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8641 - 8650 of 52800 results
  • Journal Article
    Acoustic Context Modulates Natural Sound Discrimination in Auditory Cortex through Frequency-Specific Adaptation | Journal of Neuroscience
    Sound discrimination is essential in many species for communicating and foraging. Bats, for example, use sounds for echolocation and communication. In the bat auditory cortex there are neurons that process both sound categories, but how these neurons respond to acoustic transitions, that is, echolocation streams followed by a communication sound, remains unknown. Here, we show that the acoustic context, a leading sound sequence followed by a target sound, changes neuronal discriminability of echolocation versus communication calls in the cortex of awake bats of both sexes. Nonselective neurons that fire equally well to both echolocation and communication calls in the absence of context become category selective when leading context is present. On the contrary, neurons that prefer communication sounds in the absence of context turn into nonselective ones when context is added. The presence of context leads to an overall response suppression, but the strength of this suppression is stimulus specific. Suppres...
    Dec 15, 2021 Luciana López-Jury
  • Journal Article
    Modulation of Both Intrinsic and Extrinsic Factors Additively Promotes Rewiring of Corticospinal Circuits after Spinal Cord Injury | Journal of Neuroscience
    Axon regeneration after spinal cord injury (SCI) is limited by both a decreased intrinsic ability of neurons to grow axons and the growth-hindering effects of extrinsic inhibitory molecules expressed around the lesion. Deletion of phosphatase and tensin homolog ( Pten ) augments mechanistic target of rapamycin (mTOR) signaling and enhances the intrinsic regenerative response of injured corticospinal neurons after SCI. Because of the variety of growth-restrictive extrinsic molecules, it remains unclear how inhibition of conserved inhibitory signaling elements would affect axon regeneration and rewiring after SCI. Moreover, it remains unknown how a combinatorial approach to modulate both extrinsic and intrinsic mechanisms can enhance regeneration and rewiring after SCI. In the present study, we deleted RhoA and RhoC , which encode small GTPases that mediate growth inhibition signals of a variety of extrinsic molecules, to remove global extrinsic pathways. RhoA / RhoC double deletion in mice suppressed retrac...
    Dec 15, 2021 Yuka Nakamura
  • Journal Article
    Regulation of metabotropic glutamate receptor internalization and synaptic AMPA receptor endocytosis by the post-synaptic protein Norbin | Journal of Neuroscience
    Group I metabotropic glutamate receptors (mGluRs) have diverse functions in some fundamental neuronal processes, including modulation of synaptic plasticity and dysregulation of these receptors could lead to various neuropsychiatric disorders. Trafficking of group I mGluRs plays critical roles in controlling the precise spatio-temporal localization and activity of these receptors, both of which contribute to proper downstream signaling. Using “molecular replacement” approach in hippocampal neurons derived from mice of both sexes, we demonstrate a critical role for the post-synaptic density protein Norbin in regulating the ligand-induced internalization of group I mGluRs. We show that Norbin associates with protein kinase A (PKA) through its N-terminus and anchors mGluR5 through its C-terminus, both of which are necessary for the ligand-mediated endocytosis of mGluR5, a member of the group I mGluR family. A point mutation (A687G) at the C-terminus of Norbin inhibits the binding of Norbin to mGluR5 and block...
    Dec 14, 2021 Prachi Ojha
  • Journal Article
    Task-specific Neural Representations of Generalizable Metacognitive Control Signals in The Human Dorsal Anterior Cingulate Cortex | Journal of Neuroscience
    The dorsal anterior cingulate cortex (dACC) plays a critical role in cognitive control over different domains of tasks. The dACC activities uniformly represent task-generic intensities of control signals across different tasks. However, it remains unclear whether the dACC activities could also encode task identities of control signals across different tasks. If so, how the two types of control information are coherently organized in the dACC? Decision uncertainty is an internally-generated control signal by retrospective monitoring, namely, metacognition, even with no external feedback. We here investigated neural representations of decision uncertainty accompanying three decision-making tasks in the domains of perception, rule-based inference, and memory using trial-by-trial univariate and multivariate analyses on functional magnetic imaging data acquired on human male and female healthy subjects. Our results demonstrated that the dACC represented decision uncertainty commonly across the three decision-ma...
    Dec 14, 2021 Jie Su
  • Journal Article
    Presynaptic Mitochondrial Volume and Packing Density Scale with Presynaptic Power Demand | Journal of Neuroscience
    Stable neural function requires an energy supply that can meet the intense episodic power demands of neuronal activity. Neurons have presumably optimized the volume of their bioenergetic machinery to ensure these power demands are met, but the relationship between presynaptic power demands and the volume available to the bioenergetic machinery has never been quantified. Here we estimated the power demands of six motor nerve terminals in female Drosophila larvae through direct measurements of neurotransmitter release and Ca2+ entry, and via theoretical estimates of Na+ entry and power demands at rest. Electron microscopy revealed that terminals with the highest power demands contained the greatest volume of mitochondria, indicating that mitochondria are allocated according to presynaptic power demands. In addition, terminals with the greatest power demand-to-volume ratio (∼66 nmol·min−1·μL−1) harbor the largest mitochondria packed at the greatest density. If we assume sequential and complete oxidation of gl...
