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9961 - 9970 of 52804 results
  • Journal Article
    Temporal relations between cortical network oscillations and breathing frequency during REM sleep | Journal of Neuroscience
    Nasal breathing generates a rhythmic signal which entrains cortical network oscillations in widespread brain regions on a cycle-to-cycle time scale. It is unknown, however, how respiration and neuronal network activity interact on a larger time scale: are breathing frequency and typical neuronal oscillation patterns correlated? Is there any directionality or temporal relationship? To address these questions, we recorded field potentials from the posterior parietal cortex of mice together with respiration during REM sleep. In this state, the parietal cortex exhibits prominent theta and gamma oscillations while behavioral activity is minimal, reducing confounding signals. We found that the instantaneous breathing frequency strongly correlates with the instantaneous frequency and amplitude of both theta and gamma oscillations. Cross-correlograms and Granger causality revealed specific directionalities for different rhythms: changes in theta activity precede and Granger-cause changes in breathing frequency, su...
    May 7, 2021 Adriano BL Tort
  • Journal Article
    The integrin signaling network promotes axon regeneration via the Src–ephexin–RhoA GTPase signaling axis | Journal of Neuroscience
    Axon regeneration is an evolutionarily conserved process essential for restoring the function of damaged neurons. In Caenorhabditis elegans hermaphrodites, initiation of axon regeneration is regulated by the RhoA GTPase–ROCK (Rho-associated coiled-coil kinase)–regulatory non-muscle myosin light-chain phosphorylation signaling pathway. However, the upstream mechanism that activates the RhoA pathway remains unknown. Here, we show that axon injury activates TLN-1/talin via the cAMP–Epac (exchange protein directly activated by cAMP)–Rap GTPase cascade and that TLN-1 induces multiple downstream events, one of which is integrin inside-out activation, leading to the activation of the RhoA–ROCK signaling pathway. We found that the non-receptor tyrosine kinase Src, a key mediator of integrin signaling, activates the Rho guanine nucleotide exchange factor (GEF) EPHX-1/ephexin by phosphorylating the Tyr-568 residue in the autoinhibitory domain. Our results suggest that the C. elegans integrin signaling network regula...
    May 7, 2021 Yoshiki Sakai
  • Journal Article
    The Role of the Lateral Habenula in Inhibitory Learning from Reward Omission Experiences | eNeuro
    The lateral habenula (LHb) is a phylogenetically primitive brain structure that plays a key role in learning to inhibit distinct responses to specific stimuli. This structure is activated by primary aversive stimuli, cues predicting an imminent aversive event, unexpected reward omissions, and cues associated with the omission of an expected reward. The most widely described effect of LHb activation is acutely suppressing midbrain dopaminergic signaling. However, recent studies have identified multiple means by which the LHb foster this effect as well as other mechanisms of action. These findings reveal the complex nature of LHb function. The present paper reviews the role of this structure in learning from reward omission experiences. We approach this topic from the perspective of computational models of behavioral change that account for inhibitory learning to frame key findings. Such findings are drawn from recent behavioral neuroscience studies that use novel brain imaging, stimulation, ablation, and re...
    May 7, 2021 Rodrigo Sosa
  • Journal Article
    No detectable effect on visual responses using functional MRI in a rodent model of α-synuclein expression | eNeuro
    Parkinson’s disease (PD) is a progressive neurodegenerative disease that is typically diagnosed late in its progression. There is a need for biomarkers suitable for monitoring the disease progression at earlier stages to guide the development of novel neuroprotective therapies. One potential biomarker, α-synuclein, has been found in both the familial cases of PD, as well as the sporadic cases and is considered a key feature of PD. α-synuclein is naturally present in the retina, and it has been suggested that early symptoms of the visual system may be used as a biomarker for PD. Here, we use a viral vector to induce a unilateral expression of human wildtype α-synuclein in rats as a mechanistic model of protein aggregation in PD. We employed functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to investigate whether adeno-associated virus (AAV) mediated expression of human wildtype α-synuclein alter functional activity in the visual system. 16 rats were injected with either AAV-α-synuclein (n=7) or AAV-null (n=9) i...
    May 6, 2021 Freja Gam Østergaard
  • Journal Article
    The Journal of Neuroscience’s 40th Anniversary: Looking back, looking forward | Journal of Neuroscience
    Some of us fortunate enough to have published a paper in the Journal of Neuroscience in its inaugural year (1981), have been asked to write a Progressions article addressing our views on the significance of the original work and how ideas about the topic of that work have evolved over the last 40 years. These questions cannot be effectively considered without placing them in the context of the incredible growth of the overall field of Neuroscience over these last four decades. For openers, in 1981, the Nobel Prize was awarded to three neuroscience superstars: Roger Sperry, David Hubel and Torsten Wiesel. Not a bad year to launch the Journal. With this as a backdrop, I divide this Progression into two parts. First, I discuss our original (1981) paper describing classical conditioning in Aplysia californica , and place our results in the context of the state of the field at the time. Second, I fast forward to the present and consider some of remarkable progress in the broad field of learning and memory that ...
