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3651 - 3660 of 52766 results
  • Journal Article
    Role of Ubiquilin-2 in Proteostasis and Tau Aggregation in Tauopathies | Journal of Neuroscience
    Tauopathies are a group of neurologic disorders that include frontotemporal dementia (FTD) and Alzheimer's disease (AD), the most common forms of dementia ([Wang and Mandelkow, 2016][1]). A hallmark of tauopathies is the accumulation of toxic aggregates composed of hyperphosphorylated tau protein
    Aug 10, 2022 Yuxing Xia
  • Journal Article
    The Spatial Reach of Neuronal Coherence and Spike-Field Coupling across the Human Neocortex | Journal of Neuroscience
    Neuronal coherence is thought to be a fundamental mechanism of communication in the brain, where synchronized field potentials coordinate synaptic and spiking events to support plasticity and learning. Although the spread of field potentials has garnered great interest, little is known about the spatial reach of phase synchronization, or neuronal coherence. Functional connectivity between different brain regions is known to occur across long distances, but the locality of synchronization across the neocortex is understudied. Here we used simultaneous recordings from electrocorticography (ECoG) grids and high-density microelectrode arrays to estimate the spatial reach of neuronal coherence and spike-field coherence (SFC) across frontal, temporal, and occipital cortices during cognitive tasks in humans. We observed the strongest coherence within a 2–3 cm distance from the microelectrode arrays, potentially defining an effective range for local communication. This range was relatively consistent across brain ...
    Aug 10, 2022 John C. Myers
  • Journal Article
    Frequency-Specific Modulation of Slow-Wave Neural Oscillations via Weak Exogeneous Extracellular Fields Reveals a Resonance Pattern | Journal of Neuroscience
    Single neurons often exhibit endogenous oscillatory activity centered around a specific frequency band. Transcranial alternating current stimulation (tACS) can generate a weak oscillating extracellular field in the brain that causes subthreshold membrane potential shifts that can affect spike timing at the single neuron level. Many studies have now shown that the endogenous oscillation can be entrained when the tACS frequency matches that of the exogenous extracellular field. However, the effect of tACS on the amplitude of the endogenous oscillation has been less well studied. We investigated this by using exogenous extracellular fields to modulate slow-wave neural oscillations in the ketamine anesthetized male Wistar rat. We applied spatially broad extracellular fields of different frequencies while recording spiking activity from single neurons. The effect of the exogenous extracellular field on the slow-wave neural oscillation amplitude (NOA) followed a resonance pattern: large modulations were observed...
    Aug 10, 2022 Boateng Asamoah
  • Journal Article
    Maturational Indices of the Cognitive Control Network Are Associated with Inhibitory Control in Early Childhood | Journal of Neuroscience
    Goal-directed behavior crucially relies on our capacity to suppress impulses and predominant behavioral responses. This ability, called inhibitory control, emerges in early childhood with marked improvements between 3 and 4 years. Here, we ask which brain structures are related to the emergence of this critical ability. Using a multimodal approach, we relate the pronounced behavioral improvements in different facets of 3- and 4-year-olds' ( N = 37, 20 female) inhibitory control to structural indices of maturation in the developing brain assessed with MRI. Our results show that cortical and subcortical structure of core regions in the adult cognitive control network, including the PFC, thalamus, and the inferior parietal cortices, is associated with early inhibitory functioning in preschool children. Probabilistic tractography revealed an association of frontoparietal (i.e., the superior longitudinal fascicle) and thalamocortical connections with early inhibitory control. Notably, these associations to brai...
    Aug 10, 2022 Philipp Berger
  • Journal Article
    Hypothalamic Control of Forelimb Motor Adaptation | Journal of Neuroscience
    The ability to perform skilled arm movements is central to everyday life, as limb impairments in common neurologic disorders such as stroke demonstrate. Skilled arm movements require adaptation of motor commands based on discrepancies between desired and actual movements, called sensory errors. Studies in humans show that this involves predictive and reactive movement adaptations to the errors, and also requires a general motivation to move. How these distinct aspects map onto defined neural signals remains unclear, because of a shortage of equivalent studies in experimental animal models that permit neural-level insights. Therefore, we adapted robotic technology used in human studies to mice, enabling insights into the neural underpinnings of motivational, reactive, and predictive aspects of motor adaptation. Here, we show that forelimb motor adaptation is regulated by neurons previously implicated in motivation and arousal, but not in forelimb motor control: the hypothalamic orexin/hypocretin neurons (HO...