    Dec 14, 2021 Karlis A. Justs
  • Journal Article
    The representational dynamics of sequential perceptual averaging | Journal of Neuroscience
    It is clear that humans can extract statistical information from streams of visual input, yet how our brain processes sequential images into the abstract representation of the mean feature value remains poorly explored. Using multivariate pattern analyses of electroencephalgraphy recorded while human observers viewed the sequentially presented ten Gabors of different orientations to estimate their mean orientation at the end, we investigated sequential averaging mechanism by tracking the quality of individual and mean orientation as a function of sequential position. Critically, we varied the sequential variance of Gabor orientations to understand the neural basis of perceptual mean errors occurring during sequential averaging task. We found that the mean-orientation representation emerged at specific delays from each sequential stimulus onset and became increasingly accurate as additional Gabors were viewed. Especially in frontocentral electrodes, the neural representation of mean orientation improved mor...
    Dec 13, 2021 Jongrok Do (도종록)
  • Journal Article
    Pathways for memory, cognition and emotional context: hippocampal, subgenual area 25 and amygdalar axons show unique interactions in the primate thalamic Reuniens Nucleus | Journal of Neuroscience
    The Reuniens Nucleus (RE) is situated at the most ventral position of the midline thalamus. In rats and mice RE is distinguished by bidirectional connections with the hippocampus and medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) and a role in memory and cognition. In primates, many foundational questions pertaining to RE remain unresolved. We addressed these issues by investigating the composition of the rhesus monkey RE in both sexes by labeling for gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA), a marker of inhibitory neurons, and for the calcium-binding proteins parvalbumin (PV), calbindin (CB), and calretinin (CR), which label thalamic excitatory neurons that project to cortex. As in rats and mice, the macaque RE was mostly populated by CB and CR neurons, characteristic of matrix-dominant nuclei, and had bidirectional connections with hippocampus and mPFC area 25 (A25). Unlike rodents, we found GABAergic neurons in the monkey RE, and a sparser but consistent population of core-associated thalamocortical PV neurons. RE had stronger ...
    Dec 13, 2021 MKP Joyce
  • Journal Article
    Endothelial sphingosine-1-phosphate receptor 4 regulates blood-brain barrier permeability and promotes a homeostatic endothelial phenotype | Journal of Neuroscience
    The precise regulation of blood-brain barrier (BBB) permeability for immune cells and blood-borne substances is essential to maintain brain homeostasis. Sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P), a lipid signaling molecule enriched in plasma, is known to affect BBB permeability. Previous studies focussed on endothelial S1P receptors 1 and 2, reporting a barrier-protective effect of S1P1 and a barrier-disruptive effect of S1P2. Here we present novel data characterizing the expression, localization and function of the S1P receptor 4 (S1P4) on primary brain microvascular endothelial cells (BMECs). Hitherto, the receptor was deemed to be exclusively immune cell-associated. We detected a robust expression of S1P4 in homeostatic murine, bovine and porcine BMECs and pinpointed its localization to abluminal endothelial membranes via immunoblotting of fractionated brain endothelial membrane fragments. Apical S1P treatment of BMECs tightened the endothelial barrier in vitro , whereas basolateral S1P treatment led to an increase...
    Dec 13, 2021 Lena Hansen
  • Journal Article
    Sex-specific regulation of β-Secretase: a novel estrogen response element (ERE)-dependent mechanism in Alzheimer's disease | Journal of Neuroscience
    Women have a higher prevalence and incidence of Alzheimer's disease (AD) than age-matched men, and loss of estrogen might be partially responsible for the higher risk of AD in aged women. While β-Secretase (BACE1) plays an important role in AD pathogenesis, whether BACE1 involved the sex difference in AD pathology remains unclear. This study investigated the hypothesis that estrogen regulates BACE1 transcription via the estrogen response element (ERE) and designated pathways. Using estrogen receptor (ER) knockout mice and mutagenesis of EREs in HEK293 cells, we demonstrated sex-specific inhibition of BACE1 transcription by estrogen via direct binding to ERE sites and ERα. We also used a repressor of estrogen receptor activity (REA) and showed that a REA-ERE complex downregulated BACE1. A ChIP assay analysis determined that all three EREs at the BACE1 promoter were required for estradiol-mediated downregulation of BACE1 transcription in mice. Lastly, we confirmed the impairment of the REA pathway in the cor...
    Dec 13, 2021 Jie Cui
  • Journal Article
    Attention differentially affects acoustic and phonetic feature encoding in a multispeaker environment | Journal of Neuroscience
    Humans have the remarkable ability to selectively focus on a single talker in the midst of other competing talkers. The neural mechanisms that underlie this phenomenon remain incompletely understood. In particular, there has been longstanding debate over whether attention operates at an early or late stage in the speech processing hierarchy. One way to better understand this is to examine how attention might differentially affect neurophysiological indices of hierarchical acoustic and linguistic speech representations. In this study, we do this by using encoding models to identify neural correlates of speech processing at various levels of representation. Specifically, we recorded EEG from fourteen human subjects (nine female and five male) during a “cocktail party” attention experiment. Model comparisons based on these data revealed phonetic feature processing for attended, but not unattended speech. Furthermore, we show that attention specifically enhances isolated indices of phonetic feature processing,...
    Dec 10, 2021 Emily S. Teoh
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