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10681 - 10690 of 52809 results
  • Journal Article
    Temporal Contrast Sensitivity Increases Despite Photoreceptor Degeneration in a Mouse Model of Retinitis Pigmentosa | eNeuro
    The detection of temporal variations in amplitude of light intensity, or temporal contrast sensitivity (TCS), depends on the kinetics of rod photoresponse recovery. Uncharacteristically fast rod recovery kinetics are facets of both human patients and transgenic animal models with a P23H rhodopsin mutation, a prevalent cause of retinitis pigmentosa. Here, we show that mice with this mutation (RhoP23H/+) exhibit an age- and illumination-dependent enhancement in TCS compared to controls. At retinal illumination levels producing ≥1000 R*/rod/s or more, P30 RhoP23H/+ mice exhibit a 1.2 to 2-fold increase in retinal and optomotor TCS relative to controls in response to flicker frequencies of 3, 6, and 12 Hz despite significant photoreceptor degeneration and loss of flash ERG b-wave amplitude. Surprisingly, the TCS of RhoP23H/+ mice further increases as degeneration advances. Enhanced TCS is also observed in a second model (rhodopsin heterozygous mice, Rho+/-) with fast rod recovery kinetics and no apparent retin...
    Jan 28, 2021 Rose L. Pasquale
  • Journal Article
    The effect of inclusion criteria on the functional properties reported in mouse visual cortex | eNeuro
    Neurophysiology studies require the use of inclusion criteria to identify neurons responsive to the experimental stimuli. Five recent studies used calcium imaging to measure the preferred tuning properties of layer 2/3 pyramidal neurons in mouse visual areas. These five studies employed different inclusion criteria and report different, sometimes conflicting results. Here, we examine how different inclusion criteria can impact reported tuning properties, modifying inclusion criteria to select different sub-populations from the same dataset of almost 17,000 layer 2/3 neurons from the Allen Brain Observatory. The choice of inclusion criteria greatly affected the mean tuning properties of the resulting sub-populations; indeed, the differences in mean tuning due to inclusion criteria were often of comparable magnitude to the differences between studies. In particular, the mean preferred temporal frequencies of visual areas changed markedly with inclusion criteria, such that the rank ordering of visual areas ba...
    Jan 28, 2021 Natalia Mesa
  • Journal Article
    Alternative splicing of three genes encoding mechanotransduction-complex proteins in auditory hair cells | eNeuro
    The mechanotransduction (MT) complex in auditory hair cells converts the mechanical stimulation of sound waves into neural signals. Recently, the MT complex has been suggested to contain at least 4 distinct integral membrane proteins: PCDH15, TMC1, LHFPL5, and TMIE. However, the composition, function, and regulation of the MT-complex proteins remain incompletely investigated. Here, we report previously undescribed splicing isoforms of TMC1, LHFPL5, and TMIE: We identified 4 alternative splicing events for the genes encoding these 3 proteins by analyzing RNA-seq libraries of auditory hair cells from adult mice (>postnatal day 28), and we then verified the alternative splicing events by using RT-PCR and Sanger sequencing. Moreover, we examined the tissue-specific distribution, developmental expression patterns, and tonotopic gradient of the splicing isoforms by performing semiquantitative and quantitative real-time PCR, and we found that the alternative splicing of TMC1 and LHFPL5 is cochlear-specific and oc...
    Jan 28, 2021 Zijing Zhou
  • Journal Article
    Changes in excitability properties of ventromedial motor thalamic neurons in 6-OHDA lesioned mice | eNeuro
    The activity of basal ganglia input receiving motor thalamus (BGMT) makes a critical impact on motor cortical processing, but modification in BGMT processing with Parkinsonian conditions have not be investigated at the cellular level. Such changes may well be expected due to homeostatic regulation of neural excitability in the presence of altered synaptic drive with dopamine depletion. We addressed this question by comparing BGMT properties in brain slice recordings between control and unilaterally 6-OHDA treated adult mice. At a minimum of 1 month post 6-OHDA treatment, BGMT neurons showed a highly significant increase in intrinsic excitability, which was primarily due to a decrease in M-type potassium current. BGMT neurons after 6-OHDA treatment also showed an increase in T-type calcium rebound spikes following hyperpolarizing current steps. Biophysical computer modeling of a thalamic neuron demonstrated that an increase in rebound spiking can also be accounted for by a decrease in the M-type potassium c...
    Jan 28, 2021 Edyta K Bichler
  • Journal Article
    Unexpected Role of Physiological Estrogen in Acute Stress-Induced Memory Deficits | Journal of Neuroscience
    Stress may promote emotional and cognitive disturbances, which differ by sex. Adverse outcomes, including memory disturbances, are typically observed following chronic stress, but are now being recognized also after short events, including mass shootings, assault, or natural disasters, events that consist of concurrent multiple acute stresses (MAS). Prior work has established profound and enduring effects of MAS on memory in males. Here we examined the effects of MAS on female mice and probed the role of hormonal fluctuations during the estrous cycle on MAS-induced memory problems and the underlying brain network and cellular mechanisms. Female mice were impacted by MAS in an estrous cycle-dependent manner: MAS impaired hippocampus-dependent spatial memory in early-proestrous mice, characterized by high levels of estradiol, whereas memory of mice stressed during estrus (low estradiol) was spared. As spatial memory requires an intact dorsal hippocampal CA1, we examined synaptic integrity in mice stressed at...
