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4331 - 4340 of 52764 results
  • Journal Article
    Impaired subcortical processing of amplitude-modulated tones in mice deficient for Cacna2d3, a risk gene for autism spectrum disorders in humans | eNeuro
    Temporal processing of complex sounds is a fundamental and complex task in hearing and a prerequisite for processing and understanding vocalization, speech, and prosody. Here we studied response properties of neurons in the inferior colliculus (IC) in mice lacking Cacna2d3 , a risk gene for autism spectrum disorders. The α2δ3 auxiliary Ca2+ channel subunit encoded by Cacna2d3 is essential for proper function of glutamatergic synapses in the auditory brainstem. Recent evidence has shown that much of auditory feature extraction is performed in the auditory brainstem and IC, including processing of amplitude modulation (AM). We determined both spectral and temporal properties of single- and multi-unit responses in the IC of anesthetized mice. IC units of α2δ3-/- mice showed normal tuning properties yet increased spontaneous rates compared with α2δ3+/+. When stimulated with AM tones, α2δ3-/- units exhibited less precise temporal coding and reduced evoked rates to higher modulation frequencies (fm). Whereas fir...
    Apr 11, 2022 Gerhard Bracic
  • Journal Article
    Aberrant phase precession of lateral septal cells in a maternal immune activation model of schizophrenia risk may disrupt the integration of location with reward | Journal of Neuroscience
    Spatial memory and reward processing are known to be disrupted in schizophrenia. Since the lateral septum (LS) may play an important role in the integration of location and reward, we examined the effect of maternal immune activation (MIA), a known schizophrenia risk factor, on spatial representation in the rat LS. In support of a previous study, we found that spatial location is represented as a phase code in the rostral LS of adult male rats, so that LS cell spiking shifts systematically against the phase of the hippocampal, theta-frequency, local field potential (LFP) as an animal moves along a track towards a reward (phase precession). Whereas shallow precession slopes were observed in control (CTL) group cells, they were steeper in the MIA animals, such that firing frequently precessed across several theta cycles as the animal moved along the length of the apparatus, with subsequent ambiguity in the phase representation of location. Furthermore, an analysis of the phase trajectories of the CTL group c...
    Apr 8, 2022 Lucinda J. Speers
  • Journal Article
    The Retinal Basis of Light Aversion in Neonatal Mice | Journal of Neuroscience
    Aversive responses to bright light (photoaversion) require signaling from the eye to the brain. Melanopsin-expressing intrinsically photosensitive retinal ganglion cells (ipRGCs) encode absolute light intensity and are thought to provide the light signals for photoaversion. Consistent with this, neonatal mice exhibit photoaversion prior to the developmental onset of image vision, and melanopsin deletion abolishes photoaversion in neonates. It is not well understood how the population of ipRGCs, which constitutes multiple physiologically distinct types (denoted M1-M6 in mouse), encodes light stimuli to produce an aversive response. Here, we provide several lines of evidence that M1 ipRGCs that lack the Brn3b transcription factor drive photoaversion in neonatal mice. First, neonatal mice lacking TRPC6 and TRPC7 ion channels failed to turn away from bright light, while two photon Ca2+ imaging of their acutely isolated retinas revealed reduced photosensitivity in M1 ipRGCs, but not other ipRGC types. Second, m...
    Apr 8, 2022 Franklin S. Caval-Holme
  • Journal Article
    Local interactions between steady-state visually evoked potentials at nearby flickering frequencies | Journal of Neuroscience
    Steady-state visually evoked potentials (SSVEP) are widely used to index top-down cognitive processing in human electroencephalogram (EEG) studies. Typically, two stimuli flickering at different temporal frequencies (TFs) are presented, each producing a distinct response in the EEG at its flicker frequency. However, how SSVEP responses in EEG are modulated in the presence of a competing flickering stimulus just due to sensory interactions is not well understood. We have previously shown in local field potentials (LFP) recorded from awake monkeys that when two overlapping full screen gratings are counter-phased at different TFs, there is an asymmetric SSVEP response suppression, with greater suppression from lower TFs, which further depends on the relative orientations of the gratings (stronger suppression and asymmetry for parallel compared to orthogonal gratings). Here, we first confirmed these effects in both male and female human EEG recordings. Then, we mapped the response suppression of one stimulus (...
    Apr 8, 2022 Kumari Liza
  • Journal Article
    Microglia drive pockets of neuroinflammation in middle age | Journal of Neuroscience
    During aging, microglia produce inflammatory factors, show reduced tissue surveillance, altered interactions with synapses, and prolonged responses to CNS insults, positioning these cells to have profound impact on the function of nearby neurons. We and others recently showed that microglial attributes differ significantly across brain regions in young adult mice. However, the degree to which microglial properties vary during aging is largely unexplored. Here, we analyze and manipulate microglial aging within the basal ganglia, brain circuits that exhibit prominent regional microglial heterogeneity and where neurons are vulnerable to functional decline and neurodegenerative disease. In male and female mice, we demonstrate that ventral tegmental area (VTA) and substantia nigra pars compacta (SNc) microglia exhibit unique and premature responses to aging, compared to cortex and nucleus accumbens (NAc) microglia. This is associated with localized VTA/SNc neuroinflammation that may compromise synaptic function...
