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4801 - 4810 of 52774 results
  • Journal Article
    Bi-directional communication between pontine nucleus incertus and the medial septum is carried out by electrophysiologically distinct neuronal populations | Journal of Neuroscience
    Theta oscillations are one of the brain rhythms involved in memory formation, sensorimotor integration and control of locomotion and behavioural states. Generation and spatiotemporal synchronisation of theta oscillations rely on the interactions between nuclei forming a large neural network, part of which is pontine nucleus incertus (NI). Here we identified distinct populations of NI neurons, based on the relationship of their firing to the hippocampal waves, with the special focus on theta oscillations, and the direction and type of interaction with the medial septum (MS) in male, urethane anaesthetised rats. By recording NI neuronal firing and hippocampal LFP we described NI neurons that fire action potentials in a theta phase-independent or theta phase-locked and delta wave-independent or delta wave-locked manner. Among hippocampal activity independent NI neurons, irregular, slow-firing and regular, fast-firing cells were observed, while hippocampal oscillations/waves locked NI neurons could be of burst...
    Jan 25, 2022 Aleksandra Trenk
  • Journal Article
    Long-Lasting, Pathway-Specific Impairment of a Novel Form of Spike-Timing-Dependent Long-Term Depression by Neuropathic Pain in the Anterior Cingulate Cortex | Journal of Neuroscience
    Malfunctioning synaptic plasticity is one of the major mechanisms contributing to the development of chronic pain. We studied spike-timing dependent depression (tLTD) in the ACC of male mice, a brain region involved in processing emotional aspects of pain. tLTD onto layer 5 pyramidal neurons depended on postsynaptic calcium-influx through GluN2B-containing NMDARs and retrograde signaling via nitric oxide to reduce presynaptic release probability. After chronic constriction injury of the sciatic nerve, a model for neuropathic pain, tLTD was rapidly impaired; and this phenotype persisted even beyond the time of recovery from mechanical sensitization. Exclusion of GluN2B-containing NMDARs from the postsynaptic site specifically at projections from the anterior thalamus to the ACC caused the tLTD phenotype, whereas signaling downstream of nitric oxide synthesis remained intact. Thus, transient neuropathic pain can leave a permanent trace manifested in the disturbance of synaptic plasticity in a specific affere...
    Jan 25, 2022 Norbert Hogrefe
  • Journal Article
    Peri-stimulus time responses predict adaptation and spontaneous firing of auditory-nerve fibers: from rodents data to humans | Journal of Neuroscience
    Sound-level coding in the auditory nerve is achieved through the progressive recruitment of auditory nerve fibers (ANFs) that differ in threshold of activation and in the stimulus level at which the spike rate saturates. To investigate the functional state of the ANFs, the electrophysiological tests routinely used in clinics only capture the first action potentials firing in synchrony at the onset of the acoustic stimulation. Assessment of other properties ( e.g . spontaneous rate and adaptation time constants) requires single-fiber recordings directly from the nerve, which for ethical reasons is not allowed in humans. By combining neuronal activity measurements at the round window and signal-processing algorithms, we constructed a peri-stimulus time response (PSTR), with a waveform similar to the peri-stimulus time histograms (PSTHs) derived from single-fiber recordings in young adult female gerbils. Simultaneous recordings of round-window PSTR and single-fiber PSTH provided models to predict the adaptati...
    Jan 25, 2022 Antoine Huet
  • Journal Article
    Dorsal raphe 5-HT neurons utilize, but do not generate, negative aversive prediction errors | eNeuro
    The dorsal raphe nucleus (DRN) contains the largest population of serotonin (5-HT) neurons in the central nervous system. 5-HT, synthesized via tryptophan hydroxylase 2 (Tph2), is a widely functioning neuromodulator implicated in fear learning. Here we sought to investigate whether DRN 5-HT is necessary to reduce fear via negative prediction error. Using male and female TPH2-cre rats, DRNtph2+ cells were selectively deleted via cre-caspase (rAAV5-Flex-taCasp3-TEVp) in Experiment 1. Rats then underwent fear discrimination during which three cues were associated with unique foot shock probabilities: safety p=0.00, uncertainty p=0.375, and danger p=1.00. Rats then received selective extinction to the uncertainty cue, a behavioral manipulation designed to probe negative prediction error. Deleting DRNtph2+ cells had no impact on initial discrimination but slowed selective extinction. In Experiment 2, we used a within-subjects optogenetic inhibition design to causally implicate DRNtph2+ cells in prediction error...