    Jan 27, 2021 Rachael E. Hokenson
  • Journal Article
    Dissecting the Roles of Supervised and Unsupervised Learning in Perceptual Discrimination Judgments | Journal of Neuroscience
    Our ability to compare sensory stimuli is a fundamental cognitive function, which is known to be affected by two biases: choice bias, which reflects a preference for a given response, and contraction bias, which reflects a tendency to perceive stimuli as similar to previous ones. To test whether both reflect supervised processes, we designed feedback protocols aimed to modify them and tested them in human participants. Choice bias was readily modifiable. However, contraction bias was not. To compare these results to those predicted from an optimal supervised process, we studied a noise-matched optimal linear discriminator (Perceptron). In this model, both biases were substantially modified, indicating that the “resilience” of contraction bias to feedback does not maximize performance. These results suggest that perceptual discrimination is a hierarchical, two-stage process. In the first, stimulus statistics are learned and integrated with representations in an unsupervised process that is impenetrable to e...
    Jan 27, 2021 Yonatan Loewenstein
  • Journal Article
    Table of Contents — January 27, 2021, 41 (4) | Journal of Neuroscience
    Jan 27, 2021
  • Journal Article
    Mutant Huntingtin Is Cleared from the Brain via Active Mechanisms in Huntington Disease | Journal of Neuroscience
    Huntington disease (HD) is a neurodegenerative disease caused by a CAG trinucleotide repeat expansion in the huntingtin ( HTT ) gene. Therapeutics that lower HTT have shown preclinical promise and are being evaluated in clinical trials. However, clinical assessment of brain HTT lowering presents challenges. We have reported that mutant HTT (mHTT) in the CSF of HD patients correlates with clinical measures, including disease burden as well as motor and cognitive performance. We have also shown that lowering HTT in the brains of HD mice results in correlative reduction of mHTT in the CSF, prompting the use of this measure as an exploratory marker of target engagement in clinical trials. In this study, we investigate the mechanisms of mHTT clearance from the brain in adult mice of both sexes to elucidate the significance of therapy-induced CSF mHTT changes. We demonstrate that, although neurodegeneration increases CSF mHTT concentrations, mHTT is also present in the CSF of mice in the absence of neurodegenera...
    Jan 27, 2021 Nicholas S. Caron
  • Journal Article
    The Two Cysteines of Tau Protein Are Functionally Distinct and Contribute Differentially to Its Pathogenicity in Vivo | Journal of Neuroscience
    Although Tau accumulation is clearly linked to pathogenesis in Alzheimer's disease and other Tauopathies, the mechanism that initiates the aggregation of this highly soluble protein in vivo remains largely unanswered. Interestingly, in vitro Tau can be induced to form fibrillar filaments by oxidation of its two cysteine residues, generating an intermolecular disulfide bond that promotes dimerization and fibrillization. The recently solved structures of Tau filaments revealed that the two cysteine residues are not structurally equivalent since Cys-322 is incorporated into the core of the fibril, whereas Cys-291 projects away from the core to form the fuzzy coat. Here, we examined whether mutation of these cysteines to alanine affects differentially Tau mediated toxicity and dysfunction in the well-established Drosophila Tauopathy model. Experiments were conducted with both sexes, or with either sex. Each cysteine residue contributes differentially to Tau stability, phosphorylation status, aggregation propen...
    Jan 27, 2021 Engie Prifti
  • Journal Article
    l-Theanine Prevents Long-Term Affective and Cognitive Side Effects of Adolescent Δ-9-Tetrahydrocannabinol Exposure and Blocks Associated Molecular and Neuronal Abnormalities in the Mesocorticolimbic Circuitry | Journal of Neuroscience
    Chronic adolescent exposure to Δ-9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) is linked to elevated neuropsychiatric risk and induces neuronal, molecular and behavioral abnormalities resembling neuropsychiatric endophenotypes. Previous evidence has revealed that the mesocorticolimbic circuitry, including the prefrontal cortex (PFC) and mesolimbic dopamine (DA) pathway are particularly susceptible to THC-induced pathologic alterations, including dysregulation of DAergic activity states, loss of PFC GABAergic inhibitory control and affective and cognitive abnormalities. There are currently limited pharmacological intervention strategies capable of preventing THC-induced neuropathological adaptations. l-Theanine is an amino acid analog of l-glutamate and l-glutamine derived from various plant sources, including green tea leaves. l-Theanine has previously been shown to modulate levels of GABA, DA, and glutamate in various neural regions and to possess neuroprotective properties. Using a preclinical model of adolescent THC exp...
    Jan 27, 2021 Marta De Felice
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