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9091 - 9100 of 52804 results
  • Journal Article
    μ-Opioid Receptor (Oprm1) Copy Number Influences Nucleus Accumbens Microcircuitry and Reciprocal Social Behaviors | Journal of Neuroscience
    The μ-opioid receptor regulates reward derived from both drug use and natural experiences, including social interaction, through actions in the nucleus accumbens. Here, we studied nucleus accumbens microcircuitry and social behavior in male and female mice with heterozygous genetic knockout of the μ-opioid receptor (Oprm1+/−). This genetic condition models the partial reduction of μ-opioid receptor signaling reported in several neuropsychiatric disorders. We first analyzed inhibitory synapses in the nucleus accumbens, using methods that differentiate between medium spiny neurons (MSNs) expressing the D1 or D2 dopamine receptor. Inhibitory synaptic transmission was increased in D2-MSNs of male mutants, but not female mutants, while the expression of gephyrin mRNA and the density of inhibitory synaptic puncta at the cell body of D2-MSNs was increased in mutants of both sexes. Some of these changes were more robust in Oprm1+/− mutants than Oprm1−/− mutants, demonstrating that partial reductions of μ-opioid si...
    Sep 22, 2021 Carlee Toddes
  • Journal Article
    Table of Contents — September 22, 2021, 41 (38) | Journal of Neuroscience
    Sep 22, 2021
  • Journal Article
    Oligodendrocyte HCN2 Channels Regulate Myelin Sheath Length | Journal of Neuroscience
    Oligodendrocytes generate myelin sheaths vital for the formation, health, and function of the CNS. Myelin sheath length is a key property that determines axonal conduction velocity and is known to be variable across the CNS. Myelin sheath length can be modified by neuronal activity, suggesting that dynamic regulation of sheath length might contribute to the functional plasticity of neural circuits. Although the mechanisms that establish and refine myelin sheath length are important determinants of brain function, our understanding of these remains limited. In recent years, the membranes of myelin sheaths have been increasingly recognized to contain ion channels and transporters that are associated with specific important oligodendrocyte functions, including metabolic support of axons and the regulation of ion homeostasis, but none have been shown to influence sheath architecture. In this study, we determined that hyperpolarization-activated, cyclic nucleotide-gated (HCN) ion channels, typically associated ...
    Sep 22, 2021 Matthew Swire
  • Journal Article
    This Week in The Journal | Journal of Neuroscience
    Carlos Costas-Insua, Estefanía Moreno, Irene B. Maroto, Andrea Ruiz-Calvo, Raquel Bajo-Grañeras, et al. (see pages [7924–7941][1]) Endocannabinoids are produced at postsynaptic sites throughout the brain, and they act predominantly on presynaptic G-protein-coupled CB1 receptors (CB1Rs) to
    Sep 22, 2021
  • Journal Article
    Peer Review Week 2021: Identity in Peer Review | Journal of Neuroscience
    The Journal of Neuroscience will celebrate Peer Review Week this year by thanking some of our most dedicated reviewers personally and acknowledging a few of them publicly. That acknowledgment of the time, effort, and commitment our peer reviewers contribute is the best part of Peer Review Week. Our
    Sep 22, 2021 Marina Picciotto
  • Journal Article
    Role of Inferior Frontal Junction (IFJ) in the Control of Feature versus Spatial Attention | Journal of Neuroscience
    Feature-based visual attention refers to preferential selection and processing of visual stimuli based on their nonspatial attributes, such as color or shape. Recent studies have highlighted the inferior frontal junction (IFJ) as a control region for feature but not spatial attention. However, the extent to which IFJ contributes to spatial versus feature attention control remains a topic of debate. We investigated in humans of both sexes the role of IFJ in the control of feature versus spatial attention in a cued visual spatial (attend-left or attend-right) and feature (attend-red or attend-green) attention task using fMRI. Analyzing cue-related fMRI using both univariate activation and multivoxel pattern analysis, we found the following results in IFJ. First, in line with some prior studies, the univariate activations were not different between feature and spatial attentional control. Second, in contrast, the multivoxel pattern analysis decoding accuracy was above chance level for feature attention (atten...
