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4691 - 4700 of 52768 results
  • Journal Article
    Nicotinic acetylcholine receptors expressed by striatal interneurons inhibit striatal activity and control striatal-dependent behaviors | Journal of Neuroscience
    Acetylcholine is an important modulator of striatal activity and it is vital to controlling striatal-dependent behaviors, including motor and cognitive functions. Despite this significance, the mechanisms determining how acetylcholine impacts striatal signaling are still not fully understood. In particular, little is known about the role of nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) expressed by striatal interneurons. In the present study, we used fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH) to determine which neuronal types express the most prevalent beta2 nicotinic subunit in the mouse striatum. Our data support a common view that nAChR expression is mostly restricted to striatal interneurons. Surprisingly though, cholinergic interneurons (CINs) were identified as a population with the highest expression of beta2 nicotinic subunit. To investigate the functional significance of beta2-containing nAChRs in striatal interneurons, we deleted them by injecting the AAV-Cre vector into the striatum of beta2-flox/flo...
    Feb 14, 2022 Alice Abbondanza
  • Journal Article
    Calretinin-expressing synapses show improved synaptic efficacy with reduced asynchronous release during high-rate activity | Journal of Neuroscience
    Calretinin (CR) is a major calcium binding protein widely expressed in the central nervous system. However, its synaptic function remains largely elusive. At the auditory synapse of the endbulb of Held, CR is selectively expressed in different subtypes. Combining electrophysiology with immunohistochemistry, we investigated the synaptic transmission at the endbulb of Held synapses with and without endogenous CR expression in mature CBA/CAJ mice of either sex. Two synapse subtypes showed similar basal synaptic transmission, except a larger quantal size in CR-expressing synapses. During high-rate stimulus trains, CR-expressing synapses showed improved synaptic efficacy with significantly less depression and lower asynchronous release, suggesting more efficient exocytosis than non-CR-expressing synapses. Conversely, CR-expressing synapses had smaller readily releasable pool size, which was countered by higher release probability and faster synaptic recovery to support sustained release during high-rate activit...
    Feb 14, 2022 Chuangeng Zhang
  • Journal Article
    Biophysical modelling of dopaminergic denervation landscapes in the striatum reveals new therapeutic strategy | eNeuro
    Parkinson’s disease (PD) results from a loss of dopaminergic neurons. What triggers the break-down of neuronal signaling, and how this might be compensated, is not understood. The age of onset, progression and symptoms vary between patients, and our understanding of the clinical variability remains incomplete. In this study, we investigate this, by characterizing the dopaminergic landscape in healthy and denervated striatum, using biophysical modelling. Based on currently proposed mechanisms, we model three distinct denervation patterns, and show how this affect the dopaminergic network. Depending on the denervation pattern, we show how local and global differences arise in the activity of striatal neurons. Finally, we use the mathematical formalism to suggest a cellular strategy for maintaining normal dopamine signaling following neuronal denervation. This strategy is characterized by dual enhancement of both the release and uptake capacity of dopamine in the remaining neurons. Overall, our results derive...
    Feb 11, 2022 Mathias L. Heltberg
  • Journal Article
    The Dopamine D4 Receptor Regulates Gonadotropin-Releasing Hormone Neuron Excitability in Male Mice | eNeuro
    Gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH)-secreting neurons control fertility. The release of GnRH peptide regulates the synthesis and release of both LH and FSH from the anterior pituitary. While it is known that dopamine regulates GnRH neurons, the specific dopamine receptor subtype(s) involved remain unclear. Previous studies in adult rodents have reported juxtaposition of fibers containing tyrosine hydroxylase (TH), a marker of catecholaminergic cells, onto GnRH neurons and that exogenous dopamine inhibits GnRH neurons postsynaptically through dopamine D1-like and/or D2-like receptors. Our microarray data from GnRH neurons revealed a high level of Drd4 transcripts [i.e., dopamine D4 receptor (D4R)]. Single-cell RT-PCR and immunocytochemistry confirmed GnRH cells express the Drd4 transcript and protein, respectively. Calcium imaging identified changes in GnRH neuronal activity during application of subtype-specific dopamine receptor agonists and antagonists when GABAergic and glutamatergic transmission was ...
    Feb 11, 2022 Leigh Dairaghi
  • Journal Article
    NPRL2 Inhibition of mTORC1 Controls Sodium Channel Expression and Brain Amino Acid Homeostasis | eNeuro
    Genetic mutations in nitrogen permease regulator-like 2 (NPRL2) are associated with a wide spectrum of familial focal epilepsies, autism, and sudden unexpected death of epileptics (SUDEP), but the mechanisms by which NPRL2 contributes to these effects are not well known. NPRL2 is a requisite subunit of the Gap Activity TOward Rags 1 (GATOR1) complex, which functions as a negative regulator of mammalian Target Of Rapamycin Complex 1 (mTORC1) kinase when intracellular amino acids are low. Here we show that loss of NPRL2 expression in mouse excitatory glutamatergic neurons causes seizures prior to death, consistent with SUDEP in humans with epilepsy. Additionally, the absence of NPRL2 expression increases mTORC1-dependent signal transduction and significantly alters amino acid homeostasis in the brain. Loss of NPRL2 reduces dendritic branching and increases the strength of electrically stimulated action potentials in neurons. The increased action potential strength is consistent with elevated expression of ep...
