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2751 - 2760 of 52763 results
  • Journal Article
    Domain-specific cognitive impairment reflects prefrontal dysfunction in aged common marmosets | eNeuro
    Age-related cognitive impairment is not expressed uniformly across cognitive domains. Cognitive functions that rely on brain areas that undergo substantial neuroanatomical changes with age often show age-related impairment, while those that rely on brain areas with minimal age-related change typically do not. The common marmoset has grown in popularity as a model for neuroscience research, but robust cognitive phenotyping, particularly as a function of age and across multiple cognitive domains, is lacking. This presents a major limitation for the development and evaluation of the marmoset as a model of cognitive aging, and leaves open the question of whether they exhibit age-related cognitive impairment that is restricted to some cognitive domains, as in humans. In this study, we characterized stimulus-reward association learning and cognitive flexibility in young adults to geriatric marmosets using a Simple Discrimination and a Serial Reversal task, respectively. We found that aged marmosets show transien...
    Aug 7, 2023 Casey R Vanderlip
  • Journal Article
    ACTIVITY IN BARREL CORTEX RELATED TO TRACE EYEBLINK CONDITIONING | eNeuro
    In mammals several memory systems are responsible for learning and storage of associative memory. Even apparently simple behavioral tasks, like Pavlovian conditioning, have been suggested to engage, for instance, implicit and explicit memory processes. Here we used single whisker tactile trace eyeblink conditioning (TTEBC) to investigate learning and its neuronal bases in the mouse barrel column, the primary neocortical tactile representation of one whisker. Behavioral analysis showed that conditioned responses (CR) are spatially highly restricted, they generalize from the principal whisker only to its direct neighbors. Within the respective neural representation, the principal column and its direct neighbors, spike activity showed a learning-related spike rate suppression starting during the late phase of conditioning stimulus (CS) presentation that was sustained throughout the stimulus-free trace period (Trace). Trial-by-trial analysis showed that learning-related activity was independent from the genera...
    Aug 7, 2023 May-Li Silva-Prieto
  • Journal Article
    Somatostatin-expressing neurons in the ventral tegmental area innervate specific forebrain regions and are involved in stress response | eNeuro
    Expanding knowledge about the cellular composition of subcortical brain regions demonstrates large heterogeneity and differences from the cortical architecture. Recently, we described three subtypes of somatostatin-expressing (Sst) neurons in the mouse ventral tegmental area (VTA) and showed their local inhibitory action on the neighbouring dopaminergic neurons (Nagaeva et al., 2020). Here, we report that mouse Sst+ neurons especially from the anterolateral part of the VTA also project far outside the VTA and innervate forebrain regions that are mainly involved in the regulation of emotional behaviour, including the ventral pallidum (VP), lateral hypothalamus (LH), the medial part of the central amygdala (CeM), anterolateral division of the bed nucleus of stria terminalis (alBNST), and paraventricular thalamic nucleus (PVT). Deletion of these VTASst neurons in mice affected several behaviours, such as home cage activity, sensitization of locomotor activity to morphine, fear conditioning responses and react...
    Aug 7, 2023 Elina Nagaeva
  • Journal Article
    Cortical Brain Injury Causes Retrograde Degeneration of Afferent Basal Forebrain Cholinergic Neurons via the p75NTR | eNeuro
    Traumatic brain injury elicits neuronal loss at the site of injury and progressive neuronal loss in the penumbra. However, the consequences of TBI on afferent neurons projecting to the injured tissue from distal locations is unknown. Basal forebrain cholinergic neurons (BFCNs) extend long projections to multiple brain regions including the cortex, regulate many cognitive functions and are compromised in numerous neurodegenerative disorders. To determine the consequence of cortical injury on these afferent neurons, we used the Fluid Percussion Injury (FPI) model of traumatic brain injury and assessed the effects on BFCN survival and axon integrity in male and female mice. Survival or death of BF neurons can be regulated by neurotrophins or proneurotrophins, respectively. The injury elicited an induction of proNGF and proBDNF in the cortex, and a loss of BFCNs ipsilateral to the injury compared to sham uninjured mice. p75NTR knockout mice did not show loss of BFCN neurons, indicating a retrograde degenerativ...
    Aug 7, 2023 Srestha Dasgupta
  • Journal Article
    A Novel Interaction between MFN2/Marf and MARK4/PAR-1 is Implicated in Synaptic Defects and Mitochondrial Dysfunction | eNeuro
    As cellular energy powerhouses, mitochondria undergo constant fission and fusion to maintain functional homeostasis. The conserved dynamin-like GTPase, MFN2/Marf, plays a role in mitochondrial fusion, mutations of which are implicated in age-related human diseases, including several neurodegenerative disorders. However, the regulation of MFN2/Marf-mediated mitochondrial fusion, as well as the pathologic mechanism of neurodegeneration, are not clearly understood. Here, we identified a novel interaction between MFN2/Marf and MARK4/PAR-1. In the Drosophila larval neuromuscular junction, muscle-specific overexpression of MFN2/Marf decreased the number of synaptic boutons, and the loss of MARK4/PAR-1 alleviated the synaptic defects of MFN2/Marf overexpression. Downregulation of MARK4/PAR-1 rescued the mitochondrial hyperfusion phenotype caused by MFN2/Marf overexpression in the Drosophila muscles as well as in the cultured cells. In addition, knockdown of MARK4/PAR-1 rescued the respiratory dysfunction of mitoc...
