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3341 - 3350 of 52763 results
  • Journal Article
    Uncoupling Protein-1 Modulates Anxiety-Like Behavior in a Temperature-Dependent Manner | Journal of Neuroscience
    A strong bidirectional link between metabolic and psychiatric disorders exists; yet, the molecular basis underlying this interaction remains unresolved. Here we explored the role of the brown adipose tissue (BAT) as modulatory interface, focusing on the involvement of uncoupling protein 1 (UCP-1), a key metabolic regulator highly expressed in BAT, in the control of emotional behavior. Male and female constitutive UCP-1 knock-out (KO) mice were used to investigate the consequences of UCP-1 deficiency on anxiety-related and depression-related behaviors under mild thermogenic (23°C) and thermoneutral (29°C) conditions. UCP-1 KO mice displayed a selective enhancement of anxiety-related behavior exclusively under thermogenic conditions, but not at thermoneutrality. Neural and endocrine stress mediators were not affected in UCP-1 KO mice, which showed an activation of the integrated stress response alongside enhanced fibroblast-growth factor-21 (FGF-21) levels. However, viral-mediated overexpression of FGF-21 di...
    Oct 5, 2022 Spyridon Sideromenos
  • Journal Article
    Neural Support for Contributions of Utility and Narrative Processing of Evidence in Juror Decision Making | Journal of Neuroscience
    Efforts to explain complex human decisions have focused on competing theories emphasizing utility and narrative mechanisms. These are difficult to distinguish using behavior alone. Both narrative and utility theories have been proposed to explain juror decisions, which are among the most consequential complex decisions made in a modern society. Here, we asked jury-eligible male and female subjects to rate the strength of a series of criminal cases while recording the resulting patterns of brain activation. We compared patterns of brain activation associated with evidence accumulation to patterns of brain activation derived from a large neuroimaging database to look for signatures of the cognitive processes associated with different models of juror decision-making. Evidence accumulation correlated with multiple narrative processes, including reading and recall. Of the cognitive processes traditionally viewed as components of utility, activation patterns associated with uncertainty, but not value, were more ...
    Oct 5, 2022 Jaime J. Castrellon
  • Journal Article
    Unusually Slow Spike Frequency Adaptation in Deep Cerebellar Nuclei Neurons Preserves Linear Transformations on the Subsecond Timescale | Journal of Neuroscience
    Purkinje cells (PCs) are spontaneously active neurons of the cerebellar cortex that inhibit glutamatergic projection neurons within the deep cerebellar nuclei (DCN) that provide the primary cerebellar output. Brief reductions of PC firing rapidly increase DCN neuron firing. However, prolonged reductions of PC inhibition, as seen in some disease states, certain types of transgenic mice, during optogenetic suppression of PC firing, and in acute slices of the cerebellum, do not lead to large, sustained increases in DCN firing. Here we test whether DCN neurons undergo spike frequency adaptation that could account for these properties. We perform current-clamp recordings at near physiological temperature in acute brain slices from mice of both sexes to examine how DCN neurons respond to prolonged depolarizations. DCN neuron adaptation is exceptionally slow and bidirectional. A depolarizing current step evokes large initial increases in firing that decay to ∼20% of the initial increase within ∼10 s. We find that...
    Oct 5, 2022 Mehak M. Khan
  • Journal Article
    Active licking shapes cortical taste coding | Journal of Neuroscience
    Neurons in the gustatory cortex (GC) represent taste through time-varying changes in their spiking activity. The predominant view is that the neural firing rate represents the sole unit of taste information. It is currently not known whether the phase of spikes relative to lick timing is used by GC neurons for taste encoding. To address this question, we recorded spiking activity from >500 single GC neurons in male and female mice permitted to freely lick to receive four liquid gustatory stimuli and water. We developed a set of data analysis tools to determine the ability of GC neurons to discriminate gustatory information and then to quantify the degree to which this information exists in the spike rate versus the spike timing or phase relative to licks. These tools include machine learning algorithms for classification of spike trains and methods from geometric shape and functional data analysis. Our results show that while GC neurons primarily encode taste information using a rate code, the timing of sp...
    Oct 4, 2022 Camden Neese
  • Journal Article
    Stable working memory and perceptual representations in macaque lateral prefrontal cortex during naturalistic vision | Journal of Neuroscience
    Primates use perceptual and mnemonic visuospatial representations to perform everyday functions. Neurons in the lateral prefrontal cortex (LPFC) have been shown to encode both of these representations during tasks where eye movements are strictly controlled and visual stimuli are reduced in complexity. This raises the question of whether perceptual and mnemonic representations encoded by LPFC neurons remain robust during naturalistic vision — in the presence of a rich visual scenery and during eye movements. Here we investigate this issue by training macaque monkeys to perform working memory and perception tasks in a visually complex virtual environment that requires navigation using a joystick and allows for free visual exploration of the scene. We recorded the activity of 3950 neurons in the LPFC (areas 8a and 9/46) of two male rhesus macaques using multi-electrode arrays, and measured eye movements using video tracking. We found that navigation trajectories to target locations and eye movement behavior ...
