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4521 - 4530 of 52776 results
  • Journal Article
    Age-related enhancements in positive emotionality across the lifespan: structural equation modelling of brain and behaviour | Journal of Neuroscience
    Aging is associated with a bias in attention and memories towards positive and away from negative emotional content. In addition, emotion regulation appears to improve with age, despite concomitant widespread cognitive decline coupled with gray matter volume loss in cortical and subcortical regions thought to sub-serve emotion regulation. Here, we address this emotion-aging paradox using the behavioural data of an emotion regulation task from a population derived, male and female, human sample (CamCAN) and utilise Structural Equation Modelling together with multivariate analysis of structural MRI images of the same sample to investigate brain-behaviour relationships. In a series of measurement models, we show the relationship between age and emotionality is best explained by a four-factor model, compared to single and hierarchical factor models. These four latent factors are interpreted as Basal Negative Affect, Positive Reactivity, Negative Reactivity and Positive Regulation (upregulating positive emotion...
    Mar 7, 2022 Jason Stretton
  • Journal Article
    Agmatine alleviates cisplatin-induced ototoxicity by activating PI3K/AKT signaling pathway | eNeuro
    Cisplatin-induced ototoxicity can be partially attributed to excessive reactive oxygen species (ROS) production, and agmatine is well-known for the activation of the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K)/protein kinase B (AKT) pathway to inhibit ROS production. Whether agmatine could be utilized to alleviate cisplatin-induced ototoxicity is investigated. Cisplatin exposed House Ear Institute-Organ of Corti 1 (HEI-OC1) cells and cochlear explants showed increased ROS production detected by 2’-7’dichlorofluorescin diacetate (DCFH-DA) staining and decreased cell viability detected by Cell Counting Kit-8 (CCK-8) or Myosin 7a staining, which could be reversed by the agmatine pre-treatment. Cisplatin intraperitoneally injected C57BL/6 mice demonstrated damaged auditory function as indicated by distortion products otoacoustic emissions (DPOAE) and auditory brainstem response (ABR) assays, and trans-tympanically administrated agmatine in the left ears could partly prevent the auditory function loss. Mechanistically...
    Mar 7, 2022 Ying Zhang
  • Journal Article
    Separate functional subnetworks of excitatory neurons show preference to Periodic and Random sound structures | Journal of Neuroscience
    Auditory cortex (ACX) neurons are sensitive to spectro-temporal sound patterns and violations in patterns induced by rare stimuli embedded within streams of sounds. We investigate the auditory cortical representation of repeated presentations of sequences of sounds with standard stimuli (common) with an embedded deviant (rare) stimulus in two conditions – Periodic (Fixed deviant position) or Random (Random deviant position). We used extracellular single-unit and 2-photon Ca2+ imaging recordings in Layer 2/3 neurons of the mouse (mus musculus) ACX of either sex. Population single unit average responses increased over repetitions in the Random-condition and were suppressed or did not change in the Periodic-condition, showing general irregularity preference. A subset of neurons showed the opposite behaviour, indicating regularity preference. Furthermore, pairwise noise-correlations were higher in the Random-condition than in the Periodic-condition, suggesting a role of recurrent connections in the observed di...
    Mar 3, 2022 Muneshwar Mehra
  • Journal Article
    Both Corticospinal and Reticulospinal Tracts Control Force of Contraction | Journal of Neuroscience
    The control of contraction strength is a key part of movement control. In primates, both corticospinal and reticulospinal cells provide input to motoneurons. Corticospinal discharge is known to correlate with force, but there are no previous reports of how reticular formation (RF) activity modulates with different contractions. Here we trained two female macaque monkeys (body weight 5.9-6.9kg) to pull a handle which could be loaded with 0.5-6kg weights, and recorded from identified pyramidal tract neurons (PTNs) in primary motor cortex and RF cells during task performance. Population-averaged firing rate increased monotonically with higher force for the RF, but showed a complex profile with little net modulation for PTNs. This reflected a more heterogeneous profile of rate modulation across the PTN population, leading to cancellation in the average. Linear discriminant analysis (LDA) classified the force based on the time course of rate modulation equally well for PTNs and RF cells. Peak firing rate had si...
    Mar 3, 2022 Isabel S Glover
  • Journal Article
    Dendritic domain-specific sampling of long-range axons shapes feedforward and feedback connectivity of L5 neurons | Journal of Neuroscience
    Feedforward and feedback pathways interact in specific dendritic domains to enable cognitive functions such as predictive processing and learning. Based on axonal projections, hierarchically lower areas are thought to form synapses primarily on dendrites in middle cortical layers, while higher-order areas are posited to target dendrites in layer 1 and in deep layers. However, the extent to which functional synapses form in regions of axo-dendritic overlap has not been extensively studied. Here, we use viral tracing in the secondary visual cortex of male mice to map brain-wide inputs to thick-tufted layer 5 pyramidal neurons. Furthermore, we provide a comprehensive map of input locations through subcellular optogenetic circuit mapping. We show that input pathways target distinct dendritic domains with far greater specificity than appears from their axonal branching, often deviating substantially from the canonical patterns. Common assumptions regarding the dendrite-level interaction of feedforward and feedb...