    Aug 10, 2022 Dane Donegan
  • Journal Article
    Age-Induced Changes in µ-Opioid Receptor Signaling in the Midbrain Periaqueductal Gray of Male and Female Rats | Journal of Neuroscience
    Opioids have decreased analgesic potency (but not efficacy) in aged rodents compared with adults; however, the neural mechanisms underlying this attenuated response are not yet known. The present study investigated the impact of advanced age and biological sex on opioid signaling in the ventrolateral periaqueductal gray (vlPAG) in the presence of chronic inflammatory pain. Assays measuring µ-opioid receptor (MOR) radioligand binding, GTPγS binding, receptor phosphorylation, cAMP inhibition, and regulator of G-protein signaling (RGS) protein expression were performed on vlPAG tissue from adult (2–3 months) and aged (16–18 months) male and female rats. Persistent inflammatory pain was induced by intraplantar injection of complete Freund's adjuvant (CFA). Adult males exhibited the highest MOR binding potential (BP) and highest G-protein activation (activation efficiency ratio) in comparison to aged males and females (adult and aged). No impact of advanced age or sex on MOR phosphorylation state was observed. ...
    Aug 10, 2022 Evan F. Fullerton
  • Journal Article
    Lineage analysis of Cxcr4-expressing cells in the developing midbrain suggests that progressive competence restriction in dopaminergic progenitor cells contributes to the establishment of dopaminergic neuronal diversity | eNeuro
    Midbrain dopaminergic (mDA) neurons are generated from a ventral midbrain progenitor zone over a time span of several days (embryonic day (E)10.0-E14.5 in mouse). Within this neurogenic period, a progressively changing fate potential of mDA progenitors could contribute to the generation of diverse mDA neuronal subpopulations. To test this idea, we combined inducible genetic fate mapping and intersectional labeling approaches to trace the lineage of cells expressing the chemokine receptor CXCR4. The Cxcr4 transcript is expressed in mDA progenitors and precursors but not in differentiated mDA neurons. Cxcr4 -expressing mDA progenitors/precursors labeled at E11.5 develop into a broad range of mDA neurons, whereas labeling of the Cxcr4 -lineage at later time points (E12.5-E15.5) results in an increasingly restricted contribution to mDA neurons proceeding from lateral to medial in the substantia nigra and from dorsal to ventral in the ventral tegmental area. In parallel, the innervation of dopaminergic projecti...
    Aug 10, 2022 Alessandro Petese
  • Journal Article
    Table of Contents — August 10, 2022, 42 (32) | Journal of Neuroscience
    Aug 10, 2022
  • Journal Article
    Induction of Activity-Dependent Plasticity at Auditory Nerve Synapses | Journal of Neuroscience
    Exposure to nontraumatic noise in vivo drives long-lasting changes in auditory nerve synapses, which may influence hearing, but the induction mechanisms are not known. We mimicked activity in acute slices of the cochlear nucleus from mice of both sexes by treating them with high potassium, after which voltage-clamp recordings from bushy cells indicated that auditory nerve synapses had reduced EPSC amplitude, quantal size, and vesicle release probability ( P r). The effects of high potassium were prevented by blockers of nitric oxide (NO) synthase and protein kinase A. Treatment with the NO donor, PAPA-NONOate, also decreased P r, suggesting NO plays a central role in inducing synaptic changes. To identify the source of NO, we activated auditory nerve fibers specifically using optogenetics. Strobing for 2 h led to decreased EPSC amplitude and P r, which was prevented by antagonists against ionotropic glutamate receptors and NO synthase. This suggests that the activation of AMPA and NMDA receptors in postsyn...
    Aug 10, 2022 Nicole F. Wong
  • Journal Article
    Chemogenetic Disconnection between the Orbitofrontal Cortex and the Rostromedial Caudate Nucleus Disrupts Motivational Control of Goal-Directed Action | Journal of Neuroscience
    The orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) and its major downstream target within the basal ganglia—the rostromedial caudate nucleus (rmCD)—are involved in reward-value processing and goal-directed behavior. However, a causal contribution of the pathway linking these two structures to goal-directed behavior has not been established. Using the chemogenetic technology of designer receptors exclusively activated by designer drugs with a crossed inactivation design, we functionally and reversibly disrupted interactions between the OFC and rmCD in two male macaque monkeys. We injected an adeno-associated virus vector expressing an inhibitory designer receptor, hM4Di, into the OFC and contralateral rmCD, the expression of which was visualized in vivo by positron emission tomography and confirmed by postmortem immunohistochemistry. Functional disconnection of the OFC and rmCD resulted in a significant and reproducible loss of sensitivity to the cued reward value for goal-directed action. This decreased sensitivity was most p...
    Aug 10, 2022 Kei Oyama
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