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10081 - 10090 of 52805 results
  • Journal Article
    Insulin-dependent maturation of newly generated olfactory sensory neurons after injury | eNeuro
    Loss of olfactory sensory neurons (OSNs) after injury to the olfactory epithelium (OE) triggers the generation of OSNs that are incorporated into olfactory circuits to restore olfactory sensory perception. This study addresses how insulin receptor-mediated signaling affects the functional recovery of OSNs after OE injury. Insulin levels were reduced in mice by ablating the pancreatic beta cells via streptozotocin injections. These streptozotocin-induced diabetic and control mice were then intraperitoneally injected with the olfactotoxic drug methimazole to selectively ablate OSNs. The OE of diabetic and control mice regenerated similarly until day 14 after injury. Thereafter, the OE of diabetic mice contained fewer mature and more apoptotic OSNs than control mice. Functionally, diabetic mice showed reduced electro-olfactogram responses and their olfactory bulbs had fewer c-Fos-active cells following odor stimulation, as well as performed worse in an odor-guided task compared to control mice. Insulin admini...
    Apr 27, 2021 Akihito Kuboki
  • Journal Article
    A preferential role for ventromedial prefrontal cortex in assessing “the value of the whole” in multi-attribute object evaluation | Journal of Neuroscience
    Everyday decision-making commonly involves assigning values to complex objects with multiple value-relevant attributes. Drawing on object recognition theories, we hypothesized two routes to multi-attribute evaluation: assessing the value of the whole object based on holistic attribute configuration or summing individual attribute-values. In two samples of healthy human male and female participants undergoing eye-tracking and fMRI while evaluating novel pseudo-objects, we found evidence for both forms of evaluation. Fixations to, and transitions between attributes differed systematically when the value of pseudo-objects was associated with individual attributes or attribute configurations. Ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) and perirhinal cortex were engaged when configural processing was required. These results converge with our recent findings that individuals with vmPFC lesions were impaired in decisions requiring configural evaluation, but not when evaluating “the sum of the parts”. This suggests th...
    Apr 27, 2021 Gabriel Pelletier
  • Journal Article
    Mutually repulsive EphA7-EfnA5 organize region-to-region corticopontine projection by inhibiting collateral extension | Journal of Neuroscience
    Coordination of skilled movements and motor planning relies on formation of regionally restricted brain circuits that connect cortex with subcortical areas during embryonic development. Layer 5 neurons that are distributed across most cortical areas innervate the pontine nuclei (basilar pons) by protrusion and extension of collateral branches interstitially along their corticospinal extending axons. Pons-derived chemotropic cues are known to attract extending axons, but molecules that regulate collateral extension to create regionally segregated targeting patterns have not been identified. Here, we discovered that EphA7 and EfnA5 are expressed in the cortex and the basilar pons in a region-specific and mutually exclusive manner, and that their repulsive activities are essential for segregating collateral extensions from corticospinal axonal tracts in mice. Specifically, EphA7 and EfnA5 forward and reverse inhibitory signals direct collateral extension such that EphA7 -positive frontal and occipital cortica...
    Apr 27, 2021 Tokuichi Iguchi
  • Journal Article
    Experience-dependent inhibitory plasticity is mediated by CCK+ basket cells in the developing dentate gyrus | Journal of Neuroscience
    Early postnatal experience shapes both inhibitory and excitatory networks in the hippocampus. However, the underlying circuit plasticity is unclear. Using an enriched environment (EE) paradigm during pre-weaning period in mice of either sex, we assessed the circuit plasticity of inhibitory cell-types in the hippocampus. We found that cholecystokinin (CCK)-expressing basket cells strongly increased somatic inhibition on the excitatory granular cells (GC) following EE, while another pivotal inhibitory cell-type, parvalbumin (PV)-expressing cells did not show changes. Using electrophysiological analysis and the use of cannabinoid receptor 1 (CB1R) agonist WIN 55,212-2, we demonstrate that the change in somatic inhibition from CCK+ neurons increases CB1R-mediated inhibition in the circuit. By inhibiting activity of the entorhinal cortex (EC) using a chemogenetic approach, we further demonstrate that the activity of the projections from the EC mediates the developmental assembly of CCK+ basket cell network. Alt...
    Apr 27, 2021 Ting Feng
  • Journal Article
    Impact of GABAA and GABAB inhibition on cortical dynamics and perturbational complexity during synchronous and desynchronized states | Journal of Neuroscience
    Quantitative estimations of spatiotemporal complexity of cortical activity patterns are used in the clinic as a measure of consciousness levels, but the cortical mechanisms involved are not fully understood. We used a version of the Perturbational Complexity Index adapted to multisite recordings from the ferret (either sex) cerebral cortex in vitro (sPCI) to investigate the role of GABAergic inhibition in cortical complexity. We studied two dynamical states: slow-wave activity (synchronous state) and desynchronized activity, that express low and high causal complexity respectively. Progressive blockade of GABAergic inhibition during both regimes revealed its impact on the emergent cortical activity and on sPCI. Gradual GABAA receptor blockade resulted in higher synchronization, being able to drive the network from a desynchronized to a synchronous state, with a progressive decrease of complexity (sPCI). Blocking GABAB receptors also resulted in a reduced sPCI, in particular when in a synchronous, slow wave...
