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4011 - 4020 of 52768 results
  • Journal Article
    Unbalanced regulation of Sec22b and Ykt6 blocks autophagosome axonal retrograde flux in neuronal ischemia–reperfusion injury | Journal of Neuroscience
    Cerebral ischemia–reperfusion injury in ischemic penumbra is accountable for poor outcome of ischemic stroke patients receiving recanalization therapy. Compelling evidence previously demonstrated a dual role of autophagy in stroke. This study aimed to understand the traits of autophagy in the ischemic penumbra and the potential mechanism that switches the dual role of autophagy. We found that autophagy induction by rapamycin and lithium carbonate performed before ischemia reduced neurological deficits and infarction, while autophagy induction after reperfusion had the opposite effect in the male murine middle cerebral artery occlusion/reperfusion model, both of which were eliminated in mice lacking autophagy (Atg7flox/flox; Nestin-Cre). Autophagic flux determination showed that reperfusion led to a blockage of axonal autophagosome retrograde transport in neurons, which then led to autophagic flux damage. Then, we found that ischemia–reperfusion induced changes in the protein levels of Sec22b and Ykt6 in ne...
    Jun 2, 2022 Haiying Li
  • Journal Article
    Selective prefrontal-amygdala circuit interactions underlie social and nonsocial valuation in rhesus macaques | Journal of Neuroscience
    Lesion studies in macaques suggest dissociable functions of the orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) and medial frontal cortex (MFC), with OFC being essential for goal-directed decision making and MFC supporting social cognition. Bilateral amygdala damage results in impairments in both of these domains. There are extensive reciprocal connections between these prefrontal areas and the amygdala; however, it is not known whether the dissociable roles of OFC and MFC depend on functional interactions with the amygdala. To test this possibility, we compared the performance of male rhesus macaques ( Macaca mulatta ) with crossed surgical disconnection of the amygdala and either MFC (MFC x AMY, n =4) or OFC (OFC x AMY, n =4) to a group of unoperated controls (CON, n =5). All monkeys were assessed for their performance on two tasks to measure: (1) food-retrieval latencies while viewing videos of social and nonsocial stimuli in a test of social interest, and (2) object choices based on current food value using reinforcer deva...
    Jun 2, 2022 Maia S. Pujara
  • Journal Article
    Why Wait? Neuroscience is for Everyone! | eNeuro
    Neuroscience is not just for neuroscientists. It is for everyone, but it is absent from our high schools. High schools have a huge investment in STEM, but do not include neuroscience, even though neuroscience is more interesting and relevant to a person’s daily life than most other sciences. However, neuroscience opportunities are increasing for teenagers outside the standard curriculum. Significance Statement The neuroscience community and the education community must provide more opportunities in neuroscience education for teenagers.
    Jun 2, 2022 Norbert Myslinski
  • Journal Article
    Evidence for independent processing of shape by vision and touch | eNeuro
    Although visual object recognition is well-studied and relatively well understood, much less is known about how shapes are recognized by touch and how such haptic stimuli might be compared to visual shapes. One might expect that the processes of visual and haptic object recognition engage similar brain structures given the advantages of avoiding redundant brain circuitry and indeed there is some evidence that this is the case. A potentially fruitful approach to understanding the differences in how shapes might be neurally represented is to find an algorithmic method of comparing shapes which agrees with human behavior and determine whether that method differs between different modality conditions. If not, it would provide further evidence for a shared representation of shape. We recruited human participants to perform a one-back same-different visual and haptic shape comparison task both within (i.e., comparing two visual shapes or two haptic shapes) and across (i.e., comparing visual with haptic shapes) m...
    Jun 2, 2022 Ryan Miller
  • Journal Article
    Thalamocortical projections are significantly impaired in the R6/2 mouse model of Huntington’s disease | eNeuro
    As Huntington’s disease (HD) progresses, there is a significant loss of neurons in the striatum in addition to a distinct thinning of the cerebral cortex. Despite an early presence of sensorimotor deficits in patients with HD, electrophysiological studies designed to assess the integrity of thalamocortical circuits are sparse. Using the R6/2 mouse model of HD, we provide evidence of reduced connectivity between thalamic cells and their targeted cortical regions. Whole-cell patch clamp recordings from ventral anterolateral nucleus (VAL, motor) and ventral posteromedial nucleus (VPM, somatosensory) thalamic neurons in ex vivo brain slices of R6/2 and WT mice revealed that cells in both thalamic nuclei of R6/2 mice exhibited significant differences in passive and active cell membrane properties (smaller cell membrane capacitances, faster decay time constants and increased input resistances) compared to WT cells. Although only cells in the VPM of symptomatic R6/2 mice had more depolarized resting membrane pote...
