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9971 - 9980 of 52809 results
  • Journal Article
    On the road from phenotypic plasticity to stem cell therapy | Journal of Neuroscience
    In 1981, I published a paper in the first issue of the Journal of Neuroscience with my postdoctoral mentor, Dr. Richard Bunge. At that time, the long-standing belief that each neuron expressed only one neurotransmitter, known as Dale’s Principle (Dale, 1935), was being hotly debated following a report by French embryologist Nicole Le Douarin showing that neural crest cells destined for one transmitter phenotype could express characteristics of another if transplanted to alternate sites in the developing embryo (LeDouarin, 1980). In the Bunge lab, we were able to more directly test the question of phenotypic plasticity in the controlled environment of the tissue culture dish. Thus, in our paper, we grew autonomic catecholaminergic neurons in culture under conditions which promoted the acquisition of cholinergic traits and showed that cells did not abandon their inherited phenotype in order to adopt a new one but instead were capable of dual transmitter expression. In this Progressions article, I detail the ...
    May 6, 2021 Lorraine Iacovitti
  • Journal Article
    Increased RET activity coupled with a reduction in the RET gene dosage causes intestinal aganglionosis in mice | eNeuro
    Mutations of the gene encoding the RET tyrosine kinase causes Hirschsprung disease (HSCR) and medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC). Current consensus holds that HSCR and MTC are induced by inactivating and activating RET mutations, respectively. However, it remains unknown whether activating mutations in the RET gene have adverse effects on ENS development in vivo. We addressed this issue by examining mice engineered to express RET51(C618F), an activating mutation identified in MTC patients. Although Ret51(C618F)/51(C618F) mice displayed hyperganglionosis of the ENS, Ret51(C618F)/- mice exhibited severe intestinal aganglionosis due to premature neuronal differentiation. Reduced levels of GDNF, a RET-activating neurotrophic factor, ameliorated the ENS phenotype of Ret51(C618F)/- mice, demonstrating that GDNF-mediated activation of RET51(C618F) is responsible for severe aganglionic phenotype. The RET51(C618F) allele showed genetic interaction with Ednrb gene, one of modifier genes for HSCR. These data reveal th...
    May 6, 2021 Mitsumasa Okamoto
  • Journal Article
    Neuron replating – a powerful and versatile approach to study early aspects of neuron differentiation | eNeuro
    Neuron differentiation includes formation and outgrowth of neurites that differentiate into axons or dendrites. Directed neurite outgrowth is controlled by growth cones that protrude and retract actin-rich structures to sense environmental cues. These cues control local actin filament dynamics, steer growth cones towards attractants and away from repellents and navigate neurites through the developing brain. Rodent hippocampal neurons are widely used to study the mechanisms underlying neuron differentiation. Genetic manipulation of isolated neurons including gene inactivation or reporter gene expression can be achieved by classical transfections methods, but these methods are restricted to neurons cultured for several days, after neurite formation or outgrowth. Instead, electroporation allows gene manipulation prior to seeding. However, reporter gene expression usually takes up to 24 hours and time course of gene inactivation depends on the half live of the targeted mRNA and gene product. Hence, these meth...
    May 6, 2021 Felix Schneider
  • Journal Article
    Zebrafish as a translational model: an experimental alternative to study the mechanisms involved in anosmia and possible neurodegenerative aspects of COVID-19? | eNeuro
    The Coronavirus Disease - 2019 (COVID-19) presents a variability of clinical symptoms, ranging from asymptomatic to severe respiratory and systemic conditions. In a cohort of patients, the Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2), beyond the classical respiratory manifestations, induces anosmia. Evidence has suggested SARS-CoV-2-induced anosmia can be the result of neurodegeneration of the olfactory pathway. Neurological symptoms associated with COVID-19 have been reported; however, the precise mechanism and possible long-lasting effects remain poorly investigated. Preclinical models are valuable tools for describing and testing new possible treatments for neurological disorders. In this way, the zebrafish ( Danio rerio ) organism model represents an attractive tool in the field of neuroscience, showing economic and logistical advantages besides genetic and physiologic similarities with mammalian, including the brain structure and functions. Besides, its external embryonic development, hi...
    May 5, 2021 Karla C. M. Costa
  • Journal Article
    Superior Colliculus Controls the Activity of the Rostromedial Tegmental Nuclei in an Asymmetrical Manner | Journal of Neuroscience
    Dopaminergic (DA) neurons of the midbrain are involved in controlling orienting and approach of animals toward relevant external stimuli. The firing of DA neurons is regulated by many brain structures; however, the sensory input is provided predominantly by the ipsilateral superior colliculus (SC). It is suggested that SC also innervates the contralateral rostromedial tegmental nucleus (RMTg)—the main inhibitory input to DA neurons. Therefore, this study aimed to describe the physiology and anatomy of the SC–RMTg pathway. To investigate the anatomic connections within the circuit of interest, anterograde, retrograde, and transsynaptic tract-tracing studies were performed on male Sprague Dawley rats. We have observed that RMTg is monosynaptically innervated predominantly by the lateral parts of the intermediate layer of the contralateral SC. To study the physiology of this neuronal pathway, we conducted in vivo electrophysiological experiments combined with optogenetics; the activity of RMTg neurons was rec...
