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3021 - 3030 of 52762 results
  • Journal Article
    Imaging Voltage Globally and in Isofrequency Lamina in Slices of Mouse Ventral Cochlear Nucleus | eNeuro
    The cochlear nuclei (CN) receive sensory information from the ear and perform fundamental computations before relaying this information to higher processing centers. These computations are performed by distinct types of neurons interconnected in circuits dedicated to the specialized roles of the auditory system. In the present study we explored the use of voltage imaging to investigate CN circuitry. We tested two approaches based on fundamentally different voltage sensing technologies. Using a voltage-sensitive dye we recorded glutamate receptor-independent signals arising predominantly from axons. The mean conduction velocity of these fibers of 0.27 m/sec was rapid but in range with other unmyelinated axons. We then used a genetically-encoded hybrid voltage sensor (hVOS) to image voltage from a specific population of neurons. Probe expression was controlled using Cre recombinase linked to c-fos activation. This activity-induced gene enabled targeting of neurons that are activated when a mouse hears a pure...
    Feb 13, 2023 Yihe Ma
  • Journal Article
    Photoperiod Impacts Nucleus Accumbens Dopamine Dynamics | eNeuro
    Circadian photoperiod, or day length, changes with the seasons and influences behavior to allow animals to adapt to their environment. Photoperiod is also associated with seasonal rhythms of affective state, as evidenced by seasonality of several neuropsychiatric disorders. Interestingly, seasonality tends to be more prevalent in women for affective disorders such as Major Depressive Disorder and Bipolar Disorder. However, the underlying neurobiological processes contributing to sex-linked seasonality of affective behaviors are largely unknown. Mesolimbic dopamine input to the nucleus accumbens (NAc) contributes to the regulation of affective state and behaviors. Additionally, sex differences in the mesolimbic dopamine pathway are well-established. Therefore, we hypothesize that photoperiod may drive differential modulation of NAc dopamine in males and females. Here, we used fast-scan cyclic-voltammetry (FSCV) to explore whether photoperiod can modulate sub-second dopamine signaling dynamics in the NAc cor...
    Feb 13, 2023 Alexis N. Jameson
  • Journal Article
    Assistive loading promotes goal-directed tuning of stretch reflex gains | eNeuro
    Voluntary movements are prepared before they are executed. Preparatory activity has been observed across the CNS and recently documented in first order neurons of the human PNS i.e., in muscle spindles. Changes seen in sensory organs suggest that independent modulation of stretch reflex gains may represent an important component of movement preparation. The aim of the current study was to further investigate the preparatory modulation of short- and long-latency stretch reflex responses ('SLR' and 'LLR') of the dominant upper limb of human subjects. Specifically, we investigated how different target parameters (target distance and direction) affect the preparatory tuning of stretch reflex gains in the context of goal-directed reaching, and whether any such tuning depends on preparation duration and the direction of background loads. We found that target distance produced only small variations in reflex gains. In contrast, both SLR and LLR gains were strongly modulated as a function of target direction, in a...
    Feb 10, 2023 Frida Torell
  • Journal Article
    Neurovascular development in Pten and Tsc2 mouse mutants | eNeuro
    Hyperactivation of the mTOR signaling pathway is linked to more than a dozen neurological diseases, causing a range of pathologies, including excess neuronal growth, disrupted neuronal migration, cortical dysplasia, epilepsy and autism. The mTOR pathway also regulates angiogenesis. For the present study, therefore, we queried whether loss of Pten or Tsc2 , both mTOR negative regulators, alters brain vasculature in three mouse models: one with Pten loss restricted to hippocampal dentate granule cells (DGC- Pten KOs), a second with widespread Pten loss from excitatory forebrain neurons (FB- Pten KOs) and a third with focal loss of Tsc2 from cortical excitatory neurons (f- Tsc2 KOs). Total hippocampal vessel length and volume per dentate gyrus were dramatically increased in DGC- Pten knockouts. DGC- Pten knockouts had larger dentate gyri overall, however, and when normalized to these larger structures, vessel density was preserved. In addition, tests of blood-brain barrier integrity did not reveal increased p...
    Feb 9, 2023 Mary Dusing
  • Journal Article
    Effect of the matrix metalloproteinase inhibitor doxycycline on human trace fear memory | eNeuro
    Learning to predict threat is of adaptive importance, but aversive memory can also become disadvantageous and burdensome in clinical conditions such as post-traumatic stress disorder. Pavlovian fear conditioning is a laboratory model of aversive memory and thought to rely on structural synaptic reconfiguration involving matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) 9 signalling. It has recently been suggested that the MMP9-inhibiting antibiotic doxycycline, applied before acquisition training in humans, reduces fear memory retention after one week. This previous study used cued delay fear conditioning, in which predictors and outcomes overlap in time. However, temporal separation of predictors and outcomes is common in clinical conditions. Learning the association of temporally separated events requires a partly different neural circuitry, for which the role of MMP9 signalling is not yet known. Here, we investigate the impact of doxycycline on long-interval (15 s) trace fear conditioning in a randomised controlled trial ...