    Feb 11, 2022 Jeremy B. Hui
  • Journal Article
    A crucial role of the frontal operculum in task-set dependent visuomotor performance monitoring | eNeuro
    For adaptive goal-directed action, the brain needs to monitor action performance and detect errors. The corresponding information may be conveyed via different sensory modalities; for instance, visual and proprioceptive body position cues may inform about current manual action performance. Thereby, contextual factors such as the current task set may also determine the relative importance of each sensory modality for action guidance. Here, we analysed human behavioural, functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), and magnetoencephalography (MEG) data from two virtual reality (VR)-based hand-target phase matching studies to identify the neuronal correlates of performance monitoring and error processing under instructed visual or proprioceptive task sets. Our main result was a general, modality-independent response of the bilateral frontal operculum (FO) to poor phase matching accuracy, as evident from increased BOLD signal and increased gamma power. Furthermore, functional connectivity of the bilateral FO ...
    Feb 11, 2022 Felix Quirmbach
  • Journal Article
    Differential contributions of ventral striatum subregions to the motivational and hedonic components of the affective processing of reward | Journal of Neuroscience
    The ventral striatum is implicated in the affective processing of reward, which can be divided into a motivational and a hedonic component. Here, we examined whether these two components rely on distinct neural substrates within the ventral striatum in humans (11 females and 13 males). We used a high-resolution fMRI protocol targeting the ventral striatum combined with a Pavlovian-instrumental task and a hedonic reactivity task. Both tasks involved an olfactory reward, thereby allowing us to measure Pavlovian-triggered motivation and sensory pleasure for the same reward within the same participants. Our findings show that different subregions of the ventral striatum are dissociable in their contributions to the motivational versus the hedonic component of the affective processing of reward. Parsing the neural mechanisms of the interplay between Pavlovian incentive and hedonic processes may have important implications for understanding compulsive reward-seeking behaviors such as addiction, binge-eating, or ...
    Feb 11, 2022 Eva R. Pool
  • Journal Article
    Motoneuron-specific PTEN deletion in mice induces neuronal hypertrophy and also regeneration after facial nerve injury | Journal of Neuroscience
    In post-mitotic neurons, several tumor suppressor genes (TSGs) including p53, Rb and PTEN modulate the axon regeneration success after injury. Particularly, PTEN inhibition is a key driver of successful CNS axon regeneration after optic nerve or spinal cord injury. In contrast, in peripheral neurons, TSG influence in neuronal morphology, physiology and pathology has not been investigated to the same depth. In this study we conditionally deleted PTEN from mouse facial motoneurons ( Ptenflox/flox; Chat-Cre ) and analyzed neuronal responses in vivo with or without peripheral facial nerve injury in male and female mice. In uninjured motoneurons, PTEN loss induced somatic, axonal and nerve hypertrophy, synaptic terminal enlargement and reduction in physiological whisker movement. Despite these morphological and physiological changes, PTEN deletion positively regulated facial nerve regeneration and recovery of whisker movement after nerve injury. Regenerating PTEN deficient motoneurons upregulated P-CREB and a s...
    Feb 11, 2022 Sofia Meyer zu Reckendorf
  • Journal Article
    Integrated Amygdala, Orbitofrontal and Hippocampal Contributions to Reward and Loss Coding Revealed with Human Intracranial EEG | Journal of Neuroscience
    Neurophysiological work in primates and rodents have shown the amygdala plays a central role in reward processing through connectivity with the orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) and hippocampus. However, understanding the role of oscillations in each region and their connectivity in different stages of reward processing in humans has been hampered by limitations with non-invasive methods such as poor spatial and temporal resolution. To overcome these limitations, we recorded local field potentials (LFPs) directly from the amygdala, OFC and hippocampus simultaneously in human male and female epilepsy patients performing a monetary incentive delay task. This allowed us to dissociate electrophysiological activity and connectivity patterns related to the anticipation and receipt of rewards and losses in real-time. Anticipation of reward increased high frequency gamma (HFG) (60-250 Hz) activity in the hippocampus and theta band (4-8 Hz) synchronization between amygdala and OFC, suggesting roles in memory and motivatio...
    Feb 11, 2022 Luis Manssuer
  • Journal Article
    Biased Orientation and Color Tuning of the Human Visual Gamma Rhythm | Journal of Neuroscience
    Narrowband γ oscillations (NBG: ∼20-60 Hz) in visual cortex reflect rhythmic fluctuations in population activity generated by underlying circuits tuned for stimulus location, orientation, and color. A variety of theories posit a specific role for NBG in encoding and communicating this information within visual cortex. However, recent findings suggest a more nuanced role for NBG, given its dependence on certain stimulus feature configurations, such as coherent-oriented edges and specific hues. Motivated by these factors, we sought to quantify the independent and joint tuning properties of NBG to oriented and color stimuli using intracranial recordings from the human visual cortex (male and female). NBG was shown to display a cardinal orientation bias (horizontal) and also an end- and mid-spectral color bias (red/blue and green). When jointly probed, the cardinal bias for orientation was attenuated and an end-spectral preference for red and blue predominated. This loss of mid-spectral tuning occurred even fo...
    Feb 9, 2022 Ye Li
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