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10991 - 11000 of 52809 results
  • Journal Article
    Cocaine-dependent acquisition of locomotor sensitization and conditioned place preference requires D1 dopaminergic signaling through a cyclic AMP, NCS-Rapgef2, ERK and Egr-1/Zif268 pathway | Journal of Neuroscience
    Elucidation of the underlying mechanism of dopamine signaling to ERK that underlies plasticity in dopamine D1 receptor expressing neurons leading to acquired cocaine preference is incomplete. NCS-Rapgef2 is a novel cAMP effector, expressed in neuronal and endocrine cells in adult mammals, that is required for D1 dopamine receptor-dependent ERK phosphorylation in mouse brain. In this report, we studied the effects of abrogating NCS-Rapgef2 expression on cAMP-dependent ERK→Egr-1/Zif268 signaling in cultured neuroendocrine cells; in D1 medium spiny neurons (MSNs) of nucleus accumbens slices; and in either male or female mouse brain in a region-specific manner. NCS-Rapgef2 gene deletion in the nucleus accumbens (NAc) in adult mice, using AAV-mediated expression of cre recombinase, eliminated cocaine-induced ERK phosphorylation and Egr-1/Zif268 upregulation in D1-MSNs and cocaine-induced behaviors including locomotor sensitization and conditioned place preference (CPP). Abrogation of NCS-Rapgef2 gene expression...
    Dec 2, 2020 Sunny Zhihong Jiang
  • Journal Article
    Circadian- and sex-dependent increases in intravenous cocaine self-administration in Npas2 mutant mice | Journal of Neuroscience
    Substance use disorder is associated with disruptions in circadian rhythms. The circadian transcription factor neuronal PAS domain protein 2 (NPAS2) is enriched in reward-related brain regions and regulates reward, but its role in substance use is unclear. To examine the role of NPAS2 in drug taking, we measured intravenous cocaine self-administration (acquisition, dose-response, progressive ratio, extinction, cue-induced reinstatement) in wild-type (WT) and Npas2 mutant mice at different times of day. In the light (inactive) phase, cocaine reinforcement was increased in all Npas2 mutants, while self-administration and motivation were affected sex-dependently. These sex differences were amplified during the dark (active) phase with Npas2 mutation increasing self-administration, reinforcement, motivation, extinction responding and reinstatement in females, but only reinforcement in males. To determine whether circulating hormones are driving these sex differences, we ovariectomized WT and Npas2 mutant femal...
    Dec 2, 2020 Lauren M. DePoy
  • Journal Article
    Endogenous Cholinergic Signaling Modulates Sound-evoked Responses of Medial Nucleus of Trapezoid Body | Journal of Neuroscience
    The medial nucleus of trapezoid body (MNTB) is a major source of inhibition in auditory brainstem circuitry. The MNTB projects well-timed inhibitory output to principal sound-localization nuclei in the superior olive (SOC) as well as other computationally important centers. Acoustic information is conveyed to MNTB neurons through a single calyx of Held excitatory synapse arising from the cochlear nucleus. The encoding efficacy of this large synapse depends on its activity rate, which is primarily determined by sound intensity and stimulus frequency. However, MNTB activity rate is additionally influenced by inhibition and possibly neuromodulatory inputs, albeit their functional role is unclear. Happe and Morley (2004) discovered prominent expression of α7-nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) in rat SOC, suggesting possible engagement of acetylcholine (ACh)-mediated modulation of neural activity in the MNTB. However, the existence and nature of this putative modulation has never been physiologically de...
    Dec 2, 2020 Chao Zhang
  • Journal Article
    Disentangling the Roles of RIM and Munc13 in Synaptic Vesicle Localization and Neurotransmission | Journal of Neuroscience
    Efficient neurotransmitter release at the presynaptic terminal requires docking of synaptic vesicles to the active zone membrane and formation of fusion-competent synaptic vesicles near voltage-gated Ca2+ channels. Rab3-interacting molecule (RIM) is a critical active zone organizer, as it recruits Ca2+ channels and activates synaptic vesicle docking and priming via Munc13-1. However, our knowledge about Munc13-independent contributions of RIM to active zone functions is limited. To identify the functions that are solely mediated by RIM, we used genetic manipulations to control RIM and Munc13-1 activity in cultured hippocampal neurons from mice of either sex and compared synaptic ultrastructure and neurotransmission. We found that RIM modulates synaptic vesicle localization in the proximity of the active zone membrane independent of Munc13-1. In another step, both RIM and Munc13 mediate synaptic vesicle docking and priming. In addition, while the activity of both RIM and Munc13-1 is required for Ca2+-evoked...
