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4691 - 4700 of 52785 results
  • Journal Article
    AMIGO1 promotes axon growth and territory matching in the retina | Journal of Neuroscience
    Dendrite and axon arbor sizes are critical to neuronal function and vary widely between different neuron types. The relative dendrite and axon sizes of synaptic partners control signal convergence and divergence in neural circuits. The developmental mechanisms that determine cell-type-specific dendrite and axon size and match synaptic partners' arbor territories remain obscure. Here, we discover that retinal horizontal cells express the leucine-rich repeat domain cell adhesion molecule AMIGO1. Horizontal cells provide pathway-specific feedback to photoreceptors: horizontal cell axons to rods and horizontal cell dendrites to cones. AMIGO1 selectively expands the size of horizontal cell axons. When Amigo1 is deleted in all or individual horizontal cells of either sex, their axon arbors shrink. By contrast, horizontal cell dendrites and synapse formation of horizontal cell axons and dendrites are unaffected by AMIGO1 removal. The dendrites of rod bipolar cells, which do not express AMIGO1, shrink in parallel ...
    Feb 15, 2022 Florentina Soto
  • Journal Article
    Zcchc12-containing nociceptors are required for noxious heat sensation | Journal of Neuroscience
    Dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons are classified into distinct types to mediate the somatosensation with different modalities. Recently, transcriptional profilings of DRG neurons by single-cell RNA-sequencing have provided new insights into the neuron typing and functional properties. Zinc-finger CCHC domain-containing 12 (Zcchc12) was reported to be the representative marker for a subtype of Gal-positive (Gal+) DRG neurons. However, the characteristics and functions of Zcchc12+ neurons are largely unknown. Here, we genetically labelled Zcchc12+ neurons in Zcchc12-CreERT2::Ai9 mice, and verified that Zcchc12 represented a new subpopulation of DRG neurons in both sexes. Zcchc12+ neurons centrally innervated the superficial laminae in spinal dorsal horn, and peripherally terminated as free nerve endings in the epidermis and cluster-shaped fibers in the dermis of footpads and nearby. Besides, Zcchc12+ neurons also formed circumferential endings surround the hair follicles in hairy skin. Functionally, in vivo...
    Feb 15, 2022 Dan Wu
  • Journal Article
    Reward value enhances sequence monitoring ramping dynamics as ending rewards approach in the rostrolateral prefrontal cortex | eNeuro
    Many fundamental human behaviors contain multiple sequences performed to reach a desired outcome, such as cooking. Reward is inherently associated with sequence completion and has been shown to generally enhance cognitive control. However, the impact of reward on cognitive sequence processing remains unexplored. To address this key question, we focused on the rostrolateral prefrontal cortex (RLPFC). This area is necessary and exhibits increasing (“ramping”) activation during sequences, a dynamic that may be related to reward processing in other brain regions. To separate these dynamics, we designed a task where reward was only provided after multiple four-item sequences (“iterations”), rather than each individual sequence. Using fMRI in humans, we investigated three possible interactions of reward and sequential control signals in RLPFC: (1) with the visibility of sequential cues, i.e. memory; (2) equally across individual sequence iterations; and (3) differently across individual sequence iterations (e.g....
    Feb 15, 2022 Theresa H. McKim
  • Journal Article
    The ZIP3 zinc transporter is localized to mossy fiber terminals and is required for kainate-induced degeneration of CA3 neurons | Journal of Neuroscience
    Tight regulation of neuronal Zn2+ is critical for physiological function. Multiple Zn2+ transporters are expressed in the brain, yet their spatial distribution and distinct roles are largely unknown. Here, we show developmental regulation of the expression of Zn2+ transporters ZIP1 and ZIP3 in mouse hippocampal neurons, corresponding to previously described increase in neuronal vesicular Zn2+ during the first postnatal month. Rates of Zn2+ uptake in cultured mouse hippocampal neurons, monitored using FluoZin-3 fluorescence, were higher in mature neurons, which express higher levels of ZIP1 and ZIP3. Zn2+ uptake was attenuated by approximately 50% following silencing of either ZIP1 or ZIP3. Expression of both ZIP1 and ZIP3 was ubiquitous on somas and most neuronal processes in the cultured neurons. In contrast, we observed distinct localization of the transporters in adult mouse hippocampal brain, with ZIP1 predominantly expressed in the CA3 stratum pyramidale, and ZIP3 primarily localized to the stratum lu...
    Feb 15, 2022 Milos Bogdanovic
  • Journal Article
    S-Nitrosylation of p62 Inhibits Autophagic Flux to Promote α-Synuclein Secretion and Spread in Parkinson’s Disease and Lewy Body Dementia | Journal of Neuroscience
    Dysregulation of autophagic pathways leads to accumulation of abnormal proteins and damaged organelles in many neurodegenerative disorders, including Parkinson’s disease (PD) and Lewy body dementia (LBD). Autophagy-related dysfunction may also trigger secretion and spread of misfolded proteins such as α-synuclein (α-syn), the major misfolded protein found in PD/LBD. However, the mechanism underlying these phenomena remains largely unknown. Here, we used cell-based models, including human induced pluripotent stem cell (hiPSC)-derived neurons, CRISPR/Cas9 technology, and male transgenic PD/LBD mice, plus vetting in human postmortem brains (both male and female). We provide mechanistic insight into this pathological pathway. We find that aberrant S-nitrosylation of the autophagic adaptor protein p62 causes inhibition of autophagic flux and intracellular build-up of misfolded proteins, with consequent secretion resulting in cell-to-cell spread. Thus, our data show that pathological protein S-nitrosylation of p...