    Mar 3, 2022 Alessandro R. Galloni
  • Journal Article
    A computational model of direction selectivity in Macaque V1 cortex based on dynamic differences between ON and OFF pathways | Journal of Neuroscience
    This paper is about neural mechanisms of direction selectivity (DS) in Macaque primary visual cortex, V1. We present data (on male macaque) showing strong DS in a majority of simple cells in V1 layer 4Cα, the cortical layer that receives direct afferent input from the Magnocellular division of the Lateral Geniculate Nucleus (LGN). Magnocellular LGN cells are not direction-selective. To understand the mechanisms of DS, we built a large-scale, recurrent model of spiking neurons called DSV1. Like its predecessors, DSV1 reproduces many visual response properties of V1 cells including orientation selectivity. Two important new features of DSV1 are (a) DS is initiated by small, consistent dynamic differences in the visual responses of OFF and ON Magnocellular LGN cells, and (b) DS in the responses of most model simple cells is increased over those of their feedforward inputs; this increase is achieved through dynamic interaction of feedforward and intra-cortical synaptic currents without the use of intra-cortica...
    Mar 3, 2022 Logan Chariker
  • Journal Article
    CLC anion/proton exchangers regulate secretory vesicle filling and granule exocytosis in chromaffin cells | Journal of Neuroscience
    ClC-3, ClC-4, and ClC-5 are electrogenic chloride/proton exchangers that can be found in endosomal compartments of mammalian cells. Although the association with genetic diseases and the severe phenotype of knockout animals illustrate their physiological importance, the cellular functions of these proteins have remained insufficiently understood. We here study the role of two Clcn3 splice variants, ClC-3b and ClC-3c, in granular exocytosis and catecholamine accumulation of adrenal chromaffin cells using a combination of high-resolution capacitance measurements, amperometry, protein expression/gene knock-out/down, rescue experiments, and confocal microscopy. We demonstrate that ClC-3c resides in immature as well as in mature secretory granules, where it regulates catecholamine accumulation and contributes to the establishment of the readily releasable pool of secretory vesicles. The lysosomal splice variant ClC-3b contributes to vesicle priming only with low efficiency and leaves the vesicular catecholamine...
    Mar 3, 2022 Maddalena Comini
  • Journal Article
    Patient-derived anti-NMDAR antibody disinhibits cortical neuronal networks through dysfunction of inhibitory neuron output | Journal of Neuroscience
    Anti-NMDAR encephalitis is a severe neuropsychiatric disorder associated with autoantibodies against NMDA receptors, which cause a variety of symptoms from prominent psychiatric and cognitive manifestations to seizures and autonomic instability. Previous studies mainly focused on hippocampal effects of these autoantibodies, helping to explain mechanistic causes for cognitive impairment. However, antibodies’ effects on higher cortical network function, where they could contribute to psychosis and/or seizures, have not until now been explored in detail. Here, we employed a patient-derived monoclonal antibody targeting the NR1 subunit of NMDAR and tested its effects on in vitro cultures of rodent cortical neurons, using imaging and electrophysiological techniques. We report that this hNR1 antibody drives cortical networks to a hyper-excitable state and disrupts mechanisms stabilizing network activity such as Npas4 signaling. Network hyperactivity is in part a result of a reduced synaptic output of inhibitory ...
    Mar 3, 2022 Ewa Andrzejak
  • Journal Article
    Dendritic Morphology of an Inhibitory Retinal Interneuron Enables Simultaneous Local and Global Synaptic Integration | Journal of Neuroscience
    Amacrine cells, inhibitory interneurons of the retina, feature synaptic inputs and outputs in close proximity throughout their dendritic trees, making them notable exceptions to prototypical somato-dendritic integration with output transmitted via axonal action potentials. The extent of dendritic compartmentalization in amacrine cells with widely differing dendritic tree morphology, however, is largely unexplored. Combining compartmental modeling, dendritic Ca2+ imaging, targeted microiontophoresis and multielectrode patch-clamp recording (voltage and current clamp, capacitance measurement of exocytosis), we investigated integration in the AII amacrine cell, a narrow-field electrically coupled interneuron that participates in multiple, distinct microcircuits. Physiological experiments were performed with in vitro slices prepared from retinas of both male and female rats. We found that the morphology of the AII enables simultaneous local and global integration of inputs targeted to different dendritic regio...
    Mar 2, 2022 Espen Hartveit
  • Journal Article
    Out of Rhythm: Compromised Precision of Theta-Gamma Coupling Impairs Associative Memory in Old Age | Journal of Neuroscience
    Episodic memory declines with advancing adult age. This decline is particularly pronounced when associations between items and their contexts need to be formed. According to theories of neural communication, the precise coupling of gamma power to the phase of the theta rhythm supports associative memory formation. To investigate whether age differences in associative memory are related to compromised theta-gamma coupling, we took EEG recordings during the encoding phase of an item-context association task. Fifty-eight younger (33 females) and 55 older (24 females) adults studied pictures of objects superimposed on background scenes. In a recognition test, objects were presented on old or new backgrounds, and participants responded if they had seen (1) the object and (2) the object/scene pair. Theta-gamma coupling supported pair memory formation in both age groups. Whereas pair memory was associated with coupling closer to the peak of the theta rhythm, item-only memory was associated with a deviation in pha...
    Mar 2, 2022 Anna E. Karlsson
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