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8631 - 8640 of 52802 results
  • Journal Article
    Acknowledgment of Reviewers | Journal of Neuroscience
    The editors depend heavily on outside reviewers in forming opinions about papers submitted to JNeurosci and would like to formally thank the following individuals for their help during the past year. Gloster B. Aaron Nobuhito Abe Aman Aberra Jose Francisco Abisambra Alfonso Abizaid Karina P.
    Dec 15, 2021
  • Journal Article
    Erratum: Wang et al., “Reducing Amyloid-Related Alzheimer's Disease Pathogenesis by a Small Molecule Targeting Filamin A” | Journal of Neuroscience
    In the article “Reducing Amyloid-Related Alzheimer's Disease Pathogenesis by a Small Molecule Targeting Filamin A,” by Hoau-Yan Wang, Kalindi Bakshi, Maya Frankfurt, Andres Stucky, Marissa Goberdhan, Sanket M. Shah, and Lindsay H. Burns, which appeared on pages [9773–9784][1] of the July 18,
    Dec 15, 2021
  • Journal Article
    Collaborating Reviewers | Journal of Neuroscience
    Invited reviewers are asked to identify colleagues who assisted with review. JNeurosci would like to acknowledge the hard work of these collaborating reviewers and thank them for their service to the journal. Andrin Abegg Julia Abitbol Tobias Ackels Elie Adam Kadidia Adula Blanca Aldana Mor
    Dec 15, 2021
  • Journal Article
    Barn Owl's Auditory Space Map Activity Matching Conditions for a Population Vector Readout to Drive Adaptive Sound-Localizing Behavior | Journal of Neuroscience
    Space-specific neurons in the owl's midbrain form a neural map of auditory space, which supports sound-orienting behavior. Previous work proposed that a population vector (PV) readout of this map, implementing statistical inference, predicts the owl's sound localization behavior. This model also predicts the frontal localization bias normally observed and how sound-localizing behavior changes when the signal-to-noise ratio varies, based on the spread of activity across the map. However, the actual distribution of population activity and whether this pattern is consistent with premises of the PV readout model on a trial-by-trial basis remains unknown. To answer these questions, we investigated whether the population response profile across the midbrain map in the optic tectum of the barn owl matches these predictions using in vivo multielectrode array recordings. We found that response profiles of recorded subpopulations are sufficient for estimating the stimulus interaural time difference using responses f...
    Dec 15, 2021 Roland Ferger
  • Journal Article
    Endolysosome Localization of ERα Is Involved in the Protective Effect of 17α-Estradiol against HIV-1 gp120-Induced Neuronal Injury | Journal of Neuroscience
    Neurotoxic HIV-1 viral proteins contribute to the development of HIV-associated neurocognitive disorder (HAND), the prevalence of which remains high (30–50%) with no effective treatment available. Estrogen is a known neuroprotective agent; however, the diverse mechanisms of estrogen action on the different types of estrogen receptors is not completely understood. In this study, we determined the extent to which and mechanisms by which 17α-estradiol (17αE2), a natural less-feminizing estrogen, offers neuroprotection against HIV-1 gp120-induced neuronal injury. Endolysosomes are important for neuronal function, and endolysosomal dysfunction contributes to HAND and other neurodegenerative disorders. In hippocampal neurons, estrogen receptor α (ERα) is localized to endolysosomes and 17αE2 acidifies endolysosomes. ERα knockdown or overexpressing an ERα mutant that is deficient in endolysosome localization prevents 17αE2-induced endolysosome acidification. Furthermore, 17αE2-induced increases in dendritic spine ...
