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3501 - 3510 of 52763 results
  • Journal Article
    Endogenous Circadian Clock Machinery in Cortical NG2-Glia Regulates Cellular Proliferation | eNeuro
    The molecular circadian clock can be found throughout the body and is essential for the synchronizing cellular physiology with the 24 h day. However, the role of the clock in regulating the regenerative potential of the brain has not been explored. We report here that murine NG2-glia, the largest population of proliferative cells in the mature central nervous system, rhythmically express circadian clock genes in a 24 h period, including the critical clock component Bmal1 RNA and BMAL1 protein. Interestingly, daily NG2-glia proliferation preferentially occurs during the time of day in which Bmal1 expression is high, while conditional knockout of Bmal1 decreases both cortical NG2-glia density and cellular proliferation. Furthermore, in a neurotrauma model, we show that pathology-induced NG2-glia proliferation is also dependent on Bmal1 expression. Because circadian rhythm disturbances are common in neurologic disorders across the life span, including in traumatic brain injury, these findings bear significant...
    Sep 1, 2022 Terry Dean
  • Journal Article
    Investigation of MicroRNA-134 as a Target against Seizures and SUDEP in a Mouse Model of Dravet Syndrome | eNeuro
    Dravet syndrome (DS) is a catastrophic form of pediatric epilepsy mainly caused by noninherited mutations in the SCN1A gene. DS patients suffer severe and life-threatening focal and generalized seizures which are often refractory to available anti-seizure medication. Antisense oligonucleotides (ASOs) based approaches may offer treatment opportunities in DS. MicroRNAs are short noncoding RNAs that play a key role in brain structure and function by post-transcriptionally regulating gene expression, including ion channels. Inhibiting miRNA-134 (miR-134) using an antimiR ASO (Ant-134) has been shown to reduce evoked seizures in juvenile and adult mice and reduce epilepsy development in models of focal epilepsy. The present study investigated the levels of miR-134 and whether Ant-134 could protect against hyperthermia-induced seizures, spontaneous seizures and mortality (SUDEP) in F1. Scn1a( +/− )tm1kea mice. At P17, animals were intracerebroventricular injected with 0.1–1 nmol of Ant-134 and subject to a hyper...
    Sep 1, 2022 Rogério R. Gerbatin
  • Journal Article
    Spontaneous Cell Cluster Formation in Human iPSC-Derived Neuronal Spheroid Networks Influences Network Activity | eNeuro
    Three-dimensional neuronal culture systems such as spheroids, organoids, and assembloids constitute a branch of neuronal tissue engineering that has improved our ability to model the human brain in the laboratory. However, the more elaborate the brain model, the more difficult it becomes to study functional properties such as electrical activity at the neuronal level, similar to the challenges of studying neurophysiology in vivo . We describe a simple approach to generate self-assembled three-dimensional neuronal spheroid networks with defined human cell composition on microelectrode arrays. Such spheroid networks develop a highly three-dimensional morphology with cell clusters up to 60 μm in thickness and are interconnected by pronounced bundles of neuronal fibers and glial processes. We could reliably record from up to hundreds of neurons simultaneously per culture for ≤90 d. By quantifying the formation of these three-dimensional structures over time, while regularly monitoring electrical activity, we w...
    Sep 1, 2022 Carl-Johan Hörberg
  • Journal Article
    Development of an Open Face Home Cage Running Wheel for Testing Activity-Based Anorexia and Other Applications | eNeuro
    Running wheels for mice residing in the home cage are useful for the continuous measurement of locomotor activity for studies testing exercise interventions or exercise-induced effects on brain and metabolism. Here, we have developed an open source, printable, open-faced running wheel that is automated to collect locomotor information such as distance traveled, wheel direction, and velocity that can be binned into epochs over 24 h or multiple days. This system allows for remote data collection to avoid human interference in mouse behavioral experiments. We tested this system in an activity-based anorexia procedure. Using these wheels, we replicate previous findings that food restriction augments wheel-running activity.
    Sep 1, 2022 Nathan Godfrey
  • Journal Article
    How Do Spike Collisions Affect Spike Sorting Performance? | eNeuro
    Recently, a new generation of devices have been developed to record neural activity simultaneously from hundreds of electrodes with a very high spatial density, both for in vitro and in vivo applications. While these advances enable to record from many more cells, they also challenge the already complicated process of spike sorting (i.e., extracting isolated single-neuron activity from extracellular signals). In this work, we used synthetic ground-truth recordings with controlled levels of correlations among neurons to quantitatively benchmark the performance of state-of-the-art spike sorters focusing specifically on spike collisions. Our results show that while modern template-matching-based algorithms are more accurate than density-based approaches, all methods, to some extent, failed to detect synchronous spike events of neurons with similar extracellular signals. Interestingly, the performance of the sorters is not largely affected by the spiking activity in the recordings, with respect to average firi...