    Feb 9, 2023 Jelena M Wehrli
  • Journal Article
    Abstinence-induced nicotine seeking relays on a persistent hypoglutamatergic state within the amygdalo-striatal neurocircuitry | eNeuro
    Nicotine robustly sustains smoking behavior by acting as a primer reinforcer and by enhancing the incentive salience of the nicotine associated stimuli. The motivational effects produced by environmental cues associated with nicotine delivery can progressively manifest during abstinence resulting in reinstatement of nicotine seeking. However, how the activity in reward neuronal circuits is transformed during abstinence-induced nicotine seeking is not yet fully understood. In here we used a contingent nicotine and saline control self-administration model to disentangle the contribution of cue-elicited seeking responding for nicotine after drug abstinence in male Wistar rats. Using ex vivo electrophysiological recordings and a network analysis approach, we defined temporal and brain-region specific amygdalo-striatal glutamatergic alterations that occur during nicotine abstinence. The results from this study provide critical evidence indicating a persistent hypoglutamatergic state within the amygdalo-striatal...
    Feb 8, 2023 Ana Domi
  • Journal Article
    A new tool for quantifying mouse facial expressions | eNeuro
    Facial expressions are an increasingly utilized tool to assess emotional experience and affective state during experimental procedures in animal models. Previous studies have successfully related specific facial features with different positive and negative valence situations, most notably in relation to pain. However, characterizing and interpreting such expressions remains a major challenge. We identified seven easily visualizable facial parameters on mouse profiles, accounting for changes in eye, ear, mouth, snout and face orientation. We monitored their relative position on the face across time and throughout sequences of positive and aversive gustatory and somatosensory stimuli in freely moving mice. Facial parameters successfully captured response profiles to each stimulus and reflected spontaneous movements in response to stimulus valence, as well as contextual elements such as habituation. Notably, eye opening was increased by palatable tastants and innocuous touch, while this parameter was reduced...
    Feb 8, 2023 Olivia Le Moëne
  • Journal Article
    Touchscreen-based cognitive training alters functional connectivity patterns in aged but not young male rats | eNeuro
    Age-related cognitive decline is related to cellular and systems-level disruptions across multiple brain regions. Because age-related cellular changes within different structures do not show the same patterns of dysfunction, interventions aimed at optimizing function of large-scale brain networks may show greater efficacy at improving cognitive outcomes in older adults than traditional pharmacotherapies. The current study aimed to leverage a preclinical rat model of aging to determine whether cognitive training in young and aged male rats with a computerized paired-associates learning (PAL) task resulted in changes in global resting-state functional connectivity. Moreover, seed-based functional connectivity was used to examine resting state connectivity of cortical areas involved in object-location associative memory and vulnerable in old age, namely the medial temporal lobe (hippocampal cortex and perirhinal cortex, or PRC), retrosplenial cortex (RSC), and frontal cortical areas (prelimbic, or PRL, and in...
    Feb 8, 2023 Leslie S. Gaynor
  • Journal Article
    Functional changes in GABA and glutamate during motor learning | eNeuro
    Functional magnetic resonance spectroscopy (fMRS) of GABA at 3T poses additional challenges compared to functional MRS of other metabolites due to the difficulties of measuring GABA levels; GABA is present in the brain at relatively low concentrations and its signal is overlapped by higher concentration metabolites. Using 7T fMRS, GABA levels have been shown to decrease specifically during motor learning (and not during a control task). Though the use of 7T is appealing, access is limited. For GABA fMRS to be widely accessible, it is essential to develop this method at 3T. Nine healthy right-handed participants completed a motor learning and a control button pressing task. fMRS data were acquired from the left sensorimotor cortex during the task using a continuous GABA-edited MEGA-PRESS acquisition at 3T. We found no significant changes in GABA+/tCr, Glx/tCr or Glu/tCr levels in either task, however, we show a positive relationship between motor learning and glutamate levels both at rest and at the start o...
    Feb 7, 2023 Tiffany Bell
  • Journal Article
    Validation of a new coil array tailored for dog functional magnetic resonance imaging studies | eNeuro
    Comparative neuroimaging allows for the identification of similarities and differences between species. It provides an important and promising avenue, to answer questions about the evolutionary origins of the brain´s organization, in terms of both structure and function. Dog fMRI has recently become one particularly promising and increasingly used approach to study brain function and coevolution. In dog neuroimaging, image acquisition has so far been mostly performed with coils originally developed for use in human MRI. Since such coils have been tailored to human anatomy, their sensitivity and data quality is likely not optimal for dog MRI. Therefore, we developed a multi-channel receive coil (K9 coil, read “canine”) tailored for high-resolution functional imaging in canines, optimized for dog cranial anatomy. In this paper we report structural (n = 9) as well as functional imaging data (resting-state, n = 6; simple visual paradigm, n = 9) collected with the K9 coil in comparison to reference data collect...
    Feb 7, 2023 C.-N. Alexandrina Guran
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