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9111 - 9120 of 52807 results
  • Journal Article
    Somatostatin-positive Interneurons Contribute to Seizures in SCN8A Epileptic Encephalopathy | Journal of Neuroscience
    SCN8A epileptic encephalopathy is a devastating epilepsy syndrome caused by mutant SCN8A which encodes the voltage-gated sodium channel NaV1.6. To date, it is unclear if and how inhibitory interneurons, which express NaV1.6, influence disease pathology. Using both sexes of a transgenic mouse model of SCN8A encephalopathy, we found that selective expression of the R1872W SCN8A mutation in somatostatin (SST) interneurons was sufficient to convey susceptibility to audiogenic seizures. Patch-clamp electrophysiology experiments revealed that SST interneurons from mutant mice were hyperexcitable but hypersensitive to action potential failure via depolarization block under normal and seizure-like conditions. Remarkably, GqDREADD-mediated activation of wild-type SST interneurons resulted in prolonged electrographic seizures and was accompanied by SST hyperexcitability and depolarization block. Aberrantly large persistent sodium currents, a hallmark of SCN8A mutations, were observed and were found to contribute dir...
    Sep 20, 2021 Eric R. Wengert
  • Journal Article
    Aperiodic and periodic components of ongoing oscillatory brain dynamics link distinct functional aspects of cognition across adult lifespan | eNeuro
    Signal transmission in the brain propagates via distinct oscillatory frequency bands but the aperiodic component - 1/f activity - almost always co-exists which most of the previous studies have not sufficiently taken into consideration. We used a recently proposed parameterisation model that delimits the oscillatory and aperiodic components of neural dynamics on lifespan ageing data collected from human participants using Magnetoencephalography (MEG). Since, healthy ageing underlines an enormous change in local tissue properties, any systematic relationship of 1/f activity would highlight their impact on the self-organized critical functional states. Furthermore, we have used patterns of correlation between aperiodic background and metrics of behaviour, to understand the domain general effects of 1/f activity. We suggest that age-associated global change in 1/f baseline, alters the functional critical states of the brain affecting the global information processing impacting critically all aspects of cognit...
    Sep 20, 2021 Kusum Thuwal
  • Journal Article
    Visual and tactile sensory systems share common features in object recognition | eNeuro
    Although we use our visual and tactile sensory systems interchangeably for object recognition on a daily basis, little is known about the mechanism underlying this ability. This study examined how 3D shape features of objects form two congruent and interchangeable visual and tactile perceptual spaces in healthy male and female participants. Since active exploration plays an important role in shape processing, a virtual reality environment was used to visually explore 3D objects called digital embryos without using the tactile sense. In addition, during the tactile procedure, blindfolded participants actively palpated a 3D-printed version of the same objects with both hands. We first demonstrated that the visual and tactile perceptual spaces were highly similar. We then extracted a series of 3D shape features to investigate how visual and tactile exploration can lead to the correct identification of the relationships between objects. The results indicate that both modalities share the same shape features to...
    Sep 17, 2021 Sepideh Tabrik
  • Journal Article
    CaMKII modulates diacylglycerol lipase-α activity in the rat nucleus accumbens after incubation of cocaine craving | eNeuro
    Relapse is a major challenge to the treatment of substance use disorders. A progressive increase in cue-induced drug craving, termed incubation of craving, is observed after withdrawal from multiple drugs of abuse in humans and rodents. Incubation of cocaine craving involves strengthening of excitatory synapses onto nucleus accumbens (NAc) medium spiny neurons via postsynaptic accumulation of high-conductance Ca2+-permeable AMPA receptors. This enhances reactivity to drug-associated cues and is required for the expression of incubation. Additionally, incubation of cocaine craving is associated with loss of the synaptic depression normally triggered by stimulation of metabotropic glutamate receptor 5 (mGlu5), leading to endocannabinoid production, and expressed presynaptically via cannabinoid receptor 1 activation. Previous studies have found alterations in mGlu5 and Homer proteins associated with the loss of this synaptic depression. Here we conducted co-immunoprecipitation studies to investigate associati...
    Sep 17, 2021 Conor H. Murray
  • Journal Article
    Functional characterization of ovine dorsal root ganglion neurons reveal peripheral sensitization after osteochondral defect | eNeuro
    Knee joint trauma can cause an osteochondral defect (OD), a risk factor for osteoarthritis and cause of debilitating pain in patients. Rodent OD models are less translatable due to their smaller joint size and open growth plate. This study proposes sheep as a translationally relevant model to understand the neuronal basis of OD pain. Unilateral 6 mm deep OD was induced in adult female sheep. 2-6 weeks post-operation, lumbar dorsal root ganglia (DRG) neurons were collected from the contralateral and OD side of operated sheep. Functional assessment of neuronal excitability and activity of the pain-related ion channels TRPV1 and P2X3 was carried out using electrophysiology and Ca2+-imaging. Immunohistochemistry was utilized to verify expression of pain-related proteins. We observed that an increased proportion of OD DRG neurons (sheep, N = 3; Ctrl neurons, n =15, OD neurons, n = 16) showed spontaneous electrical excitability (Ctrl: 20.33 ± 4.5%; OD: 50 ± 10%; p = 0.009, unpaired t-test) and an increased propo...
