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9791 - 9800 of 52804 results
  • Journal Article
    The Journal of Neuroscience's 40th Anniversary: Looking Back, Looking Forward | Journal of Neuroscience
    Some of us fortunate enough to have published a paper in The Journal of Neuroscience in its inaugural year (1981) have been asked to write a Progressions article addressing our views on the significance of the original work and how ideas about the topic of that work have evolved over the last 40 years. These questions cannot be effectively considered without placing them in the context of the incredible growth of the overall field of neuroscience over these last four decades. For openers, in 1981, the Nobel Prize was awarded to three neuroscience superstars: Roger Sperry, David Hubel, and Torsten Wiesel. Not a bad year to launch the Journal . With this as a backdrop, I divide this Progressions article into two parts. First, I discuss our original (1981) paper describing classical conditioning in Aplysia californica , and place our results in the context of the state of the field at the time. Second, I fast forward to the present and consider some of remarkable progress in the broad field of learning and me...
    Jun 9, 2021 Thomas J. Carew
  • Journal Article
    Stimulus Contrast Affects Spatial Integration in the Lateral Geniculate Nucleus of Macaque Monkeys | Journal of Neuroscience
    Gain-control mechanisms adjust neuronal responses to accommodate the wide range of stimulus conditions in the natural environment. Contrast gain control and extraclassical surround suppression are two manifestations of gain control that govern the responses of neurons in the early visual system. Understanding how these two forms of gain control interact has important implications for the detection and discrimination of stimuli across a range of contrast conditions. Here, we report that stimulus contrast affects spatial integration in the lateral geniculate nucleus of alert macaque monkeys (male and female), whereby neurons exhibit a reduction in the strength of extraclassical surround suppression and an expansion in the preferred stimulus size with low-contrast stimuli compared to high-contrast stimuli. Effects were greater for magnocellular neurons than for parvocellular neurons, indicating stream-specific interactions between stimulus contrast and stimulus size. Within the magnocellular pathway, contrast...
    Jun 8, 2021 Darlene R. Archer
  • Journal Article
    Comodulation of h- and Na+/K+ Pump Currents Expands the Range of Functional Bursting in a Central Pattern Generator by Navigating Between Dysfunctional Regimes | Journal of Neuroscience
    Central pattern generators (CPGs), specialized oscillatory neuronal networks controlling rhythmic motor behaviors such as breathing and locomotion, must adjust their patterns of activity to a variable environment and changing behavioral goals. Neuromodulation adjusts these patterns by orchestrating changes in multiple ionic currents. In the medicinal leech, the endogenous neuromodulator myomodulin speeds up the heartbeat CPG by reducing the electrogenic Na+/K+ pump current and increasing h-current in pairs of mutually inhibitory leech heart interneurons (HNs)which form half-center oscillators (HN HCOs). Here we investigate whether the comodulation of two currents could have advantages over a single current in the control of functional bursting patterns of a CPG. We use a conductance-based biophysical model of an HN HCO to explain the experimental effects of myomodulin. We demonstrate that in the model, comodulation of the Na+/K+ pump current and h-current expands the range of functional bursting activity b...
    Jun 8, 2021 Parker J. Ellingson
  • Journal Article
    Visual recognition is heralded by shifts in local field potential oscillations and inhibitory networks in primary visual cortex | Journal of Neuroscience
    Learning to recognize and filter familiar, irrelevant sensory stimuli eases the computational burden on the cerebral cortex. Inhibition is a candidate mechanism in this filtration process, and oscillations in the cortical local field potential (LFP) serve as markers of the engagement of different inhibitory neurons. We show here that LFP oscillatory activity in visual cortex is profoundly altered as male and female mice learn to recognize an oriented grating stimulus—low frequency (∼15 Hz peak) power sharply increases while high frequency (∼65 Hz peak) power decreases. These changes report recognition of the familiar pattern, as they disappear when the stimulus is rotated to a novel orientation. Two-photon imaging of neuronal activity reveals that parvalbumin-expressing inhibitory neurons disengage with familiar stimuli and reactivate to novelty, whereas somatostatin-expressing inhibitory neurons show opposing activity patterns. We propose a model in which the balance of two interacting interneuron circuit...
    Jun 8, 2021 Dustin J. Hayden
  • Journal Article
    Neural representations in the prefrontal cortex are task-dependent for scene attributes but not for scene categories | Journal of Neuroscience
    Natural scenes deliver rich sensory information about the world. Decades of research has shown that the scene-selective network in the visual cortex represents various aspects of scenes. However, less is known about how such complex scene information is processed beyond the visual cortex, such as in the prefrontal cortex. It is also unknown how task context impacts the process of scene perception, modulating which scene content is represented in the brain. In this study, we investigate these questions using scene images from four natural scene categories, which also depict two types of scene attributes, temperature (warm or cold), and sound level (noisy or quiet). A group of healthy human subjects from both sexes participated in the present study using fMRI. In the study, participants viewed scene images under two different task conditions; temperature judgment and sound-level judgment. We analyzed how these scene attributes and categories are represented across the brain under these task conditions. Our f...
