNeuro
    Therapeutic hypothermia is well-established as a standard treatment for infants with hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy but it is only partially effective. The potential for combination treatments to augment hypothermic neuroprotection has major relevance. Our aim was to assess the effects of treating newborn rats following hypoxic-ischemic (HI) injury with cannabidiol (CBD) at 0.1 or 1 mg/kg i.p., in normothermic (37.5°C) and hypothermic (32.0°C) conditions, from 7 (neonatal phase) to 37 days old (juvenile phase). Placebo or CBD were administered at 0.5, 24 and 48 h after HI injury. Two sensorimotor (rotarod and cylinder rearing), and two cognitive (novel object recognition and T-maze) tests were conducted 30 days after HI. The extent of brain damage was determined by magnetic resonance imaging, histological evaluation, magnetic resonance spectroscopy, amplitude-integrated electroencephalography and Western blotting. At 37 days, the HI insult produced impairments in all neurobehavioral score (cognitive and s...
    Apr 17, 2023 Francisco J Alvarez
  • Journal Article
    Effect of Reverberation on Neural Responses to Natural Speech in Rabbit Auditory Midbrain: No Evidence for a Neural Dereverberation Mechanism | eNeuro
    Reverberation is ubiquitous in everyday acoustic environments. It degrades both binaural cues and the envelope modulations of sounds and thus can impair speech perception. Still, both humans and animals can accurately perceive reverberant stimuli in most everyday settings. Previous neurophysiological and perceptual studies have suggested the existence of neural mechanisms that partially compensate for the effects of reverberation. However, these studies were limited by their use of either highly simplified stimuli or rudimentary reverberation simulations. To further characterize how reverberant stimuli are processed by the auditory system, we recorded single-unit (SU) and multiunit (MU) activity from the inferior colliculus (IC) of unanesthetized rabbits in response to natural speech utterances presented with no reverberation (“dry”) and in various degrees of simulated reverberation (direct-to-reverberant energy ratios (DRRs) ranging from 9.4 to –8.2 dB). Linear stimulus reconstruction techniques (Mesgara...
    Apr 17, 2023 Oded Barzelay
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