    Apr 8, 2022 Eric N. Moca
  • Journal Article
    Isolating the neural substrates of visually guided attention orienting in humans | Journal of Neuroscience
    The neural processes that enable healthy humans to orient attention to sudden visual events are poorly understood because they are tightly intertwined with purely sensory processes. Here we isolated visually guided orienting activity from sensory activity using event-related potentials (ERPs). By recording ERPs to a lateral stimulus and comparing waveforms obtained under conditions of attention and inattention, we identified an early positive deflection over the ipsilateral visual cortex that was associated with the covert orienting of visual attention to the stimulus. Across five experiments with male and female adults participants, this ipsilateral visual orienting activity (VOA) could be distinguished from purely sensory-evoked activity and from other top-down spatial attention effects. The VOA was linked with behavioral measures of orienting, being significantly larger when the stimulus was detected rapidly than when it was detected more slowly, and its presence was independent of saccadic eye movement...
    Apr 8, 2022 John J. McDonald
  • Journal Article
    Spatial learning drives rapid goal representation in hippocampal ripples without place field accumulation or goal-oriented theta sequences | Journal of Neuroscience
    The hippocampus is critical for rapid acquisition of many forms of memory, although the circuit-level mechanisms through which the hippocampus rapidly consolidates novel information are unknown. Here, activity of large ensembles of hippocampal neurons in adult male Long-Evans rats were monitored across a period of rapid spatial learning to assess how the network changes during the initial phases of memory formation and retrieval. In contrast to several reports, the hippocampal network did not display enhanced representation of the goal location via accumulation of place fields or elevated firing rates at the goal. Rather, population activity rates increased globally as a function of experience. These alterations in activity were mirrored in the power of the theta oscillation and in the quality of theta sequences, without preferential encoding of paths to the learned goal location. In contrast, during brief ‘offline’ pauses in movement representation of a novel goal location emerged rapidly in ripples, prec...
    Apr 8, 2022 Brad E. Pfeiffer
  • Journal Article
    Quantitative BONCAT (QBONCAT) allows identification of newly synthesized proteins after optic nerve injury | Journal of Neuroscience
    Retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) die after optic nerve trauma or in degenerative disease. However, acute changes in protein expression that may regulate RGC response to injury are not fully understood, and detailed methods to quantify new protein synthesis have not been tested. Here we develop and apply a new in vivo quantitative measure of newly synthesized proteins to examine changes occurring in the retina after optic nerve injury. Azidohomoalanine (AHA), a noncanonical amino acid, was injected intravitreally into the eyes of rodents of either sex with or without optic nerve injury. Isotope variants of biotin-alkyne were used for quantitative BONCAT (QBONCAT) mass spectrometry, allowing identification of protein synthesis and transport rate changes in over 1000 proteins at 1 or 5 days after optic nerve injury. In vitro screening showed several newly synthesized proteins regulate axon outgrowth in primary neurons in vitro . This novel approach to targeted quantification of newly synthesized proteins after i...
    Apr 8, 2022 Sahil H. Shah
  • Journal Article
    Drosophila Tet is required for maintaining glial homeostasis in developing and adult fly brains | eNeuro
    Ten eleven translocation (TET) proteins are crucial epigenetic regulators highly conserved in multicellular organisms. TETs’ enzymatic function in demethylating 5-methyl cytosine in DNA is required for proper development and TETs are frequently mutated in cancer. Recently, Drosophila melanogaster Tet (dTet) was shown to be highly expressed in developing fly brains and discovered to play an important role in brain and muscle development as well as fly behavior. Furthermore, dTet was shown to have different substrate specificity compared to mammals. However, the exact role dTet plays in glial cells and how ectopic TET expression in glial cells contributes to tumorigenesis and glioma is still not clear. Here, we report a novel role for dTet specifically in glial cell organization and number. We show that loss of dTet affects the organization of a specific glia population in the optic lobe, the “optic chiasm” glia. Additionally, we find irregularities in axon patterns in the ventral nerve cord (VNC) both, in t...
    Apr 8, 2022 Felice Frey
  • Journal Article
    Dynamic Theta Frequency Coordination Within and Between the Prefrontal Cortex-Hippocampus Circuit During Learning of a Spatial Avoidance Task | eNeuro
    Theta-scale coordination of prelimbic medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) local field potentials (LFPs) and its influence via direct or indirect projections to the ventral hippocampus (vHC) and dorsal hippocampus (dHC) during spatial learning remains poorly understood. We hypothesized that theta frequency coordination dynamics within and between the mPFC, dHC and vHC would be predetermined by the level of connectivity rather than reflecting differing circuit throughput relationships depending on cognitive demands. Moreover, we hypothesized that coherence levels would not change during learning of a complex spatial avoidance task. Adult male rats were bilaterally implanted with EEG electrodes and LFPs recorded in each structure. Contrary to predictions, theta coherence averaged across ‘Early’ or ‘Late’ training sessions in the mPFC-HC, mPFC-mPFC, and HC-HC increased as a function of task learning. Coherence levels were also highest between the indirectly connected mPFC-dHC circuit, particularly during early tra...
    Apr 7, 2022 Conor R. Dickson
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