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4471 - 4480 of 52766 results
  • Journal Article
    Neural Entrainment to Auditory Rhythms: Automatic or Top-Down Driven? | Journal of Neuroscience
    Our brains continuously track the temporal structure of incoming information to anticipate upcoming events ([Haegens and Zion Golumbic, 2018][1]). Temporal expectations allow us to efficiently distribute attention over time ([Haegens and Zion Golumbic, 2018][1]), and they play an important role in
    Mar 16, 2022 Fleur L. Bouwer
  • Journal Article
    Altruism under stress: cortisol negatively predicts charitable giving and neural value representations depending on mentalizing capacity | Journal of Neuroscience
    Altruism, defined as costly other-regarding behavior, varies considerably across people and contexts. One prominent context in which people frequently must decide on how to socially act is under stress. How does stress affect altruistic decision-making and through which neurocognitive mechanisms? To address these questions, we assessed neural activity associated with charitable giving under stress. Human participants (males and females) completed a charitable donation task before and after they underwent either a psychosocial stressor or a control manipulation, while their brain activity was measured using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). As the ability to infer other people’s mental states (i.e., mentalizing) predicts prosocial giving and may be susceptible to stress, we examined whether stress effects on altruism depend on participants’ general capacity to mentalize, as assessed in an independent task. Although our stress manipulation per se had no influence on charitable giving, increases i...
    Mar 14, 2022 Stefan Schulreich
  • Journal Article
    A novel automated approach for improving standardization of the marble burying test enables quantification of burying bouts and activity characteristics | eNeuro
    The marble burying test is a commonly used paradigm to describe phenotypes in mouse models of neurodevelopmental and psychiatric disorders. The current methodological approach relies predominantly on reporting the number of buried marbles at the end of the test. By measuring the proxy of the behavior (buried marbles), many important characteristics regarding the temporal aspect of this assay are lost. Here we introduce a novel, automated method to quantify mouse behavior during the marble burying test with the focus on the burying bouts and movement dynamics. Using open-source software packages, we trained a supervised machine learning algorithm (the “classifier”) to distinguish burying behavior in freely moving mice. In order to confirm the classifier’s accuracy and characterize burying events in high detail, we performed the marble burying test in three mouse models: Ube3am-/p+ (Angelman Syndrome model), Shank2-/- (autism model), and Sapap3-/- (obsessive-compulsive disorder model) mice. The classifier sc...
    Mar 14, 2022 Lucas Wahl
  • Journal Article
    Prefrontal cortical connectivity mediates locus coeruleus noradrenergic regulation of inhibitory control in older adults | Journal of Neuroscience
    Response inhibition is a core executive function enabling adaptive behaviour in dynamic environments. Human and animal models indicate that inhibitory control and control networks are modulated by noradrenaline, arising from the locus coeruleus. The integrity (i.e., cellular density) of the locus coeruleus noradrenergic system can be estimated from magnetization transfer sensitive magnetic resonance imaging, in view of neuromelanin present in noradrenergic neurons of older adults. Noradrenergic psychopharmacological studies indicate noradrenergic modulation of prefrontal and frontostriatal stopping-circuits in association with behavioural change. Here we test the noradrenergic hypothesis of inhibitory control, in healthy adults. We predicted that locus coeruleus integrity is associated with age-adjusted variance in response inhibition, mediated by changes in connectivity between frontal inhibitory control regions. In a preregistered analysis, we used magnetization transfer MRI images from N=63 healthy huma...
    Mar 11, 2022 Alessandro Tomassini
  • Journal Article
    Reward-dependent selection of feedback gains impacts rapid motor decisions | eNeuro
    Target reward influences motor planning strategies through modulation of movement vigor. Considering current theories of sensorimotor control suggesting that movement planning consists in selecting a goal-directed control strategy, we sought to investigate the influence of reward on feedback control. Here we explored this question in three human reaching experiments. First, we altered the explicit reward associated with the goal target and found an overall increase in feedback gains for higher target rewards, highlighted by larger velocities, feedback responses to external loads, and background muscle activity. Then, we investigated whether the differences in target rewards across multiple goals impacted rapid motor decisions during movement. We observed idiosyncratic switching strategies dependent on both target rewards and, surprisingly, the feedback gains at perturbation onset: the more vigorous movements were less likely to switch to a new goal following perturbations. To gain further insight into a ca...
    Mar 10, 2022 Antoine De Comite
  • Journal Article
    V3 Interneurons are Active and Recruit Spinal Motor Neurons During In Vivo Fictive Swimming in Larval Zebrafish | eNeuro
    Survival for vertebrate animals is dependent on the ability to successfully find food, locate a mate, and avoid predation. Each of these behaviors requires motor control, which is set by a combination of kinematic properties. For example, the frequency and amplitude of motor output combine in a multiplicative manner to determine features of locomotion such as distance traveled, speed, force (thrust), and vigor. Although there is a good understanding of how different populations of excitatory spinal interneurons establish locomotor frequency, there is a less thorough mechanistic understanding for how locomotor amplitude is established. Recent evidence indicates that locomotor amplitude is regulated in part by a subset of functionally and morphologically distinct V2a excitatory spinal interneurons (type II, non-bursting) in larval and adult zebrafish. Here we provide direct evidence that most V3 interneurons (V3-INs), which are a developmentally and genetically defined population of ventromedial glutamatergi...