    Sep 1, 2022 Samuel Garcia
  • Journal Article
    COVID-19 Deterred Career Path of Our Undergraduate Neuroscience Students: Educators’ Perspective | eNeuro
    Almost every industry had a deer-in-the-headlights moment when the COVID-19 pandemic forced the world to a halt. The education field was faced with an unprecedented situation. How do we continue our instruction with this bizarre reality that we must accept as the new normal? Educators from kindergarten to university levels had to urgently adapt their ways to keep the mission of education alive. While some teaching methods remained effective despite remote learning and “Zoom school,” some were simply not possible to implement given social distancing and occupancy restriction guidelines at the time. As an undergraduate neuroscience educator, one daunting dilemma was how to continue laboratory research training of our young neuroscientists. Universities across the country had to send students home and restrict access to campuses. Many of our undergraduate neuroscience students are on premedical tracks, and these restrictions added much more complexity to their goals of meeting medical school requirements of s...
    Sep 1, 2022 Ami P. Raval
  • Journal Article
    Erratum: Dulac et al., “A Novel Neuron-Specific Regulator of the V-ATPase in Drosophila” | eNeuro
    In the article “A Novel Neuron-Specific Regulator of the V-ATPase in Drosophila ,” by Amina Dulac, Abdul-Raouf Issa, Jun Sun, Giorgio Matassi, Célia Jonas, Baya Chérif-Zahar, Daniel Cattaert, and Serge …
    Sep 1, 2022 Amina Dulac
  • Journal Article
    Recurring Cholinergic Inputs Induce Local Hippocampal Plasticity through Feedforward Disinhibition | eNeuro
    The CA1 pyramidal neurons are embedded in an intricate local circuitry that contains a variety of interneurons. The roles these interneurons play in the regulation of the excitatory synaptic plasticity remains largely understudied. Recent experiments showed that recurring cholinergic activation of α7 nACh receptors expressed in oriens-lacunosum-moleculare (OLMα2) interneurons can directly induce LTP in Schaffer collateral (SC)–CA1 synapses. Here, we pair in vitro studies with biophysically based modeling to uncover the underlying mechanisms. According to our model, α7 nAChR activation increases OLM GABAergic activity. This results in the inhibition of the fast-spiking interneurons that provide feedforward inhibition onto CA1 pyramidal neurons. This disinhibition, paired with tightly timed SC stimulation, can induce potentiation at the excitatory synapses of CA1 pyramidal neurons. Our work details the role of cholinergic modulation in disinhibition-induced hippocampal plasticity. It relates the timing of ch...
    Sep 1, 2022 Inês Guerreiro
  • Journal Article
    Fast Event-Related Mapping of Population Fingertip Tuning Properties in Human Sensorimotor Cortex at 7T | eNeuro
    fMRI studies that investigate somatotopic tactile representations in the human cortex typically use either block or phase-encoded stimulation designs. Event-related (ER) designs allow for more flexible and unpredictable stimulation sequences than the other methods, but they are less efficient. Here, we compared an efficiency-optimized fast ER design (2.8-s average intertrial interval; ITI) to a conventional slow ER design (8-s average ITI) for mapping voxelwise fingertip tactile tuning properties in the sensorimotor cortex of six participants at 7 Tesla. The fast ER design yielded more reliable responses compared with the slow ER design, but with otherwise similar tuning properties. Concatenating the fast and slow ER data, we demonstrate in each individual brain the existence of two separate somatotopically-organized tactile representations of the fingertips, one in the primary somatosensory cortex (S1) on the postcentral gyrus, and the other shared across the motor and premotor cortices on the precentral ...
    Sep 1, 2022 Sarah Khalife
  • Journal Article
    Remind Me, My Memory Is All Shook Up | eNeuro
    Our brains synthesize vast and varied sensory inputs to represent an event or place that can later be recalled freely. The term “engram” refers to a group of neurons activated in association with a memory or event, suggesting that if one were to activate a subset of cells in the ensemble, one would trigger the recall of a memory. The medial temporal lobes, including the hippocampus, are often studied as the primary region of spatial engram formation (Josselyn and Tonegawa, 2020). However, newly formed spatial memory representations are incredibly transient. Following encoding, consolidation from the hippocampus to related cortical structures is critical for stable memory retention (Wirt and Hyman, 2017). What happens when this process of generating stable long-term memories is disrupted? Neuronal hyperactivity, seen in seizures, potentially corrupts existing engrams and is often associated with retrograde amnesia in humans. Retrograde amnesia, or forgetting recently formed memories, could be because of dis...
    Sep 1, 2022 Laura Dovek
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