    Dec 2, 2020 Fereshteh Zarebidaki
  • Journal Article
    The Notch Ligand Jagged1 Is Required for the Formation, Maintenance, and Survival of Hensen's Cells in the Mouse Cochlea | Journal of Neuroscience
    During cochlear development, the Notch ligand JAGGED 1 (JAG1) plays an important role in the specification of the prosensory region, which gives rise to sound-sensing hair cells and neighboring supporting cells (SCs). While JAG1's expression is maintained in SCs through adulthood, the function of JAG1 in SC development is unknown. Here, we demonstrate that JAG1 is essential for the formation and maintenance of Hensen's cells, a highly specialized SC subtype located at the edge of the auditory epithelium. Using Sox2 CreERT2 /+:: Jag1loxP/loxP mice of both genders, we show that Jag1 deletion at the onset of differentiation, at embryonic day 14.5, disrupted Hensen's cell formation. Similar loss of Hensen's cells was observed when Jag1 was deleted after Hensen's cell formation at postnatal day (P) 0/P1 and fate-mapping analysis revealed that in the absence of Jag1 , some Hensen's cells die, but others convert into neighboring Claudius cells. In support of a role for JAG1 in cell survival, genes involved in mi...
    Dec 2, 2020 Elena Chrysostomou
  • Journal Article
    CREB Coactivator CRTC2 Plays a Crucial Role in Endothelial Function | Journal of Neuroscience
    The cAMP pathway is known to stabilize endothelial barrier function and maintain vascular physiology. The family of cAMP-response element binding (CREB)-regulated transcription coactivators (CRTC)1–3 activate transcription by targeting the basic leucine zipper domain of CREB. CRTC2 is a master regulator of glucose metabolism in liver and adipose tissue. However, the role of CRTC2 in endothelium remains unknown. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of CRTC2 on endothelial function. We focused the effect of CRTC2 in endothelial cells and its relationship with p190RhoGAP-A. We examined the effect of CRTC2 on endothelial function using a mouse aorta ring assay ex vivo and with photothrombotic stroke in endothelial cell-specific CRTC2-knock-out male mice in vivo . CRTC2 was highly expressed in endothelial cells and related to angiogenesis. Among CRTC1–3, only CRTC2 was activated under ischemic conditions at endothelial cells, and CRTC2 maintained endothelial barrier function through p190RhoGAP-A exp...
    Dec 2, 2020 Hideaki Kanki
  • Journal Article
    Lysophospholipids Contribute to Oxaliplatin-Induced Acute Peripheral Pain | Journal of Neuroscience
    Oxaliplatin, a platinum-based chemotherapeutic drug, which is used as first-line treatment for some types of colorectal carcinoma, causes peripheral neuropathic pain in patients. In addition, an acute peripheral pain syndrome develop in almost 90% of patients immediately after oxaliplatin treatment, which is poorly understood mechanistically but correlates with incidence and severity of the later-occurring neuropathy. Here we investigated the effects of acute oxaliplatin treatment in a murine model, showing that male and female mice develop mechanical hypersensitivity 24 h after oxaliplatin treatment. Interestingly, we found that the levels of several lipids were significantly altered in nervous tissue during oxaliplatin-induced acute pain. Specifically, the linoleic acid metabolite 9,10-EpOME (epoxide of linoleic acid) as well as the lysophospholipids lysophosphatidylcholine (LPC) 18:1 and LPC 16:0 were significantly increased 24 h after oxaliplatin treatment in sciatic nerve, DRGs, or spinal cord tissue ...
    Dec 2, 2020 Vittoria Rimola
  • Journal Article
    Low-Level Visual Information Is Maintained across Saccades, Allowing for a Postsaccadic Handoff between Visual Areas | Journal of Neuroscience
    Experience seems continuous and detailed despite saccadic eye movements changing retinal input several times per second. There is debate whether neural signals related to updating across saccades contain information about stimulus features, or only location pointers without visual details. We investigated the time course of low-level visual information processing across saccades by decoding the spatial frequency of a stationary stimulus that changed from one visual hemifield to the other because of a horizontal saccadic eye movement. We recorded magnetoencephalography while human subjects (both sexes) monitored the orientation of a grating stimulus, making spatial frequency task irrelevant. Separate trials, in which subjects maintained fixation, were used to train a classifier, whose performance was then tested on saccade trials. Decoding performance showed that spatial frequency information of the presaccadic stimulus remained present for ∼200 ms after the saccade, transcending retinotopic specificity. Po...
    Dec 2, 2020 Jasper H. Fabius
  • Journal Article
    Monocytic Infiltrates Contribute to Autistic-like Behaviors in a Two-Hit Model of Neurodevelopmental Defects | Journal of Neuroscience
    Growing evidence suggests that early-life interactions among genetic, immune, and environment factors may modulate neurodevelopment and cause psycho-cognitive deficits. Maternal immune activation (MIA) induces autism-like behaviors in offspring, but how it interplays with perinatal brain injury (especially birth asphyxia or hypoxia ischemia [HI]) is unclear. Herein we compared the effects of MIA (injection of poly[I:C] to dam at gestational day 12.5), HI at postnatal day 10, and the combined MIA/HI insult in murine offspring of both sexes. We found that MIA induced autistic-like behaviors without microglial activation but amplified post-HI NFκB signaling, pro-inflammatory responses, and brain injury in offspring. Conversely, HI neither provoked autistic-like behaviors nor concealed them in the MIA offspring. Instead, the dual MIA/HI insult added autistic-like behaviors with diminished synaptic density and reduction of autism-related PSD-95 and Homer-1 in the hippocampus, which were missing in the singular ...
    Dec 2, 2020 Hong-Ru Chen
  • Journal Article
    Table of Contents — December 02, 2020, 40 (49) | Journal of Neuroscience
    Dec 2, 2020
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