    Sep 22, 2021 Sreenivasan Meyyappan
  • Journal Article
    C-Boutons and Their Influence on Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis Disease Progression | Journal of Neuroscience
    Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is an adult-onset neurodegenerative disease with progressive motor neuron death, where patients usually die within 5 years of diagnosis. Previously, we showed that the C-boutons, which are large cholinergic synapses to motor neurons that modulate motor neuron activity, are necessary for behavioral compensation in mSOD1G93A mice, a mouse model for ALS. We reasoned that, since the C-boutons likely increase the excitability of surviving motor neurons to compensate for motor neuron loss during ALS disease progression, then amplitude modulation through the C-boutons likely increases motor neuron stress and worsens disease progression. By comparing male and female mSOD1G93A mice to mSOD1G93A mice with genetically silenced C-boutons [ mSOD1G93A ; Dbx1::cre ; ChATfl/fl ( mSOD1G93A/Coff )], we show that the C-boutons do not influence the humane end point of mSOD1G93A mice; however, our histologic analysis shows that C-bouton silencing significantly improves fast-twitch muscle inn...
    Sep 22, 2021 Tyler L. Wells
  • Journal Article
    Spontaneous Multimodal Neural Transmission Suggests That Adult Spinal Networks Maintain an Intrinsic State of Readiness to Execute Sensorimotor Behaviors | Journal of Neuroscience
    Spontaneous action potential discharge (spAP) is both ubiquitous and functionally relevant during neural development. spAP remains a prominent feature of supraspinal networks in maturity, even during unconsciousness. Evidence suggests that spAP persists in mature spinal networks during wakefulness, and one function of spAP in this context could be maintenance of a “ready state” to execute behaviors. The extent to which spAP persists in mature spinal networks during unconsciousness remains unclear, and its function(s), if any, are likewise unresolved. Here, we attempt to reconcile some of the questions and contradictions that emerge from the disintegrated picture of adult spinal spAP currently available. We recorded simultaneously from large populations of spinal interneurons in vivo in male rats, characterizing the spatial distribution of spAP in the lumbar enlargement and identifying subgroups of spontaneously active neurons. We find (1) concurrent spAP throughout the dorsoventral extent of the gray matte...
    Sep 22, 2021 Maria F. Bandres
  • Journal Article
    Frequency Selectivity of Persistent Cortical Oscillatory Responses to Auditory Rhythmic Stimulation | Journal of Neuroscience
    Cortical oscillations have been proposed to play a functional role in speech and music perception, attentional selection, and working memory, via the mechanism of neural entrainment. One of the properties of neural entrainment that is often taken for granted is that its modulatory effect on ongoing oscillations outlasts rhythmic stimulation. We tested the existence of this phenomenon by studying cortical neural oscillations during and after presentation of melodic stimuli in a passive perception paradigm. Melodies were composed of ∼60 and ∼80 Hz tones embedded in a 2.5 Hz stream. Using intracranial and surface recordings in male and female humans, we reveal persistent oscillatory activity in the high-γ band in response to the tones throughout the cortex, well beyond auditory regions. By contrast, in response to the 2.5 Hz stream, no persistent activity in any frequency band was observed. We further show that our data are well captured by a model of damped harmonic oscillator and can be classified into thre...
    Sep 22, 2021 Jacques Pesnot Lerousseau
  • Journal Article
    Bidirectional control of orienting behavior by the substantia nigra pars reticulata: distinct significance of head and whisker movements | eNeuro
    Detection of an unexpected, novel, or salient stimulus typically leads to an orienting response by which animals move the head, in concert with the sensors (e.g., eyes, pinna, whiskers), to evaluate the stimulus. The basal ganglia are known to control orienting movements through tonically active GABAergic neurons in the substantia nigra pars reticulata (SNr) that project to the superior colliculus. Using optogenetics, we explored the ability of GABAergic SNr neurons on one side of the brain to generate orienting movements. In a strain of mice that express channelrhodopsin (ChR2) in both SNr GABAergic neurons and afferent fibers, we found that continuous blue light produced a robust sustained excitation of SNr neurons which generated ipsiversive orienting. Conversely, in the same animal, trains of blue light excited afferent fibers more effectively than continuous blue light, producing a robust sustained inhibition of SNr neurons which generated contraversive orienting. When ChR2 expression was restricted t...
    Sep 20, 2021 Sebastian Hormigo
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