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3291 - 3300 of 52763 results
  • Journal Article
    Social play behavior is critical for the development of prefrontal inhibitory synapses and cognitive flexibility in rats | Journal of Neuroscience
    Sensory driven activity during early life is critical for setting up the proper connectivity of the sensory cortices. We ask here if social play behavior, a particular form of social interaction that is highly abundant during post-weaning development, is equally important for setting up connections in the developing prefrontal cortex (PFC). Young male rats were deprived from social play with peers during the period in life when social play behavior normally peaks (postnatal day 21-42; SPD rats), followed by resocialization until adulthood. We recorded synaptic currents in layer 5 cells in slices from medial PFC of adult SPD and control rats and observed that inhibitory synaptic currents were reduced in SPD slices, while excitatory synaptic currents were unaffected. This was associated with a decrease in perisomatic inhibitory synapses from parvalbumin-positive GABAergic cells. In parallel experiments, adult SPD rats achieved more reversals in a probabilistic reversal learning task (PRL), which depends on t...
    Oct 17, 2022 Ate Bijlsma
  • Journal Article
    Development of an open face home cage running wheel for testing activity-based anorexia and other applications | eNeuro
    Running wheels for mice residing in the home cage are useful for the continuous measurement of locomotor activity for studies testing exercise interventions or exercise-induced effects on brain and metabolism. Here, we have developed an open source, printable, open-faced running wheel that is automated to collect locomotor information such as distance travelled, wheel direction, and velocity that can be binned into epochs over 24 h or multiple days. This system allows for remote data collection to avoid human interference in mouse behavioural experiments. We tested this system in an activity-based-anorexia procedure. Using these wheels, we replicate previous findings that food restriction augments wheel running activity. Significance statement Anorexia Nervosa (AN) is a psychiatric disease with few treatments and a high mortality rate. It is important to better understand the biology to accelerate the development of new therapies. The most used animal model to study AN is the activity-based anorexia mod...
    Oct 14, 2022 Nathan Godfrey
  • Journal Article
    Prefrontal cortical to mediodorsal thalamus projection neurons regulate post-error adaptive control of behavior | eNeuro
    Adaptive control is the online adjustment of behavior to guide and optimize responses after errors or conflict. The neural circuits involved in monitoring and adapting behavioral performance following error are poorly understood. The prefrontal cortex (PFC) plays a critical role in this form of control. However, these brain areas are densely connected with many other regions and it is unknown which projections are critical for adaptive behavior. Here, we tested the involvement of four distinct dorsal and ventral prefrontal cortical projections to striatal and thalamic target areas in adaptive control. We re-analyzed data from published experiments, using trial-by-trial analyses of behavior in an operant task for attention and impulsivity. We find that male rats slow their responses and perform worse following errors. Moreover, by combining retrograde labeling and chemogenetic silencing, we find that dorsomedial prefrontal pyramidal neurons that project to the lateral nucleus of the mediodorsal thalamus (MD...
    Oct 14, 2022 Bastiaan Bruinsma
  • Journal Article
    Preserved motility after neonatal dopaminergic lesion relates to hyperexcitability of direct pathway medium spiny neurons | Journal of Neuroscience
    In Parkinson’s Disease (PD) patients and rodent models, dopaminergic neuron loss (DAN) results in severe motor disabilities. In contrast, general motility is preserved after early postnatal DAN loss in rodents. Here we used mice of both sexes to show that the preserved motility observed after early DAN loss depends on functional changes taking place in medium spiny neurons (MSN) of the dorsomedial striatum (DMS) that belong to the direct pathway (dMSN). Previous animal model studies showed that adult loss of dopaminergic input depresses dMSN response to cortical input, which likely contributes to PD motor impairments. However, the response of DMS-dMSN to their preferred medial prefrontal cortex input is preserved after neonatal DAN loss as shown by in vivo studies. Moreover, their response to inputs from adjacent cortical areas is increased, resulting in reduced cortical inputs selectivity. Additional ex vivo studies show that membrane excitability increases in dMSN. Furthermore, chemogenetic inhibition of...
    Oct 14, 2022 Ettel Keifman
  • Journal Article
    Whole-brain propagation delays in multiple sclerosis, a combined tractography - magnetoencephalography study | Journal of Neuroscience
    Two structurally connected brain regions are more likely to interact, with the lengths of the structural bundles, their widths, myelination, and the topology of the structural connectome influencing the timing of the interactions. We introduce an in vivo approach for measuring functional delays across the whole brain in humans (of either sex) using magneto/electroencephalography and integrating them with the structural bundles. The resulting topochronic map of the functional delays/velocities shows that larger bundles have faster velocities. We estimated the topochronic map in multiple sclerosis patients, who have damaged myelin sheaths, and controls, demonstrating greater delays in patients across the network and that structurally lesioned tracts were slowed down more than unaffected ones. We provide a novel framework for estimating functional transmission delays in vivo at the single-subject and single-tract level. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT: This manuscript provides a straightforward way to estimate pati...
