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9511 - 9520 of 52804 results
  • Journal Article
    Stimulus Contrast Affects Spatial Integration in the Lateral Geniculate Nucleus of Macaque Monkeys | Journal of Neuroscience
    Gain-control mechanisms adjust neuronal responses to accommodate the wide range of stimulus conditions in the natural environment. Contrast gain control and extraclassical surround suppression are two manifestations of gain control that govern the responses of neurons in the early visual system. Understanding how these two forms of gain control interact has important implications for the detection and discrimination of stimuli across a range of contrast conditions. Here, we report that stimulus contrast affects spatial integration in the lateral geniculate nucleus of alert macaque monkeys (male and female), whereby neurons exhibit a reduction in the strength of extraclassical surround suppression and an expansion in the preferred stimulus size with low-contrast stimuli compared with high-contrast stimuli. Effects were greater for magnocellular neurons than for parvocellular neurons, indicating stream-specific interactions between stimulus contrast and stimulus size. Within the magnocellular pathway, contra...
    Jul 21, 2021 Darlene R. Archer
  • Journal Article
    Substantia Nigra Integrity Correlates with Sequential Working Memory in Parkinson's Disease | Journal of Neuroscience
    Maintaining and manipulating sequences online is essential for daily activities such as scheduling a day. In Parkinson's disease (PD), sequential working memory deficits have been associated with altered regional activation and functional connectivity in the basal ganglia. This study demonstrates that the substantia nigra (SN) integrity correlated with basal ganglia function and sequencing performance in 29 patients with PD (17 women) and 29 healthy controls (HCs; 18 women). In neuromelanin-sensitive structural magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), PD patients showed smaller SNs than HCs. In a digit-ordering task with functional MRI (fMRI), participants either recalled sequential digits in the original order (pure recall) or rearranged the digits and recalled the new sequence (reorder and recall). PD patients performed less accurately than HCs, accompanied by the caudate and pallidal hypoactivation, subthalamic hyperactivation, and weakened functional connectivity between the bilateral SN and all three basal g...
    Jul 21, 2021 Wenyue Liu
  • Journal Article
    Distinct Neural Representations of Content and Ordinal Structure in Auditory Sequence Memory | Journal of Neuroscience
    Two forms of information, frequency (content) and ordinal position (structure), have to be stored when retaining a sequence of auditory tones in working memory (WM). However, the neural representations and coding characteristics of content and structure, particularly during WM maintenance, remain elusive. Here, in two EEG studies in human participants (both sexes), by transiently perturbing the “activity-silent” WM retention state and decoding the reactivated WM information, we demonstrate that content and structure are stored in a dissociative manner with distinct characteristics throughout WM process. First, each tone in the sequence is associated with two codes in parallel, characterizing its frequency and ordinal position, respectively. Second, during retention, a structural retrocue successfully reactivates structure but not content, whereas a following white noise triggers content but not structure. Third, structure representation remains stable, whereas content code undergoes a dynamic transformatio...
    Jul 21, 2021 Ying Fan
  • Journal Article
    Monoamine oxidase-B inhibition facilitates α-synuclein secretion in vitro and delays its aggregation in rAAV-based rat models of Parkinson’s disease | Journal of Neuroscience
    Cell-to-cell transmission of α-synuclein (α-syn) pathology is considered to underlie the spread of neurodegeneration in Parkinson’s disease. Previous studies have demonstrated that α-syn is secreted under physiological conditions in neuronal cell lines and primary neurons. However, the molecular mechanisms that regulate extracellular α-syn secretion remain unclear. In this study, we found that inhibition of monoamine oxidase-B (MAO-B) enzymatic activity facilitated α-syn secretion in human neuroblastoma SH-SY5Y cells. Both inhibition of MAO-B by selegiline or rasagiline and siRNA-mediated knockdown of MAO-B facilitated α-syn secretion. However, TVP-1022, the S-isomer of rasagiline that is 1,000 times less active, failed to facilitate α-syn secretion. Additionally, the MAO-B inhibition-induced increase in α-syn secretion was unaffected by brefeldin A, which inhibits endoplasmic reticulum/Golgi transport, but was blocked by probenecid and glyburide, which inhibit ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter functi...
    Jul 21, 2021 Yoshitsugu Nakamura
  • Journal Article
    Effects of Sex and Estrous Cycle on the Time-Course of Incubation of Cue-Induced Craving Following Extended-Access Cocaine Self-Administration | eNeuro
    Cocaine addiction is a devastating public health epidemic that continues to grow. Studies focused on identifying biological factors influencing cocaine craving and relapse vulnerability are necessary in order to promote abstinence in recovering drug users. Sex and ovarian hormones are known to influence cocaine addiction liability and relapse vulnerability in both humans and rodents. Previous studies have investigated sex differences in the time-dependent intensification or “incubation” of cue-induced cocaine craving that occurs during withdrawal from extended-access cocaine self-administration and have identified changes across the rat reproductive cycle (estrous cycle). Female rats in the estrus stage of the cycle (Estrus Females), the phase during which ovulation occurs, show an increase in the magnitude of incubated cue-induced cocaine craving compared to females in all other phases of the estrous cycle (Non-Estrus Females). Here we extend these findings by assessing incubated craving across the estrou...