    Mar 10, 2022 Timothy D. Wiggin
  • Journal Article
    Descending axonal projections from the inferior colliculus target nearly all excitatory and inhibitory cell-types of the dorsal cochlear nucleus | Journal of Neuroscience
    The dorsal cochlear nucleus (DCN) integrates auditory nerve input with non-auditory sensory signals and is proposed to function in sound source localization and suppression of self-generated sounds. The DCN also integrates activity from descending auditory pathways, including a particularly large feedback projection from the inferior colliculus (IC), the main ascending target of the DCN. Understanding how these descending feedback signals are integrated into the DCN circuit and what role they play in hearing requires knowing the targeted DCN cell-types and their postsynaptic responses. In order to explore these questions, neurons in the DCN that received descending synaptic input from the IC were labeled with a trans-synaptic viral approach in male and female mice, which allowed them to be targeted for whole-cell recording in acute brain slices. We tested their synaptic responses to optogenetic activation of the descending IC projection. Every cell-type in the granule cell domain received monosynaptic, glu...
    Mar 10, 2022 Timothy S. Balmer
  • Journal Article
    A non-nuclear NF-κB modulates alcohol sensitivity but not immunity | Journal of Neuroscience
    NF-κB proteins are well known as transcription factors important in immune system activation. In this highly conserved role, they contribute to changes in behavior in response to infection and in response to a variety of other insults and experiences. In some mammalian neurons, NF-κBs can be found at the synapse and translocate to the nucleus to alter gene expression when activated by synaptic activity. Here we demonstrate that, in Drosophila melanogaster , NF-κB action is important both inside and outside the nucleus and that the Dif gene has segregated nuclear and non-nuclear NF-κB action into different protein isoforms. The DifA isoform is a canonical nuclear-acting NF-κB protein that enters the nucleus and is important for combating infection. The DifB variant, but not the DifA variant, is found in the central nervous system (mushroom bodies and antennal lobes). DifB does not enter the nucleus and co-localizes with a synaptic protein. In males and females, a DifB mutant alters alcohol behavioral sensit...
    Mar 10, 2022 Thilini P. Wijesekera
  • Journal Article
    Improved sleep, memory, and cellular pathological features of tauopathy, including the NLRP3 inflammasome, after chronic administration of trazodone in rTg4510 mice | Journal of Neuroscience
    Several cellular pathways contribute to neurodegenerative tauopathy-related disorders. Microglial activation, a major component of neuroinflammation, is an early pathological hallmark that correlates with cognitive decline, while the unfolded protein response (UPR) contributes to synaptic pathology. Sleep disturbances are prevalent in tauopathies and may also contribute to disease progression. Few studies have investigated whether manipulations of sleep influence cellular pathological and behavioural features of tauopathy. We investigated whether trazodone, a licensed antidepressant with hypnotic efficacy in dementia, can reduce disease-related cellular pathways and improve memory and sleep in male rTg4510 mice with a tauopathy-like phenotype. In a 9-week dosing regimen, trazodone decreased microglial NLRP3 inflammasome expression and phosphorylated p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase levels which correlated with the NLRP3 inflammasome, the UPR effector ATF4, and total tau levels. Trazodone reduced theta ...
    Mar 10, 2022 Paula de Oliveira
  • Journal Article
    Formation of the mouse internal capsule and cerebral peduncle: A pioneering role for striatonigral axons as revealed in Isl1 conditional mutants | Journal of Neuroscience
    The projection neurons of the striatum, the principal nucleus of the basal ganglia, belong to one of two major pathways: the striatopallidal (indirect) pathway or the striatonigral (direct) pathway. Striatonigral axons project long-distances and encounter ascending (thalamocortical) while coursing alongside descending (corticofugal) tracts as they extend through the internal capsule and cerebral peduncle. These observations suggest that striatal circuitry may help to guide their trajectories. To investigate the developmental contributions of striatonigral axons to internal capsule formation, we have made use of Sox8-EGFP (striatal direct pathway) and Fezf2-TdTomato (corticofugal pathway) BAC transgenic reporter mice in combination with immunohistochemical markers to trace these axonal pathways throughout development. We show that striatonigral axons pioneer the internal capsule and cerebral peduncle and are temporally and spatially well-positioned to provide guidance for corticofugal and thalamocortical ax...
    Mar 10, 2022 Jacqueline M. Ehrman
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