    Oct 4, 2022 Megan Roussy
  • Journal Article
    Differential Subcellular Distribution and Release Dynamics of Co-transmitted Cholinergic and GABAergic Synaptic Inputs Modifies Dopaminergic Neuronal Excitability | Journal of Neuroscience
    We identified three types of monosynaptic cholinergic inputs spatially arranged onto medial substantia nigra dopaminergic neurons in male and female mice: co-transmitted acetylcholine (ACh)/GABA, GABA only, and ACh only. There was a predominant GABA-only conductance along lateral dendrites and soma-centered ACh/GABA co-transmission. In response to repeated stimulation the GABA conductance found on lateral dendrites decremented less than the proximally located GABA conductance, and was more effective at inhibiting action potentials. While soma-localized ACh/GABA co-transmission showed depression of the GABA component with repeated stimulation, ACh-mediated nicotinic responses were largely maintained. We investigated whether this differential change in inhibitory/excitatory inputs leads to altered neuronal excitability. We found that a depolarizing current or glutamate preceded by co-transmitted ACh/GABA was more effective in eliciting an action potential compared to current, glutamate, or ACh/GABA alone. Th...
    Oct 4, 2022 Keyrian Louis Le Gratiet
  • Journal Article
    Low-Cost Platform for Multianimal Chronic Local Field Potential Video Monitoring with Graphical User Interface (GUI) for Seizure Detection and Behavioral Scoring | eNeuro
    Experiments employing chronic monitoring of neurophysiological signals and video are commonly used in studies of epilepsy to characterize behavioral correlates of seizures. Our objective was to design a low-cost platform that enables chronic monitoring of several animals simultaneously, synchronizes bilateral local field potential (LFP) and video streams in real time, and parses recorded data into manageable file sizes. We present a hardware solution leveraging Intan and Open Ephys acquisition systems and a software solution implemented in Bonsai. The platform was tested in 48-h continuous recordings simultaneously from multiple mice (male and female) with chronic epilepsy. To enable seizure detection and scoring, we developed a graphical user interface (GUI) that reads the data produced by our workflow and allows a user with no coding expertise to analyze events. Our Bonsai workflow was designed to maximize flexibility for a wide variety of experimental applications, and our use of the Open Ephys acquisit...
    Oct 3, 2022 Gergely Tarcsay
  • Journal Article
    Early life pain experience changes adult functional pain connectivity in the rat somatosensory and the medial prefrontal cortex | Journal of Neuroscience
    Early life pain experience (ELP) alters adult pain behaviour and increases injury induced pain hypersensitivity, but the effect of ELP upon adult functional brain connectivity is not known. We have performed continuous local field potential (LFP) recording in the awake adult male rats to test the effect of ELP upon functional cortical connectivity related to pain behaviour. Somatosensory cortex (S1) and medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) LFPs evoked by mechanical hindpaw stimulation were recorded simultaneously with pain reflex behaviour for 10 days after adult incision injury. We show that, post adult injury, sensory evoked S1 LFP delta and gamma energy and S1 LFP delta/gamma frequency coupling are significantly increased in ELP rats compared to controls. Adult injury also induces increases in S1-mPFC functional connectivity but this is significantly prolonged in ELP rats, lasting 4 days compared to 1 day in controls. Importantly, the increases in LFP energy and connectivity in ELP rats were directly correla...
    Oct 3, 2022 Pishan Chang
  • Journal Article
    The age of reason: Functional brain network development during childhood | Journal of Neuroscience
    Human childhood is characterized by dramatic changes in the mind and brain. However, little is known about the large-scale intrinsic cortical network changes that occur during childhood due to methodological challenges in scanning young children. Here, we overcome this barrier by using sophisticated acquisition and analysis tools to investigate functional network development in children between the ages of 4 and 10 years ( n = 92; 50 female, 42 male). At multiple spatial scales, age is positively associated with brain network segregation. At the system level, age was associated with segregation of systems involved in attention from those involved in abstract cognition, and with integration among attentional and perceptual systems. Associations between age and functional connectivity are most pronounced in visual and medial prefrontal cortex, the two ends of a gradient from perceptual, externally oriented cortex to abstract, internally oriented cortex. These findings suggest that both ends of the sensory-as...
    Oct 3, 2022 Ursula A. Tooley
  • Journal Article
    Emx1-Cre is expressed in peripheral autonomic ganglia that regulate central cardiorespiratory functions | eNeuro
    The Emx1-IRES-Cre transgenic mouse is commonly used to direct genetic recombination in forebrain excitatory neurons. However, the original study reported that Emx1-Cre is also expressed embryonically in peripheral autonomic ganglia, which could potentially affect the interpretation of targeted circuitry contributing to systemic phenotypes. Here, we report that Emx1-Cre is expressed in the afferent vagus nerve system involved in autonomic cardiorespiratory regulatory pathways. Our imaging studies revealed expression of Emx1-Cre driven tdtomato fluorescence in the afferent vagus nerve innervating the dorsal medulla of brainstem, cell bodies in the nodose ganglion, and their potential target structures at the carotid bifurcation such as the carotid sinus and the superior cervical ganglion. Photostimulation of the afferent terminals in the nucleus tractus solitarius (NTS) in vitro using Emx1-Cre driven ChR2 reliably evoked excitatory postsynaptic currents in the postsynaptic neurons with electrophysiological c...
    Oct 3, 2022 Yao Ning
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