    Jul 21, 2021 Claire M. Corbett
  • Journal Article
    Sperm Transcriptional State Associated with Paternal Transmission of Stress Phenotypes | Journal of Neuroscience
    Paternal stress can induce long-lasting changes in germ cells potentially propagating heritable changes across generations. To date, no studies have investigated differences in transmission patterns between stress-resilient and stress-susceptible mice. We tested the hypothesis that transcriptional alterations in sperm during chronic social defeat stress (CSDS) transmit increased susceptibility to stress phenotypes to the next generation. We demonstrate differences in offspring from stressed fathers that depend on paternal category (resilient vs susceptible) and offspring sex. Importantly, artificial insemination (AI) reveals that sperm mediates some of the behavioral phenotypes seen in offspring. Using RNA-sequencing (RNA-seq), we report substantial and distinct changes in the transcriptomic profiles of sperm following CSDS in susceptible versus resilient fathers, with alterations in long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) predominating especially in susceptibility. Correlation analysis revealed that these alteratio...
    Jul 21, 2021 Ashley M. Cunningham
  • Journal Article
    On the Necessity of Recurrent Processing during Object Recognition: It Depends on the Need for Scene Segmentation | Journal of Neuroscience
    Although feedforward activity may suffice for recognizing objects in isolation, additional visual operations that aid object recognition might be needed for real-world scenes. One such additional operation is figure-ground segmentation, extracting the relevant features and locations of the target object while ignoring irrelevant features. In this study of 60 human participants (female and male), we show objects on backgrounds of increasing complexity to investigate whether recurrent computations are increasingly important for segmenting objects from more complex backgrounds. Three lines of evidence show that recurrent processing is critical for recognition of objects embedded in complex scenes. First, behavioral results indicated a greater reduction in performance after masking objects presented on more complex backgrounds, with the degree of impairment increasing with increasing background complexity. Second, electroencephalography (EEG) measurements showed clear differences in the evoked response potenti...
    Jul 21, 2021 Noor Seijdel
  • Journal Article
    Medial Prefrontal Cortex Has a Causal Role in Selectively Enhanced Consolidation of Emotional Memories after a 24-Hour Delay: A TBS Study | Journal of Neuroscience
    Previous research points to an association between retrieval-related activity in the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) and preservation of emotional information compared with co-occurring neutral information following sleep. Although the role of the mPFC in emotional memory likely begins at encoding, little research has examined how mPFC activity during encoding interacts with consolidation processes to enhance emotional memory. This issue was addressed in the present study using transcranial magnetic stimulation in conjunction with an emotional memory paradigm. Healthy young adults encoded negative and neutral scenes while undergoing concurrent TMS with a modified short intermittent theta burst stimulation (sTBS) protocol. Participants received stimulation to either the mPFC or an active control site (motor cortex) during the encoding phase. Recognition memory for scene components (objects and backgrounds) was assessed after a short delay (30 min) and a long delay [24 h (including a night of sleep)] to obta...
    Jul 21, 2021 Nicholas Yeh
  • Journal Article
    The Transcription Factor Sox2 Is Required to Maintain the Cell Type-Specific Properties and Innervation of Type II Vestibular Hair Cells in Adult Mice | Journal of Neuroscience
    The sense of balance relies on vestibular hair cells, which detect head motions. Mammals have two types of vestibular hair cell, I and II, with unique morphological, molecular, and physiological properties. Furthermore, each hair cell type signals to a unique form of afferent nerve terminal. Little is known about the mechanisms in mature animals that maintain the specific features of each hair cell type or its postsynaptic innervation. We found that deletion of the transcription factor Sox2 from Type II hair cells in adult mice of both sexes caused many cells in utricles to acquire features unique to Type I hair cells and to lose Type II-specific features. This cellular transdifferentiation, which included changes in nuclear size, chromatin condensation, soma and stereocilium morphology, and marker expression, resulted in a significantly higher proportion of Type I-like hair cells in all epithelial zones. Furthermore, Sox2 deletion from Type II hair cells triggered non-cell autonomous changes in vestibular...
    Jul 21, 2021 Jennifer S. Stone
  • Journal Article
    Visual Recognition Is Heralded by Shifts in Local Field Potential Oscillations and Inhibitory Networks in Primary Visual Cortex | Journal of Neuroscience
    Learning to recognize and filter familiar, irrelevant sensory stimuli eases the computational burden on the cerebral cortex. Inhibition is a candidate mechanism in this filtration process, and oscillations in the cortical local field potential (LFP) serve as markers of the engagement of different inhibitory neurons. We show here that LFP oscillatory activity in visual cortex is profoundly altered as male and female mice learn to recognize an oriented grating stimulus—low-frequency (∼15 Hz peak) power sharply increases, whereas high-frequency (∼65 Hz peak) power decreases. These changes report recognition of the familiar pattern as they disappear when the stimulus is rotated to a novel orientation. Two-photon imaging of neuronal activity reveals that parvalbumin-expressing inhibitory neurons disengage with familiar stimuli and reactivate to novelty, whereas somatostatin-expressing inhibitory neurons show opposing activity patterns. We propose a model in which the balance of two interacting interneuron circu...
    Jul 21, 2021 Dustin J. Hayden
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