    May 5, 2021 Kamil Pradel
  • Journal Article
    Table of Contents — May 05, 2021, 41 (18) | Journal of Neuroscience
    May 5, 2021
  • Journal Article
    Neural Development of Speech Sensorimotor Learning | Journal of Neuroscience
    The development of the human brain continues through to early adulthood. It has been suggested that cortical plasticity during this protracted period of development shapes circuits in associative transmodal regions of the brain. Here we considered how cortical plasticity during development might contribute to the coordinated brain activity required for speech motor learning. Specifically, we examined patterns of brain functional connectivity (FC), whose strength covaried with the capacity for speech audio-motor adaptation in children ages 5–12 and in young adults of both sexes. Children and adults showed distinct patterns of the encoding of learning in the brain. Adult performance was associated with connectivity in transmodal regions that integrate auditory and somatosensory information, whereas children rely on basic somatosensory and motor circuits. A progressive reliance on transmodal regions is consistent with human cortical development and suggests that human speech motor adaptation abilities are bui...
    May 5, 2021 Hiroki Ohashi
  • Journal Article
    The Sustained Antidepressant Effects of Ketamine Are Independent of the Lateral Habenula | Journal of Neuroscience
    Ketamine is known to have a rapid and lasting antidepressant effect. Recent studies have shown that ketamine exerts it rapid antidepressant effect by blocking burst firing in the lateral habenula (LHb). Whether the sustained antidepressant effect of ketamine occurs through the same mechanism has not been explored. Here, using male rats, we found that local infusion of (R,S)-ketamine into the LHb resulted in a rapid antidepressant-like effect 1 h after infusion, which almost returned to baseline levels after 24 h. Intra-LHb injection of (S)-ketamine also showed a significant antidepressant-like effect 1 h after injection, which recovered at 24 h. No significant antidepressant-like effect was found at 1 or 24 h after the administration of (R)-ketamine into the LHb. Injection of (2R,6R)-hydroxynorketamine, a ketamine metabolite, into the LHb did not result in any obvious antidepressant-like effect 1 or 24 h after injection. Systemic administration of (R,S)-ketamine (intraperitoneally) significantly suppressed...
    May 5, 2021 Xuelong Zhou
  • Journal Article
    Oscillatory Entrainment of the Frequency-following Response in Auditory Cortical and Subcortical Structures | Journal of Neuroscience
    There is much debate about the existence and function of neural oscillatory mechanisms in the auditory system. The frequency-following response (FFR) is an index of neural periodicity encoding that can provide a vehicle to study entrainment in frequency ranges relevant to speech and music processing. Criteria for entrainment include the presence of poststimulus oscillations and phase alignment between stimulus and endogenous activity. To test the hypothesis of entrainment, in experiment 1 we collected FFR data for a repeated syllable using magnetoencephalography (MEG) and electroencephalography in 20 male and female human adults. We observed significant oscillatory activity after stimulus offset in auditory cortex and subcortical auditory nuclei, consistent with entrainment. In these structures, the FFR fundamental frequency converged from a lower value over 100 ms to the stimulus frequency, consistent with phase alignment, and diverged to a lower value after offset, consistent with relaxation to a preferr...
    May 5, 2021 Emily B. J. Coffey
  • Journal Article
    Macrostructural Changes of the Acoustic Radiation in Humans with Hearing Loss and Tinnitus Revealed with Fixel-Based Analysis | Journal of Neuroscience
    Age-related hearing loss is the most prevalent sensory impairment in the older adult population and is related to noise-induced damage or age-related deterioration of the peripheral auditory system. Hearing loss may affect the central auditory pathway in the brain, which is a continuation of the peripheral auditory system located in the ear. A debilitating symptom that frequently co-occurs with hearing loss is tinnitus. Strikingly, investigations into the impact of acquired hearing loss, with and without tinnitus, on the human central auditory pathway are sparse. This study used diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) to investigate changes in the largest central auditory tract, the acoustic radiation, related to hearing loss and tinnitus. Participants with hearing loss, with and without tinnitus, and a control group were included. Both conventional diffusion tensor analysis and higher-order fixel-based analysis were applied. The fixel-based analysis was used as a novel framework providing insight into the axonal...
    May 5, 2021 Elouise A. Koops
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