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4501 - 4510 of 52766 results
  • Journal Article
    Hemin-Induced Death Models Hemorrhagic Stroke and Is a Variant of Classical Neuronal Ferroptosis | Journal of Neuroscience
    Ferroptosis is a caspase-independent, iron-dependent form of regulated necrosis extant in traumatic brain injury, Huntington disease, and hemorrhagic stroke. It can be activated by cystine deprivation leading to glutathione depletion, the insufficiency of the antioxidant glutathione peroxidase-4, and the hemolysis products hemoglobin and hemin. A cardinal feature of ferroptosis is extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK)1/2 activation culminating in its translocation to the nucleus. We have previously confirmed that the mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase kinase (MEK) inhibitor U0126 inhibits persistent ERK1/2 phosphorylation and ferroptosis. Here, we show that hemin exposure, a model of secondary injury in brain hemorrhage and ferroptosis, activated ERK1/2 in mouse neurons. Accordingly, MEK inhibitor U0126 protected against hemin-induced ferroptosis. Unexpectedly, U0126 prevented hemin-induced ferroptosis independent of its ability to inhibit ERK1/2 signaling. In contrast to classical ferroptosis in...
    Mar 9, 2022 Marietta Zille
  • Journal Article
    Medial Temporal Lobe Networks in Alzheimer's Disease: Structural and Molecular Vulnerabilities | Journal of Neuroscience
    The medial temporal lobe (MTL) is connected to the rest of the brain through two main networks: the anterior-temporal (AT) and the posterior-medial (PM) systems. Given the crucial role of the MTL and networks in the physiopathology of Alzheimer's disease (AD), the present study aimed at (1) investigating whether MTL atrophy propagates specifically within the AT and PM networks, and (2) evaluating the vulnerability of these networks to AD proteinopathies. To do that, we used neuroimaging data acquired in human male and female in three distinct cohorts: (1) resting-state functional MRI (rs-fMRI) from the aging brain cohort (ABC) to define the AT and PM networks ( n = 68); (2) longitudinal structural MRI from Alzheimer's disease neuroimaging initiative (ADNI)GO/2 to highlight structural covariance patterns ( n = 349); and (3) positron emission tomography (PET) data from ADNI3 to evaluate the networks' vulnerability to amyloid and tau ( n = 186). Our results suggest that the atrophy of distinct MTL subregions ...
    Mar 9, 2022 Robin de Flores
  • Journal Article
    A Female-Specific Role for Calcitonin Gene-Related Peptide (CGRP) in Rodent Pain Models | Journal of Neuroscience
    We aimed to investigate a sexually dimorphic role of calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) in rodent models of pain. Based on findings in migraine where CGRP has a preferential pain-promoting effect in female rodents, we hypothesized that CGRP antagonists and antibodies would attenuate pain sensitization more efficaciously in female than male mice and rats. In hyperalgesic priming induced by activation of interleukin 6 signaling, CGRP receptor antagonists olcegepant and CGRP8-37 both given intrathecally, blocked, and reversed hyperalgesic priming only in females. A monoclonal antibody against CGRP, given systemically, blocked priming specifically in female rodents but failed to reverse it. In the spared nerve injury model, there was a transient effect of both CGRP antagonists, given intrathecally, on mechanical hypersensitivity in female mice only. Consistent with these findings, intrathecally applied CGRP caused a long-lasting, dose-dependent mechanical hypersensitivity in female mice but more transient ...
    Mar 9, 2022 Candler Paige
  • Journal Article
    The Hippocampus May Support Context Retrieval in One-Shot Learning about Pain | Journal of Neuroscience
    The ability to recall something we encounter only once and unexpectedly—for example, that a food type is poisonous—is crucial for survival. Yet, neuroscientific research in recent decades has been dominated by incremental learning paradigms, relatively neglecting how the brain can learn
    Mar 9, 2022 Georgia Turner
  • Journal Article
    Brief Stimuli Cast a Persistent Long-Term Trace in Visual Cortex | Journal of Neuroscience
    Visual processing is strongly influenced by recent stimulus history, a phenomenon termed adaptation. Prominent theories cast adaptation as a consequence of optimized encoding of visual information by exploiting the temporal statistics of the world. However, this would require the visual system to track the history of individual briefly experienced events, within a stream of visual input, to build up statistical representations over longer timescales. Here, using an openly available dataset from the Allen Brain Observatory, we show that neurons in the early visual cortex of the mouse indeed maintain long-term traces of individual past stimuli that persist despite the presentation of several intervening stimuli, leading to long-term and stimulus-specific adaptation over dozens of seconds. Long-term adaptation was selectively expressed in cortical, but not in thalamic, neurons, which only showed short-term adaptation. Early visual cortex thus maintains concurrent stimulus-specific memory traces of past input,...