    Jan 24, 2022 Rachel A. Walker
  • Journal Article
    Erratum: Takamura et al., “Modality-Specific Impairment of Hippocampal CA1 Neurons of Alzheimer’s Disease Model Mice” | Journal of Neuroscience
    Jan 24, 2022
  • Journal Article
    Targeting neurons with functional oxytocin receptors: A novel set of simple knock-in mouse lines for oxytocin receptor visualization and manipulation | eNeuro
    The neuropeptide oxytocin (Oxt) plays important roles in modulating social behaviors. Oxytocin receptor (Oxtr) is abundantly expressed in the brain and its relationship to socio-behavioral controls has been extensively studied using mouse brains. Several genetic tools to visualize and/or manipulate Oxtr-expressing cells, such as fluorescent reporters and Cre recombinase drivers, have been generated by ES-cell based gene targeting or bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) transgenesis. However, these mouse lines displayed some differences in their Oxtr expression profiles probably due to the complex context and integrity of their genomic configurations in each line. Here we apply our sophisticated genome-editing techniques to the Oxtr locus, systematically generating a series of knock-in mouse lines, in which its endogenous transcriptional regulations are intactly preserved and evaluate their expression profiles to ensure the reliability of our new tools. We employ the epitope tagging strategy, with which C-...
    Jan 24, 2022 Yukiko U. Inoue
  • Journal Article
    Auditory nerve fiber discrimination and representation of naturally-spoken vowels in noise | eNeuro
    To understand how vowels are encoded by auditory nerve fibers, a number of representation schemes have been suggested that extract the vowel’s formant frequencies from auditory nerve-fiber spiking patterns. The current study aims to apply and compare these schemes for auditory nerve-fiber responses to naturally-spoken vowels in a speech-shaped background noise. Responses to three vowels were evaluated; based on behavioral experiments in the same species, two of these were perceptually difficult to discriminate from each other (/e/vs/i/) and one was perceptually easy to discriminate from the other two (/a:/). Single-unit auditory nerve fibers were recorded from ketamine/xylazine-anesthetized Mongolian gerbils of either sex (n = 8). First, single-unit discrimination between the three vowels was studied. Compared to the perceptually easy discriminations, the average spike timing-based discrimination values were significantly lower for the perceptually difficult vowel discrimination. This was not true for an ...
    Jan 24, 2022 Amarins N. Heeringa
  • Journal Article
    The sensory and motor components of the cortical hierarchy are coupled to the rhythm of the stomach during rest | Journal of Neuroscience
    Bodily rhythms appear as novel scaffolding mechanisms orchestrating the spatio-temporal organization of spontaneous brain activity. Here, we follow up on the discovery of the gastric resting-state network (Rebollo et al, 2018), composed of brain regions in which the fMRI signal is phase-synchronized to the slow (0.05 Hz) electrical rhythm of the stomach. Using a larger sample size (n=63 human participants, both genders), we further characterize the anatomy and effect sizes of gastric-brain coupling across resting-state networks, a fine grained cortical parcellation, as well as along the main gradients of cortical organization. Most (67%) of the gastric network is included in the somato-motor-auditory (38%) and visual (29%) resting state networks. Gastric brain coupling also occurs in the granular insula and, to a lesser extent, in the piriform cortex. Thus, all sensory and motor cortices corresponding to both exteroceptive and interoceptive modalities are coupled to the gastric rhythm during rest. Converse...
    Jan 24, 2022 Ignacio Rebollo
  • Journal Article
    Frequency shapes the quality of tactile percepts evoked through electrical stimulation of the nerves | Journal of Neuroscience
    Electrical stimulation of the peripheral nerves of human participants provides a unique opportunity to study the neural determinants of perceptual quality using a causal manipulation. A major challenge in the study of neural coding of touch has been to isolate the role of spike timing – at the scale of milliseconds or tens of milliseconds – in shaping the sensory experience. In the present study, we address this question by systematically varying the frequency (PF) of electrical stimulation pulse trains delivered to the peripheral nerves of seven participants with upper and lower extremity limb loss via chronically implanted neural interfaces. We find that increases in PF lead to systematic increases in perceived frequency, up to about 50 Hz, at which point further changes in PF have little to no impact on sensory quality. Above this transition frequency, ratings of perceived frequency level off, the ability to discriminate changes in PF is abolished, and verbal descriptors selected to characterize the sen...
    Jan 24, 2022 Emily L. Graczyk
  • Journal Article
    NDI: A platform-independent data interface and database for neuroscience physiology and imaging experiments | eNeuro
    Collaboration in neuroscience is impeded by the difficulty of sharing primary data, results, and software across labs. Here we introduce Neuroscience Data Interface (NDI), a platform-independent standard that allows an analyst to use and create software that functions independently from the format of the raw data or the manner in which the data is organized into files. The interface is rooted in a simple vocabulary that describes common apparatus and storage devices used in neuroscience experiments. Results of analyses – and analyses of analyses – are stored as documents in a scalable, queryable database that stores the relationships and history among the experiment elements and documents. The interface allows the development of an application ecosystem where applications can focus on calculation rather than data format or organization. This tool can be used by individual labs to exchange and analyze data, and it can serve to curate neuroscience data for searchable archives. Significance Statement Neuro...
    Jan 21, 2022 Daniel García Murillo
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