    Feb 15, 2022 Chang-ki Oh
  • Journal Article
    Prior expectations in visual speed perception predict, encoding characteristics of neurons in area MT | Journal of Neuroscience
    Bayesian inference provides an elegant theoretical framework for understanding the characteristic biases and discrimination thresholds in visual speed perception. However, the framework is difficult to validate due to its flexibility and the fact that suitable constraints on the structure of the sensory uncertainty have been missing. Here, we demonstrate that a Bayesian observer model constrained by efficient coding not only well explains human visual speed perception but also provides an accurate quantitative account of the tuning characteristics of neurons known for representing visual speed. Specifically, we found that the population coding accuracy for visual speed in area MT (“neural prior”) is precisely predicted by the power-law, slow-speed prior extracted from fitting the Bayesian model to psychophysical data (“behavioral prior”) to the point that the two priors are indistinguishable in a cross-validation model comparison. Our results demonstrate a quantitative validation of the Bayesian observer m...
    Feb 15, 2022 Ling-Qi Zhang
  • Journal Article
    Evidence for Paracrine Protective Role of Exogenous αA-Crystallin in Retinal Ganglion Cells | eNeuro
    Expression and secretion of neurotrophic factors have long been known as a key mechanism of neuroglial interaction in the central nervous system. In addition, several other intrinsic neuroprotective pathways have been described, including those involving small heat shock proteins such as α-crystallins. While initially considered as a purely intracellular mechanism, both αA- and αB-crystallins have been recently reported to be secreted by glial cells. While an anti-apoptotic effect of such secreted αA-crystallin has been suggested, its regulation and protective potential remain unclear. We recently identified residue T148 and its phosphorylation as a critical regulator of αA-crystallin intrinsic neuroprotective function. In the current study, we explored how mutation of this residue affected αA-crystallin chaperone function, secretion, and paracrine protective function using primary glial and neuronal cells. After demonstrating the paracrine protective effect of αA-crystallins secreted by primary Müller gli...
    Feb 14, 2022 Madhu Nath
  • Journal Article
    Contributions of distinct auditory cortical inhibitory neuron types to the detection of sounds in background noise | eNeuro
    The ability to separate background noise from relevant acoustic signals is essential for appropriate sound-driven behavior in natural environments. Examples of this separation are apparent in the auditory system, where neural responses to behaviorally relevant stimuli become increasingly noise-invariant along the ascending auditory pathway. However, the mechanisms that underlie this reduction in responses to background noise are not well understood. To address this gap in knowledge, we first evaluated the effects of auditory cortical inactivation on mice of both sexes trained to perform a simple auditory signal-in-noise detection task, and found that outputs from the auditory cortex are important for the detection of auditory stimuli in noisy environments. Next, we evaluated the contributions of the two most common cortical inhibitory cell types, parvalbumin-expressing (PV+) and somatostatin-expressing (SOM+) interneurons, to the perception of masked auditory stimuli. We found that inactivation of either P...
    Feb 14, 2022 Anna A. Lakunina
  • Journal Article
    The neural representations of emotional experiences are more similar than those of neutral experiences | Journal of Neuroscience
    Stimuli that evoke the same feelings can nevertheless look different and have different semantic meanings. Although we know much about the neural representation of emotion, the neural underpinnings of emotional similarity are unknown. One possibility is that the same brain regions represent similarity between emotional and neutral stimuli, perhaps with different strengths. Alternatively, emotional similarity could be coded in separate regions, possibly those sensitive to emotional valence and arousal. In behaviour, the extent to which people consider similarity along emotional dimensions when they evaluate the overall similarity between stimuli has never been investigated. While the emotional features of stimuli may dominate explicit ratings of similarity, it is also possible that people neglect emotional dimensions as irrelevant to that judgement. We contrasted these hypotheses in (male and female) healthy controls using two measures of similarity and two picture databases of complex negative and neutral ...
    Feb 14, 2022 Martina Riberto
  • Journal Article
    APT1-mediated de-palmitoylation regulates hippocampal synaptic plasticity | Journal of Neuroscience
    Palmitoylation may be relevant to the processes of learning and memory, and even disorders such as post-traumatic stress disorder and aging-related cognitive decline. However, underlying mechanisms of palmitoylation in these processes remain unclear. Herein, we employed acyl-biotin exchange, co-immunoprecipitation and biotinylation assays, and behavioral and electrophysiological methods, to explore whether palmitoylation is required for hippocampal synaptic transmission and fear memory formation, and involved in functional modification of synaptic proteins such as PSD-95 and glutamate receptors, and detected if de-palmitoylation by specific enzymes has influence on glutamatergic synaptic plasticity. Our results showed that global palmitoylation level, palmitoylation of PSD-95 and glutamate receptors, post-synapse density-localization of PSD-95, surface expression of AMPARs, and synaptic strength of cultured hippocampal neurons, were all enhanced by TTX pretreatment, and these can be reversed by inhibition ...
    Feb 14, 2022 Zu-Cheng Shen
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