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9991 - 10000 of 52807 results
  • Journal Article
    ZFPM1 Necessary for Development of Serotonergic Projections Related to Anxiety and Contextual Fear Learning | Journal of Neuroscience
    The serotonergic system is strongly implicated in anxiety and depression, and it is the first-line target for pharmacological treatment ([Tamblyn et al., 2019][1]). Genetic factors predispose people to these disorders, but the anatomic and molecular diversity of the main serotonergic nuclei, the
    May 5, 2021 Masakazu Taira
  • Journal Article
    State-Dependent Regulation of Cortical Processing Speed via Gain Modulation | Journal of Neuroscience
    To thrive in dynamic environments, animals must be capable of rapidly and flexibly adapting behavioral responses to a changing context and internal state. Examples of behavioral flexibility include faster stimulus responses when attentive and slower responses when distracted. Contextual or state-dependent modulations may occur early in the cortical hierarchy and may be implemented via top-down projections from corticocortical or neuromodulatory pathways. However, the computational mechanisms mediating the effects of such projections are not known. Here, we introduce a theoretical framework to classify the effects of cell type-specific top-down perturbations on the information processing speed of cortical circuits. Our theory demonstrates that perturbation effects on stimulus processing can be predicted by intrinsic gain modulation, which controls the timescale of the circuit dynamics. Our theory leads to counterintuitive effects, such as improved performance with increased input variance. We tested the mod...
    May 5, 2021 David Wyrick
  • Journal Article
    Mechanism of Pacemaker Activity in Zebrafish DC2/4 Dopaminergic Neurons | Journal of Neuroscience
    Zebrafish models are used increasingly to study the molecular pathogenesis of Parkinson's disease (PD), owing to the extensive array of techniques available for their experimental manipulation and analysis. The ascending dopaminergic projection from the posterior tuberculum (TPp; diencephalic populations DC2 and DC4) to the subpallium is considered the zebrafish correlate of the mammalian nigrostriatal projection, but little is known about the neurophysiology of zebrafish DC2/4 neurons. This is an important knowledge gap, because autonomous activity in mammalian substantia nigra (SNc) dopaminergic neurons contributes to their vulnerability in PD models. Using a new transgenic zebrafish line to label living dopaminergic neurons, and a novel brain slice preparation, we conducted whole-cell patch clamp recordings of DC2/4 neurons from adult zebrafish of both sexes. Zebrafish DC2/4 neurons share many physiological properties with mammalian dopaminergic neurons, including the cell-autonomous generation of actio...
    May 5, 2021 Vladimir A. Ilin
  • Journal Article
    Natural statistics as inference principles of auditory tuning in biological and artificial midbrain networks | eNeuro
    Bats provide a powerful mammalian model to explore the neural representation of complex sounds, as they rely on hearing to survive in their environment. The inferior colliculus (IC) is a central hub of the auditory system that receives converging projections from the ascending pathway and descending inputs from auditory cortex. In this work, we build an artificial neural network to replicate auditory characteristics in IC neurons of the big brown bat. We first test the hypothesis that spectro-temporal tuning of IC neurons is optimized to represent the natural statistics of conspecific vocalizations. We estimate spectro-temporal receptive fields (STRF) of IC neurons and compare tuning characteristics to statistics of bat calls. The results indicate that the FM tuning of IC neurons is matched with the statistics. Then, we investigate this hypothesis on the network optimized to represent natural sound statistics and to compare its output with biological responses. We also estimate biomimetic STRF's from the a...
    May 4, 2021 Sangwook Park
  • Journal Article
    Input-independent homeostasis of developing thalamocortical activity | eNeuro
    The isocortex of all mammals studied to date shows a progressive increase in the amount and continuity of background activity during early development. In humans the transition from a discontinuous (mostly silent, intermittently bursting) cortex to one that is continuously active is complete soon after birth and is a critical prognostic indicator. In the visual cortex of rodents this switch from discontinuous to continuous background activity occurs during the two days before eye-opening, driven by activity changes in relay thalamus. The factors that regulate the timing of continuity development, which enables mature visual processing, are unknown. Here we test the role of the retina, the primary input, in the development of continuous spontaneous activity in the visual cortex of mice using depth electrode recordings from Enucleated mice in vivo . Bilateral enucleation at postnatal day (P)6, one week prior to the onset of continuous activity, acutely silences cortex, yet firing rates and early oscillations...