    May 6, 2021 Thomas J. Carew
  • Journal Article
    On the road from phenotypic plasticity to stem cell therapy | Journal of Neuroscience
    In 1981, I published a paper in the first issue of the Journal of Neuroscience with my postdoctoral mentor, Dr. Richard Bunge. At that time, the long-standing belief that each neuron expressed only one neurotransmitter, known as Dale’s Principle (Dale, 1935), was being hotly debated following a report by French embryologist Nicole Le Douarin showing that neural crest cells destined for one transmitter phenotype could express characteristics of another if transplanted to alternate sites in the developing embryo (LeDouarin, 1980). In the Bunge lab, we were able to more directly test the question of phenotypic plasticity in the controlled environment of the tissue culture dish. Thus, in our paper, we grew autonomic catecholaminergic neurons in culture under conditions which promoted the acquisition of cholinergic traits and showed that cells did not abandon their inherited phenotype in order to adopt a new one but instead were capable of dual transmitter expression. In this Progressions article, I detail the ...
    May 6, 2021 Lorraine Iacovitti
  • Journal Article
    Increased RET activity coupled with a reduction in the RET gene dosage causes intestinal aganglionosis in mice | eNeuro
    Mutations of the gene encoding the RET tyrosine kinase causes Hirschsprung disease (HSCR) and medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC). Current consensus holds that HSCR and MTC are induced by inactivating and activating RET mutations, respectively. However, it remains unknown whether activating mutations in the RET gene have adverse effects on ENS development in vivo. We addressed this issue by examining mice engineered to express RET51(C618F), an activating mutation identified in MTC patients. Although Ret51(C618F)/51(C618F) mice displayed hyperganglionosis of the ENS, Ret51(C618F)/- mice exhibited severe intestinal aganglionosis due to premature neuronal differentiation. Reduced levels of GDNF, a RET-activating neurotrophic factor, ameliorated the ENS phenotype of Ret51(C618F)/- mice, demonstrating that GDNF-mediated activation of RET51(C618F) is responsible for severe aganglionic phenotype. The RET51(C618F) allele showed genetic interaction with Ednrb gene, one of modifier genes for HSCR. These data reveal th...
    May 6, 2021 Mitsumasa Okamoto
  • Journal Article
    Neuron replating – a powerful and versatile approach to study early aspects of neuron differentiation | eNeuro
    Neuron differentiation includes formation and outgrowth of neurites that differentiate into axons or dendrites. Directed neurite outgrowth is controlled by growth cones that protrude and retract actin-rich structures to sense environmental cues. These cues control local actin filament dynamics, steer growth cones towards attractants and away from repellents and navigate neurites through the developing brain. Rodent hippocampal neurons are widely used to study the mechanisms underlying neuron differentiation. Genetic manipulation of isolated neurons including gene inactivation or reporter gene expression can be achieved by classical transfections methods, but these methods are restricted to neurons cultured for several days, after neurite formation or outgrowth. Instead, electroporation allows gene manipulation prior to seeding. However, reporter gene expression usually takes up to 24 hours and time course of gene inactivation depends on the half live of the targeted mRNA and gene product. Hence, these meth...
    May 6, 2021 Felix Schneider
  • Journal Article
    Zebrafish as a translational model: an experimental alternative to study the mechanisms involved in anosmia and possible neurodegenerative aspects of COVID-19? | eNeuro
    The Coronavirus Disease - 2019 (COVID-19) presents a variability of clinical symptoms, ranging from asymptomatic to severe respiratory and systemic conditions. In a cohort of patients, the Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2), beyond the classical respiratory manifestations, induces anosmia. Evidence has suggested SARS-CoV-2-induced anosmia can be the result of neurodegeneration of the olfactory pathway. Neurological symptoms associated with COVID-19 have been reported; however, the precise mechanism and possible long-lasting effects remain poorly investigated. Preclinical models are valuable tools for describing and testing new possible treatments for neurological disorders. In this way, the zebrafish ( Danio rerio ) organism model represents an attractive tool in the field of neuroscience, showing economic and logistical advantages besides genetic and physiologic similarities with mammalian, including the brain structure and functions. Besides, its external embryonic development, hi...
    May 5, 2021 Karla C. M. Costa
  • Journal Article
    Superior Colliculus Controls the Activity of the Rostromedial Tegmental Nuclei in an Asymmetrical Manner | Journal of Neuroscience
    Dopaminergic (DA) neurons of the midbrain are involved in controlling orienting and approach of animals toward relevant external stimuli. The firing of DA neurons is regulated by many brain structures; however, the sensory input is provided predominantly by the ipsilateral superior colliculus (SC). It is suggested that SC also innervates the contralateral rostromedial tegmental nucleus (RMTg)—the main inhibitory input to DA neurons. Therefore, this study aimed to describe the physiology and anatomy of the SC–RMTg pathway. To investigate the anatomic connections within the circuit of interest, anterograde, retrograde, and transsynaptic tract-tracing studies were performed on male Sprague Dawley rats. We have observed that RMTg is monosynaptically innervated predominantly by the lateral parts of the intermediate layer of the contralateral SC. To study the physiology of this neuronal pathway, we conducted in vivo electrophysiological experiments combined with optogenetics; the activity of RMTg neurons was rec...
    May 5, 2021 Kamil Pradel
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