    Mar 9, 2022 Matthias Fritsche
  • Journal Article
    Causal evidence for the multiple demand network in change detection: auditory mismatch magnetoencephalography across focal neurodegenerative diseases. | Journal of Neuroscience
    The multiple demand system is a network of fronto-parietal brain regions active during the organisation and control of diverse cognitive operations. It has been argued that this activation may be a non-specific signal of task difficulty. However, here we provide convergent evidence for a causal role for the multiple demand network in the ‘simple task’ of automatic auditory change detection, through the impairment of top-down control mechanisms. We employ independent structure-function mapping, dynamic causal modelling, and frequency-resolved functional connectivity analyses of MRI and MEG from 75 mixed-sex human patients across four neurodegenerative syndromes (bvFTD, nfvPPA, PCA and AD-MCI) and 48 age-matched controls. We show that atrophy of any multiple demand node is sufficient to impair auditory neurophysiological response to change in frequency, location, intensity, continuity or duration. There was no similar association with atrophy of the cingulo-opercular, salience or language networks, or with g...
    Mar 8, 2022 Thomas E. Cope
  • Journal Article
    KCNQ channels enable reliable presynaptic spiking and synaptic transmission at high frequency | Journal of Neuroscience
    The presynaptic action potential (AP) is required to drive calcium influx into nerve terminals, resulting in neurotransmitter release. Accordingly, the AP waveform is crucial in determining the timing and strength of synaptic transmission. The calyx of Held nerve terminals of rat of either sex showed minimum changes in AP waveform during high-frequency AP firing. We found that the stability of the calyceal AP waveform requires KCNQ (KV7) K+ channel activation during high-frequency spiking activity. High-frequency presynaptic spikes gradually led to accumulation of KCNQ channels in open states which kept interspike membrane potential sufficiently negative to maintain Na+ channel availability. Blocking KCNQ channels during stimulus trains led to inactivation of presynaptic Na+, and to a lesser extent KV1 channels, thereby reducing the AP height and broadening AP duration. Moreover, blocking KCNQ channels disrupted the stable calcium influx and glutamate release required for reliable synaptic transmission at ...
    Mar 7, 2022 Yihui Zhang
  • Journal Article
    Differential activation of pain circuitry neuron populations in a mouse model of spinal cord injury induced neuropathic pain | Journal of Neuroscience
    Neuropathic pain (NP) is one of the most common and debilitating comorbidities of spinal cord injury (SCI). Current therapies are often ineffective due in part to an incomplete understanding of underlying pathogenic mechanisms. In particular, it remains unclear how SCI leads to dysfunction in the excitability of nociceptive circuitry. The immediate early gene c-Fos has long been used in pain processing locations as a marker of neuronal activation. We employed a mouse reporter line with fos-promoter driven Cre-recombinase to define neuronal activity changes in relevant pain circuitry locations following C5/6 contusion (using both females and males), a SCI model that results in multiple forms of persistent NP-related behavior. SCI significantly increased activation of cervical dorsal horn (DH) projection neurons, as well as induced a selective reduction in the activation of a specific DH projection neuron subpopulation that innervates the periaqueductal gray (PAG), an important brain region involved in desce...
    Mar 7, 2022 Eric V. Brown
  • Journal Article
    Opioid-induced pronociceptive signaling in the gastrointestinal tract is mediated by delta-opioid receptor signaling. | Journal of Neuroscience
    Opioid tolerance (OT) leads to dose escalation and serious side effects, including opioid-induced hyperalgesia (OIH). We sought to better understand the mechanisms underlying this event in the gastrointestinal tract. Chronic in vivo administration of morphine by intraperitoneal (i.p.) injection in male C57BL/6 mice evoked tolerance and evidence of OIH in an assay of colonic afferent nerve mechanosensitivity; this was inhibited by the δ-opioid receptor (DOPr) antagonist naltrindole when i.p. injected previous morphine administration. Patch clamp studies of dorsal root ganglia (DRG) neurons following overnight incubation with high concentrations of morphine, the µ-opioid receptors (MOPr) agonist DAMGO or the DOPr agonist DADLE evoked hyperexcitability. The pronociceptive actions of these opioids were blocked by the DOPr antagonist SDM25N but not the MOPr antagonist CTOP. The hyperexcitability induced by DAMGO was reversed after a 1 hr washout but reapplication of low concentrations of DAMGO or DADLE restored...
    Mar 7, 2022 Josue Jaramillo-Polanco
  • Journal Article
    Suppressing CSPG/LAR/PTPσ axis facilitates neuronal replacement and synaptogenesis by human neural precursor grafts and improves recovery after spinal cord injury | Journal of Neuroscience
    Traumatic spinal cord injury (SCI) is a leading cause of permanent neurological disabilities in young adults. Functional impairments after SCI are substantially attributed to the progressive neurodegeneration. However, regeneration of spinal specific neurons and circuit re-assembly remain challenging in the dysregulated milieu of SCI due to impaired neurogenesis and neuronal maturation by neural precursor cells (NPCs) spontaneously or in cell-based strategies. The extrinsic mechanisms that regulate neuronal differentiation and synaptogenesis in SCI are poorly understood. Here, we perform extensive in vitro and in vivo studies to unravel that SCI-induced upregulation of matrix chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans (CSPGs) impedes neurogenesis of NPCs through co-activation of two receptor protein tyrosine phosphatases, LAR and PTPσ. In adult female rats with SCI, systemic co-inhibition of LAR and PTPσ promotes regeneration of motoneurons and spinal interneurons by engrafted human directly reprogrammed caudalized...
    Mar 7, 2022 Seyed Mojtaba Hosseini
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