    Jun 8, 2021 Yaelan Jung
  • Journal Article
    Anticipatory energization revealed by pupil and brain activity guides human effort-based decision making | Journal of Neuroscience
    An organism’s fitness is determined by how it chooses to adapt to effort in response to challenges. Exertion of effort correlates with activity in dorsomedial prefrontal cortex (dmPFC) and noradrenergic pupil dilation, but little is known about the role of these neurophysiological processes for decisions about future efforts - they may provide anticipatory energization to help us accept the challenge or a cost representation that is weighted against the expected rewards. Here we provide evidence for the former, by measuring pupil and fMRI brain responses while 52 human participants (29 females) chose whether to exert efforts to obtain rewards. Both pupil-dilation rate and dMPFC fMRI activity increased with anticipated effort level, and these increases differ depending on the choice outcome: They were stronger when participants chose to accept the challenge compared to when the challenge was declined. Crucially, the choice-dependent modulation of pupil and brain-activity effort representations were stronger...
    Jun 8, 2021 Irma T. Kurniawan
  • Journal Article
    Munc18-1 is essential for neuropeptide secretion in neurons | Journal of Neuroscience
    Neuropeptide secretion from dense-core vesicles (DCVs) controls many brain functions. Several components of the DCV exocytosis machinery have recently been identified, but the participation of a SEC1/MUNC18 (SM) protein has remained elusive. Here, we tested the ability of the three exocytic SM proteins expressed in the mammalian brain, MUNC18-1/2/3, to support neuropeptide secretion. We quantified DCV exocytosis at a single vesicle resolution upon action potential train-stimulation in mouse CNS neurons (of unknown sex) using pHluorin- and/or mCherry-tagged Neuropeptide-Y (NPY) or Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor (BDNF). Conditional inactivation of Munc18-1 abolished all DCV exocytosis. Expression of MUNC18-1, but not MUNC18-2 or MUNC18-3, supported DCV exocytosis in Munc18-1 null neurons. Heterozygous (HZ) inactivation of Munc18-1, as a model for reduced MUNC18-1 expression, impaired DCV exocytosis, especially during the initial phase of train-stimulation, when the release was maximal. These data show tha...
    Jun 8, 2021 Daniël C. Puntman
  • Journal Article
    Early inflammation dysregulates neuronal circuit formation in vivo via upregulation of IL-1β | Journal of Neuroscience
    Neuro-immune interaction during development is strongly implicated in the pathogenesis of neurodevelopmental disorders, but the mechanisms that cause neuronal circuit dysregulation are not well understood. We performed in vivo imaging of the developing retinotectal system in the larval zebrafish to characterize the effects of immune system activation on refinement of an archetypal sensory processing circuit. Acute inflammatory insult induced hyper-dynamic remodeling of developing retinal axons in larval fish and increased axon arbor elaboration over days. Using calcium imaging in GCaMP6s transgenic fish we showed that these morphological changes were accompanied by a shift toward decreased visual acuity in tectal cells. This finding was supported by poorer performance in a visually guided behavioral task. We further found that the pro-inflammatory cytokine, interleukin-1β (IL-1β) is upregulated by the inflammatory insult, and that down-regulation of IL-1β abrogated the effects of inflammation on axonal dyn...
    Jun 8, 2021 Cynthia M. Solek
  • Journal Article
    Application of Recombinant Rabies Virus to Xenopus Tadpole Brain | eNeuro
    The Xenopus laevis experimental system has provided significant insight into the development and plasticity of neural circuits. Xenopus neuroscience research would be enhanced by additional tools to study neural circuit structure and function. Rabies viruses are powerful tools to label and manipulate neural circuits and have been widely used to study mesoscale connectomics. Whether rabies virus can be used to transduce neurons and express transgenes in Xenopus has not been systematically investigated. Glycoprotein-deleted rabies virus transduces neurons at the axon terminal and retrogradely labels their cell bodies. We show that glycoprotein-deleted rabies virus infects local and projection neurons in the Xenopus tadpole when directly injected into brain tissue. Pseudotyping glycoprotein-deleted rabies with EnvA restricts infection to cells with exogenous expression of the EnvA receptor, TVA. EnvA pseudotyped virus specifically infects tadpole neurons with promoter-driven expression of TVA, demonstrating i...
    Jun 7, 2021 Regina L. Faulkner
  • Journal Article
    Fyn knockdown prevents levodopa-induced dyskinesia in a mouse model of Parkinson’s disease | eNeuro
    Dopamine replacement by levodopa is the most widely used therapy for Parkinson’s disease (PD), however patients often develop side effects, known as levodopa-induced dyskinesia (LID), that usually need therapeutic intervention. There are no suitable therapeutic options for LID, except for the use of the NMDA receptor antagonist amantadine, which has limited efficacy. The NMDA receptor is indeed the most plausible target to manage LID in PD and recently the kinase Fyn- one of its key regulators- became a new putative molecular target involved in LID. The aim of this work was to reduce Fyn expression to alleviate LID in a mouse model of PD. We performed intra-striatal delivery of a designed micro-RNA against Fyn (miRNA-Fyn) in 6-OHDA-lesioned mice treated with levodopa. The miRNA-Fyn was delivered either before or after levodopa exposure to assess its ability to prevent or revert dyskinesia. Pre-administration of miRNA-Fyn reduced LID with a concomitant reduction of FosB-ΔFosB protein levels –a marker of LID...
    Jun 7, 2021 Melina P. Bordone
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