    May 4, 2021 Pouria Riyahi
  • Journal Article
    Estrogen receptor β contributes to both hypertension and hypothalamic plasticity in a mouse model of peri-menopause | Journal of Neuroscience
    Hypertension susceptibility in women increases at the transition to menopause, termed perimenopause, a state characterized by erratic estrogen fluctuation and extended hormone cycles. Elucidating the role of estrogen signaling in the emergence of hypertension during perimenopause has been hindered by animal models that are confounded by abrupt estrogen cessation or effects of aging. In the present study, accelerated ovarian failure (AOF) in estrogen receptor beta (ERβ) reporter mice was induced by 4-vinylcyclohexene diepoxide (VCD) in young mice to model early-stage ovarian failure (peri-AOF) characteristic of peri-menopause. It was found that administering ERβ agonists suppressed elevated blood pressure in a model of neurogenic hypertension induced by angiotensin II (AngII) in peri-AOF, but not age-matched male mice. It was also found that ERβ agonist administration in peri-AOF females, but not males, suppressed the heightened NMDA receptor signaling and reactive oxygen production in ERβ neurons in the hy...
    May 3, 2021 Teresa A. Milner
  • Journal Article
    Fever during localized inflammation in mice is elicited by a humoral pathway and depends on brain endothelial interleukin-1 and interleukin-6 signaling and central EP3 receptors | Journal of Neuroscience
    We examined the signaling route for fever during localized inflammation in male and female mice, elicited by casein injection into a preformed air pouch. The localized inflammation gave rise to high concentrations of PGE2 and cytokines in the air pouch, and elevated levels of these inflammatory mediators in plasma. There were also elevated levels of PGE2 in the cerebrospinal fluid, although there was little evidence for PGE2 synthesis in the brain. Global deletion of the PGE2 EP3 receptor abolished the febrile response as did deletion of the EP3 receptor in neural cells, whereas its deletion on peripheral nerves had no effect, implying that PGE2 action on this receptor in the CNS elicited the fever. Global deletion of the interleukin-1 receptor type 1 (IL-1R1) also abolished the febrile response, whereas its deletion on neural cells or peripheral nerves had no effect. However, deletion of the IL-1R1 on brain endothelial cells, as well as deletion of the interleukin-6 receptor α on these cells, attenuated t...
    May 3, 2021 Anna Eskilsson
  • Journal Article
    GPR84 is Essential for the Taste of Medium Chain Saturated Fatty Acids | Journal of Neuroscience
    The ability of mammalian taste cells to respond to fatty acids (FAs) has garnered significant attention of late and has been proposed to represent a sixth primary taste. With few exceptions, studies on FA taste have centered exclusively on polyunsaturated FAs, most notably on linoleic acid. In the current study, we have identified an additional FA receptor, GPR84, in the gustatory system that responds to the medium chains saturated FAs (MCFAs) in male mice. GPR84 ligands activate both Type II and Type III taste cells in calcium imaging and patch clamp recording assays. MCFAs depolarize and lead to a rise in intracellular free [Ca2+] in mouse taste cells in a concentration-dependent fashion and the relative ligand specificity in taste cells is consistent with the response profile of GPR84 expressed in a heterologous system. A systemic Gpr84-/- mouse model reveals a specific deficit in both the neural (via chorda tympani recording) and behavioral responses to administration of oral MCFAs compared to wild typ...
    May 3, 2021 Yan Liu
  • Journal Article
    Interocular Suppression in Primary Visual Cortex in Strabismus | Journal of Neuroscience
    People with strabismus acquired during childhood do not experience diplopia (double vision). To investigate how perception of the duplicate image is suppressed, we raised two male monkeys with alternating exotropia by disinserting the medial rectus muscle in each eye at age 4 weeks. Once the animals were mature, they were brought to the laboratory and trained to fixate a small spot while recordings were made in V1. Drifting gratings were presented to the receptive fields of 500 single neurons for 8 interleaved conditions: 1) right eye monocular, 2) left eye monocular, 3) right eye’s field, right eye fixating, 4) right eye’s field, left eye fixating, 5) left eye’s field, right eye fixating, 6) left eye’s field, left eye fixating, 7) both eyes’ fields, right eye fixating, 8) both eyes’ fields, left eye fixating. As expected, ocular dominance histograms showed a monocular bias compared with normal animals, but many cells could still be driven via both eyes. Overall, neuronal responses were not affected by swi...
    May 3, 2021 John R. Economides
  • Journal Article
    Short-Term Effects of Vagus Nerve Stimulation on Learning and Evoked Activity in Auditory Cortex | eNeuro
    Chronic vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) has been shown to facilitate learning, but effects of acute VNS on neural coding and behavior remain less well understood. Ferrets implanted with cuff electrodes on the vagus nerve were trained by classical conditioning on an auditory tone frequency-reward association. One tone was associated with reward while another tone was not. Tone frequencies and reward associations were changed every 2 d, requiring learning of a new relationship. When tones were paired with VNS, animals consistently learned the new association within 2 d. When VNS occurred randomly between trials, learning within 2 d was unreliable. In passively listening animals, neural activity in primary auditory cortex (A1) and pupil size were recorded before and after acute VNS-tone pairing. After pairing with a neuron’s best-frequency (BF) tone, responses by a subpopulation of neurons were reduced. VNS paired with an off-BF tone or during intertrial intervals had no effect. The BF-specific reduction in neu...
    May 1, 2021 Jesyin Lai
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