    Sep 17, 2021 Sampurna Chakrabarti
  • Journal Article
    High behavioural variability mediated by altered neuronal excitability in auts2 mutant zebrafish | eNeuro
    Autism spectrum disorders (ASDs) are characterized by abnormal behavioral traits arising from neural circuit dysfunction. While a number of genes have been implicated in ASDs, in most cases, a clear understanding of how mutations in these genes lead to circuit dysfunction and behavioral abnormality is absent. The autism susceptibility candidate 2 ( AUTS2 ) gene is one such gene, associated with ASDs, intellectual disability and a range of other neurodevelopmental conditions. Yet, the role of AUTS2 in neural development and circuit function is not at all known. Here, we undertook functional analysis of Auts2a, the main homolog of AUTS2 in zebrafish, in the context of the escape behavior. Escape behavior in wild type zebrafish is critical for survival and is therefore, reliable, rapid, and has well-defined kinematic properties. Auts2a mutant zebrafish are viable, have normal gross morphology and can generate escape behavior with normal kinematics. However, the behavior is unreliable and delayed, with high tr...
    Sep 17, 2021 Urvashi Jha
  • Journal Article
    Intrauterine growth restriction causes abnormal embryonic dentate gyrus neurogenesis in mouse offspring that leads to adult learning and memory deficits | eNeuro
    Human infants who suffer from intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR), which is a failure to attain their genetically pre-determined weight, are at increased risk for postnatal learning and memory deficits. Hippocampal dentate gyrus (DG) granule neurons play an important role in memory formation, however it is unknown whether IUGR affects embryonic DG neurogenesis, which could provide a potential mechanism underlying abnormal postnatal learning and memory function. Using a mouse model of the most common cause of IUGR, induced by hypertensive disease of pregnancy, we first assessed adult learning and memory function. We quantified the percentages of embryonic hippocampal DG neural stem and progenitor cells and developing glutamatergic granule neurons, as well as hippocampal volumes and neuron cell count and morphology 18 and 40 days after delivery. We characterized the differential embryonic hippocampal transcriptomic pathways between appropriately-grown and IUGR mouse offspring. We found that IUGR offspring...
    Sep 17, 2021 Ashley S. Brown
  • Journal Article
    HFOApp: A MATLAB graphical user interface for high frequency oscillation marking | eNeuro
    Epilepsy affects 3.4 million people in the United States, and despite availability of numerous antiepileptic drugs, 36% of patients have uncontrollable seizures, which severely impacts quality of life. High frequency oscillations (HFOs) are a potential biomarker of epileptogenic tissue that could be useful in surgical planning. As a result, research into the efficacy of HFOs as a clinical tool has increased over the last two decades. However, detection and identification of these transient rhythms in intracranial electroencephalographic recordings remain time-consuming and challenging. Although automated detection algorithms have been developed, their results are widely inconsistent, reducing reliability. Thus, manual marking of HFOs remains the gold standard, and manual review of automated results is required. However, manual marking and review are time-consuming and can still produce variable results due to their subjective nature and the limitations in functionality of existing open-source software. Our...
    Sep 17, 2021 Guangyu Zhou
  • Journal Article
    The type 2 diabetes factor methylglyoxal mediates axon initial segment shortening and alters neuronal function at the cellular and network levels | eNeuro
    Recent evidence suggests that alteration of axon initial segment (AIS) geometry (i.e., length or location along the axon) contributes to CNS dysfunction in neurological diseases. For example, AIS length is shorter in the prefrontal cortex of type 2 diabetic mice with cognitive impairment. To determine the key type 2 diabetes-related factor that produces AIS shortening we modified levels of insulin, glucose, or the reactive glucose metabolite methylglyoxal in cultures of dissociated cortices from male and female mice and quantified AIS geometry using immunofluorescent imaging of the AIS proteins AnkyrinG and βIV spectrin. Neither insulin nor glucose modification altered AIS length. Exposure to 100 but not 1 or 10 µM methylglyoxal for 24 h resulted in accumulation of the methylglyoxal-derived advanced glycation end-product hydroimidazolone and produced reversible AIS shortening without cell death. Methylglyoxal-evoked AIS shortening occurred in both excitatory and putative inhibitory neuron populations and ...
    Sep 16, 2021 Ryan B. Griggs
  • Journal Article
    The hedgehog signaling pathway is expressed in the adult mouse hypothalamus and modulated by fasting | eNeuro
    The hedgehog signaling pathway is best known for its role in developmental patterning of the neural tube and limb bud. More recently, hedgehog signaling has been recognized for its roles in growth of adult tissues and maintenance of progenitor cell niches. However, the role of hedgehog signaling in fully differentiated cells like neurons in the adult brain is less clear. In mammals, coordination of hedgehog pathway activity relies on primary cilia and patients with ciliopathies such as Bardet-Biedl and Alström syndrome exhibit clinical features clearly attributable to errant hedgehog such as polydactyly. However, these ciliopathies also present with features not clearly associated with hedgehog signaling such as hyperphagia-associated obesity. How hedgehog signaling may contribute to feeding behavior is complex and unclear, but cilia are critical for proper energy homeostasis. Here, we provide a detailed analysis of the expression of core components of the hedgehog signaling pathway in the adult mouse hypo...
    Sep 16, 2021 Patrick J. Antonellis
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