    Jun 2, 2022 S.M. Holley
  • Journal Article
    NMDA Receptors in the Lateral Preoptic Hypothalamus Are Essential for Sustaining NREM and REM Sleep | Journal of Neuroscience
    The lateral preoptic (LPO) hypothalamus is a center for NREM and REM sleep induction and NREM sleep homeostasis. Although LPO is needed for NREM sleep, we found that calcium signals were, surprisingly, highest in REM sleep. Furthermore, and equally surprising, NMDA receptors in LPO were the main drivers of excitation. Deleting the NMDA receptor GluN1 subunit from LPO abolished calcium signals in all cells and produced insomnia. Mice of both sexes had highly fragmented NREM sleep-wake patterns and could not generate conventionally classified REM sleep. The sleep phenotype produced by deleting NMDA receptors depended on where in the hypothalamus the receptors were deleted. Deleting receptors from the anterior hypothalamic area (AHA) did not influence sleep-wake states. The sleep fragmentation originated from NMDA receptors on GABA neurons in LPO. Sleep fragmentation could be transiently overcome with sleeping medication (zolpidem) or sedatives (dexmedetomidine; Dex). By contrast, fragmentation persisted unde...
    Jun 1, 2022 Giulia Miracca
  • Journal Article
    Dynein Is Required for Rab7-Dependent Endosome Maturation, Retrograde Dendritic Transport, and Degradation | Journal of Neuroscience
    In all cell types, endocytosed cargo is transported along a set of endosomal compartments, which are linked maturationally from early endosomes (EEs) via late endosomes (LEs) to lysosomes. Lysosomes are critical for degradation of proteins that enter through endocytic as well as autophagic pathways. Rab7 is the master regulator of early-to-late endosome maturation, motility, and fusion with lysosomes. We previously showed that most degradative lysosomes are localized in the soma and in the first 25 µm of the dendrite and that bulk degradation of dendritic membrane proteins occurs in/near the soma. Dendritic late endosomes therefore move retrogradely in a Rab7-dependent manner for fusion with somatic lysosomes. We now used cultured E18 rat hippocampal neurons of both sexes to determine which microtubule motor is responsible for degradative flux of late endosomes. Based on multiple approaches (inhibiting dynein/dynactin itself or inhibiting dynein recruitment to endosomes by expressing the C-terminus of the ...
    Jun 1, 2022 Chan Choo Yap
  • Journal Article
    Table of Contents — June 01, 2022, 42 (22) | Journal of Neuroscience
    Jun 1, 2022
  • Journal Article
    Human Spindle Variability | Journal of Neuroscience
    In humans, sleep spindles are 10- to 16-Hz oscillations lasting approximately 0.5–2 s. Spindles, along with cortical slow oscillations, may facilitate memory consolidation by enabling synaptic plasticity. Early recordings of spindles at the scalp found anterior channels had overall slower frequency than central-posterior channels. This robust, topographical finding led to dichotomizing spindles as “slow” versus “fast,” modeled as two distinct spindle generators in frontal versus posterior cortex. Using a large dataset of intracranial stereoelectroencephalographic (sEEG) recordings from 20 patients (13 female, 7 male) and 365 bipolar recordings, we show that the difference in spindle frequency between frontal and parietal channels is comparable to the variability in spindle frequency within the course of individual spindles, across different spindles recorded by a given site, and across sites within a given region. Thus, fast and slow spindles only capture average differences that obscure a much larger unde...
    Jun 1, 2022 Christopher Gonzalez
  • Journal Article
    This Week in The Journal | Journal of Neuroscience
    Chan Choo Yap, Laura Digilio, Lloyd P. McMahon, Tuanlao Wang, Bettina Winckler (see pages [4415–4434][1]) Cells continually make new proteins and degrade old ones that have become damaged. For membrane proteins, the degradation process begins with endocytosis and delivery to early endosomes,
    Jun 1, 2022
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