    Aug 4, 2023 Yeongmi Cheon
  • Journal Article
    Sources of calcium at Connexin 36 gap junctions in the retina | eNeuro
    Synaptic plasticity is a fundamental feature of the central nervous system that controls the magnitude of signal transmission between communicating cells. Many electrical synapses exhibit substantial plasticity that modulates the degree of coupling within groups of neurons, alters the fidelity of signal transmission or even reconfigures functional circuits. In several known examples, such plasticity depends on calcium and is associated with neuronal activity. Calcium-driven signaling is known to promote potentiation of electrical synapses in fish Mauthner cells, mammalian retinal AII amacrine cells and inferior olive neurons, and to promote depression in thalamic reticular neurons. In order to measure local calcium dynamics in situ, we developed a transgenic mouse expressing a GCaMP calcium biosensor fused to Connexin 36 (Cx36) at electrical synapses. We examined the sources of calcium for activity-dependent plasticity in retina slices using confocal or SRRF imaging. More than half of Cx36-GCaMP gap juncti...
    Aug 1, 2023 Yuan-Hao Lee
  • Journal Article
    Genetically Defined Subtypes of Somatostatin-Containing Cortical Interneurons | eNeuro
    Inhibitory interneurons play a crucial role in proper development and function of the mammalian cerebral cortex. Of the different inhibitory subclasses, dendritic-targeting, somatostatin-containing (SOM) interneurons may be the most diverse. Earlier studies used GFP-expressing and recombinase-expressing mouse lines to characterize genetically defined subtypes of SOM interneurons by morphologic, electrophysiological, and neurochemical properties. More recently, large-scale studies classified SOM interneurons into 13 morpho-electric transcriptomic (MET) types. It remains unclear, however, how these various classification schemes relate to each other, and experimental access to MET types has been limited by the scarcity of specific mouse driver lines. To address these issues, we crossed Flp and Cre driver lines with a dual-color intersectional reporter, allowing experimental access to several combinatorially defined SOM subsets. Brains from adult mice of both sexes were retrogradely dye labeled from the pial ...
    Aug 1, 2023 Rachel E. Hostetler
  • Journal Article
    Estradiol Receptors Inhibit Long-Term Potentiation in the Dorsomedial Striatum | eNeuro
    Estradiol, a female sex hormone and the predominant form of estrogen, has diverse effects throughout the brain including in learning and memory. Estradiol modulates several types of learning that depend on the dorsomedial striatum (DMS), a subregion of the basal ganglia involved in goal-directed learning, cued action-selection, and motor skills. A cellular basis of learning is synaptic plasticity, and the presence of extranuclear estradiol receptors ERα, ERβ, and G-protein-coupled estrogen receptor (GPER) throughout the DMS suggests that estradiol may influence rapid cellular actions including those involved in plasticity. To test whether estradiol affects synaptic plasticity in the DMS, corticostriatal long-term potentiation (LTP) was induced using theta-burst stimulation (TBS) in ex vivo brain slices from intact male and female C57BL/6 mice. Extracellular field recordings showed that female mice in the diestrous stage of the estrous cycle exhibited LTP similar to male mice, while female mice in estrus di...
    Aug 1, 2023 Valerie J. Lewitus
  • Journal Article
    Implicit Sensorimotor Adaptation Proceeds in Absence of Movement Execution | eNeuro
    In implicit sensorimotor adaptation, a mismatch between the predicted and actual sensory feedback results in a sensory prediction error (SPE). Sensory predictions have long been thought to be linked to descending motor commands, implying a necessary contribution of movement execution to adaptation. However, recent work has shown that mere motor imagery (MI) also engages predictive mechanisms, opening up the possibility that MI might be sufficient to drive implicit adaptation. In a within-subject design in humans ( n  = 30), implicit adaptation was assessed in a center-out reaching task, following a single exposure to a visuomotor rotation. It was hypothesized that performing MI of a reaching movement while being provided with an animation of rotated visual feedback (MI condition) would lead to postrotation biases (PRBs) similar to those observed when the movement is executed (Execution condition). Results revealed that both the MI and Execution conditions led to significant directional biases following rot...
    Aug 1, 2023 Constance Pawlowsky
  • Journal Article
    Bursting Dynamics Based on the Persistent Na+ and Na+/K+ Pump Currents: A Dynamic Clamp Approach | eNeuro
    Life-supporting rhythmic motor functions like heart-beating in invertebrates and breathing in vertebrates require an indefatigable generation of a robust rhythm by specialized oscillatory circuits, central pattern generators (CPGs). These CPGs should be sufficiently flexible to adjust to environmental changes and behavioral goals. Continuous self-sustained operation of bursting neurons requires intracellular Na+ concentration to remain in a functional range and to have checks and balances of the Na+ fluxes met on a cycle-to-cycle basis during bursting. We hypothesize that at a high excitability state, the interaction of the Na+/K+ pump current, Ipump, and persistent Na+ current, INaP, produces a mechanism supporting functional bursting. INaP is a low voltage-activated inward current that initiates and supports the bursting phase. This current does not inactivate and is a significant source of Na+ influx. Ipump is an outward current activated by [Na+]i and is the major source of Na+ efflux. Both currents ar...
    Aug 1, 2023 Ricardo Erazo-Toscano
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