    Apr 27, 2021 Almudena Barbero-Castillo
  • Journal Article
    NMDA receptors in accumbal D1 neurons influence chronic sugar consumption and relapse | eNeuro
    Glutamatergic input via NMDA and AMPA receptors within the mesolimbic dopamine pathway plays a critical role in the development of addictive behavior and relapse towards drugs of abuse. Although well-established for drugs of abuse, it is not clear whether glutamate receptors within the mesolimbic system are involved in mediating chronic consumption and relapse following abstinence from a non-drug reward. Here we evaluated the contribution of mesolimbic glutamate receptors in mediating chronic sugar consumption and the sugar deprivation effect (SDE), which is used as a measure of relapse-like behavior following abstinence. We studied four inducible mutant mouse lines lacking the GluA1 or GluN1 subunit in either dopamine transporter (DAT) or D1R-expressing neurons in an automated monitoring system for free-choice sugar drinking in the home cage. Mice lacking either GluA1 or GluN1 in D1R expressing neurons ( GluA1D1CreERT2 or GluN1D1CreERT2 mice) have altered sugar consumption in both sexes, whereas GluA1DATC...
    Apr 27, 2021 Shoupeng Wei
  • Journal Article
    Local and CNS-wide astrocyte intracellular calcium signalling attenuation in vivo with CalExflox mice | Journal of Neuroscience
    Astrocytes exist throughout the CNS and are proposed to affect neural circuits and behaviour through intracellular Ca2+ signaling. Studying the function(s) of astrocyte Ca2+ signaling has proven difficult because of the paucity of tools to achieve selective attenuation. Based on recent studies, we generated and used male and female knock-in mice for Cre-dependent expression of mCherry-tagged hPMCA2w/b in order to attenuate astrocyte Ca2+ signaling in genetically defined cells in vivo (CalExflox mice for Calcium Extrusion). We characterized CalExflox mice following local AAV-Cre microinjections into the striatum and found reduced astrocyte Ca2+ signaling (∼90%) accompanied with repetitive self-grooming behaviour. We also crossed CalExflox mice to astrocyte specific Aldh1l1 -Cre/ERT2 mice in order to achieve inducible global CNS-wide Ca2+ signaling attenuation. Within six days of induction in the bigenic mice, we observed significantly altered ambulation in the open field, disrupted motor coordination and ga...
    Apr 26, 2021 Xinzhu Yu
  • Journal Article
    Cortical Responses to the Amplitude Envelopes of Sounds Change with Age | Journal of Neuroscience
    Many older listeners have difficulty understanding speech in noise, when cues to speech-sound identity are less redundant. The amplitude envelope of speech fluctuates dramatically over time, and features such as the rate of amplitude change at onsets (attack) and offsets (decay) signal critical information about the identity of speech sounds. Aging is also thought to be accompanied by increases in cortical excitability, which may differentially alter sensitivity to envelope dynamics. Here, we recorded electroencephalography in younger and older human adults (of both sexes) to investigate how aging affects neural synchronization to 4-Hz amplitude-modulated noises with different envelope shapes ( ramped : slow attack & sharp decay; damped : sharp attack & slow decay). We observed that subcortical responses did not differ between age groups, whereas older compared to younger adults exhibited larger cortical responses to sound onsets, consistent with an increase in auditory cortical excitability. Neural activi...
    Apr 26, 2021 Vanessa C. Irsik
  • Journal Article
    Brain coding of social network structure | Journal of Neuroscience
    Humans have large social networks, with hundreds of interacting individuals. How does the brain represent the complex connectivity structure of these networks? Here we used social media (Facebook) data to objectively map participants’ real-life social networks. We then used representational similarity analysis (RSA) of fMRI activity patterns to investigate the neural coding of these social networks as participants reflected on each individual. We found coding of social network distances in the default-mode network (medial prefrontal, medial parietal and lateral parietal cortices). When using partial correlation RSA to control for other factors that can be correlated to social distance (personal affiliation, personality traits and visual appearance, as subjectively rated by the participants), we found that social network distance information was uniquely coded in the retrosplenial complex, a region involved in spatial processing. In contrast, information on individuals’ personal affiliation to the participa...
    Apr 26, 2021 Michael Peer
  • Journal Article
    Erratum: Fairhall, “Cross Recruitment of Domain-Selective Cortical Representations Enables Flexible Semantic Knowledge” | Journal of Neuroscience
    Apr 26, 2021
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