    Dec 15, 2021 Gaurav Datta
  • Journal Article
    Input Zone-Selective Dysrhythmia in Motor Thalamus after Dopamine Depletion | Journal of Neuroscience
    The cerebral cortex, basal ganglia and motor thalamus form circuits important for purposeful movement. In Parkinsonism, basal ganglia neurons often exhibit dysrhythmic activity during, and with respect to, the slow (∼1 Hz) and beta-band (15-30 Hz) oscillations that emerge in cortex in a brain state-dependent manner. There remains, however, a pressing need to elucidate the extent to which motor thalamus activity becomes similarly dysrhythmic after dopamine depletion relevant to Parkinsonism. To address this, we recorded single-neuron and ensemble outputs in the basal ganglia-recipient zone (BZ) and cerebellar-recipient zone (CZ) of motor thalamus in anesthetized male dopamine-intact rats and 6-OHDA-lesioned rats during two brain states, respectively defined by cortical slow-wave activity and activation. Two forms of thalamic input zone-selective dysrhythmia manifested after dopamine depletion: (1) BZ neurons, but not CZ neurons, exhibited abnormal phase-shifted firing with respect to cortical slow oscillati...
    Dec 15, 2021 Kouichi C. Nakamura
  • Journal Article
    Table of Contents — December 15, 2021, 41 (50) | Journal of Neuroscience
    Dec 15, 2021
  • Journal Article
    Neural mechanism for coding depth from motion parallax in area MT: gain modulation or tuning shifts? | Journal of Neuroscience
    There are two distinct sources of retinal image motion: objects moving in the world and observer movement. When the eyes move to track a target of interest, the retinal velocity of some object in the scene will depend on both eye velocity and that object’s motion in the world. Thus, to compute the object’s velocity relative to the head, a coordinate transformation must be performed by vectorially adding eye velocity and retinal velocity. In contrast, a very different interaction between retinal and eye velocity signals has been proposed to underlie estimation of depth from motion parallax (MP), which involves computing the ratio of retinal and eye velocities. We examined how neurons in the middle temporal (MT) area of male macaques combine eye velocity and retinal velocity, to test whether this interaction is more consistent with a partial coordinate transformation (for computing head-centered object motion) or a multiplicative gain interaction (for computing depth from MP). We find that some MT neurons sh...
    Dec 15, 2021 Zhe-Xin Xu
  • Journal Article
    Lateral entorhinal cortex suppresses drift in cortical memory representations | Journal of Neuroscience
    Memory retrieval is thought to depend on the reinstatement of cortical memory representations guided by pattern completion processes in the hippocampus. The lateral entorhinal cortex (LEC) is one of the intermediary regions supporting hippocampal-cortical interactions and houses neurons that prospectively signal past events in a familiar environment. To investigate the functional relevance of the LEC’s activity for cortical reinstatement, we pharmacologically inhibited the LEC and examined its impact on the stability of ensemble firing patterns in one of the LEC’s efferent targets, the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC). When male rats underwent multiple epochs of identical stimulus sequences in the same environment, the mPFC maintained a stable ensemble firing pattern across repetitions, particularly when the sequence included pairings of neutral and aversive stimuli. With LEC inhibition, the mPFC still formed an ensemble pattern that accurately captured stimuli and their associations within each epoch. Howe...
    Dec 15, 2021 Maryna Pilkiw
  • Journal Article
    Acoustic Context Modulates Natural Sound Discrimination in Auditory Cortex through Frequency-Specific Adaptation | Journal of Neuroscience
    Sound discrimination is essential in many species for communicating and foraging. Bats, for example, use sounds for echolocation and communication. In the bat auditory cortex there are neurons that process both sound categories, but how these neurons respond to acoustic transitions, that is, echolocation streams followed by a communication sound, remains unknown. Here, we show that the acoustic context, a leading sound sequence followed by a target sound, changes neuronal discriminability of echolocation versus communication calls in the cortex of awake bats of both sexes. Nonselective neurons that fire equally well to both echolocation and communication calls in the absence of context become category selective when leading context is present. On the contrary, neurons that prefer communication sounds in the absence of context turn into nonselective ones when context is added. The presence of context leads to an overall response suppression, but the strength of this suppression is stimulus specific. Suppres...
    Dec 15, 2021 Luciana López-Jury
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