    Oct 14, 2022 Pierpaolo Sorrentino
  • Journal Article
    Distinct roles of dopamine receptor subtypes in the nucleus accumbens during itch signal processing | Journal of Neuroscience
    Ventral tegmental area (VTA) dopaminergic neurons, which are well known for their central roles in reward and motivation-related behaviors, have been shown to participate in itch processing via their projection to the nucleus accumbens (NAc). However, the functional roles of different dopamine receptor subtypes in subregions of the NAc during itch processing remain unknown. With pharmacological approaches, we found that the blockade of dopamine D1 receptors (D1R), but not dopamine D2 receptors (D2R), in the lateral shell (LaSh) of the NAc impaired pruritogen-induced scratching behavior in male mice. In contrast, pharmacological activation of D2R in both the LaSh and medial shell (MeSh) of the NAc attenuated the scratching behavior induced by pruritogens. Consistently, we found that dopamine release, as detected by a dopamine sensor, was elevated in the LaSh rather than the MeSh of the NAc at the onset of scratching behavior. Furthermore, the elevation of dopamine release in the LaSh of the NAc persisted ev...
    Oct 14, 2022 Tong-Yu Liang
  • Journal Article
    Object boundary detection in natural images may depend on 'incitatory' cell-cell interactions | Journal of Neuroscience
    Detecting object boundaries is crucial for recognition, but how the process unfolds in visual cortex remains unknown. To study the problem faced by a hypothetical boundary cell, and to predict how cortical circuitry could produce a boundary cell from a population of conventional “simple cells”, we labeled 30,000 natural image patches and used Bayes’ rule to help determine how a simple cell should influence a nearby boundary cell depending on its relative offset in receptive field position and orientation. We identified three basic types of cell-cell interactions: rising and falling interactions with a range of slopes and saturation rates, as well as non-monotonic (bump-shaped) interactions with varying modes and amplitudes. Using simple models we show that a ubiquitous cortical circuit motif consisting of direct excitation and indirect inhibition – a compound effect we call "incitation" – can produce the entire spectrum of simple cell-boundary cell interactions found in our dataset. Moreover, we show that ...
    Oct 14, 2022 Gabriel C. Mel
  • Journal Article
    This Week in The Journal | Journal of Neuroscience
    Jing-Jing Liu, Katherine W. Eyring, Gabriele M. König, Evi Kostenis, and Richard W. Tsien (see pages [7707–7720][1]) Interest in hippocampal area CA2 has grown substantially since the area was discovered to have essential roles in social interaction. In particular, blocking output from dorsal
    Oct 12, 2022
  • Journal Article
    Sensory target detection at local and global timescales reveals a hierarchy of supramodal dynamics in the human cortex | Journal of Neuroscience
    To ensure survival in a dynamic environment, the human neocortex monitors input streams from different sensory organs for important sensory events. Which principles govern whether different senses share common or modality-specific brain networks for sensory target detection? We examined whether complex targets evoke sustained supramodal activity while simple targets rely on modality-specific networks with short-lived supramodal contributions. In a series of hierarchical multisensory target detection studies (n=77, of either sex) using Electroencephalography, we applied a temporal cross-decoding approach to dissociate supramodal and modality-specific cortical dynamics elicited by rule-based global and feature-based local sensory deviations within and between the visual, somatosensory and auditory modality. Our data show that each sense implements a cortical hierarchy orchestrating supramodal target detection responses which operate at local and global timescales in successive processing stages. Across diffe...
    Oct 12, 2022 Maria Niedernhuber
  • Journal Article
    General Auditory and Speech-Specific Contributions to Cortical Envelope Tracking Revealed Using Auditory Chimeras | Journal of Neuroscience
    In recent years research on natural speech processing has benefited from recognizing that low-frequency cortical activity tracks the amplitude envelope of natural speech. However, it remains unclear to what extent this tracking reflects speech-specific processing beyond the analysis of the stimulus acoustics. In the present study, we aimed to disentangle contributions to cortical envelope tracking that reflect general acoustic processing from those that are functionally related to processing speech. To do so, we recorded EEG from subjects as they listened to auditory chimeras, stimuli composed of the temporal fine structure of one speech stimulus modulated by the amplitude envelope (ENV) of another speech stimulus. By varying the number of frequency bands used in making the chimeras, we obtained some control over which speech stimulus was recognized by the listener. No matter which stimulus was recognized, envelope tracking was always strongest for the ENV stimulus, indicating a dominant contribution from ...
    Oct 12, 2022 Kevin D. Prinsloo
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