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9301 - 9310 of 52804 results
  • Journal Article
    This Week in The Journal | Journal of Neuroscience
    Despina Antypa, Aurore A. Perrault, Patrik Vuilleumier, Sophie Schwartz, and Ulrike Rimmele (see pages [7259–7266][1]) Newly encoded memories are strengthened and stabilized for long-term retention through a process called consolidation. Consolidated memories are not immutable, however. Each
    Aug 25, 2021
  • Journal Article
    Corticotropin-Releasing Hormone from the Pontine Micturition Center Plays an Inhibitory Role in Micturition | Journal of Neuroscience
    Lower urinary tract or voiding disorders are prevalent across all ages and affect >40% of adults over 40 years old, leading to decreased quality of life and high health care costs. The pontine micturition center (PMC; i.e., Barrington's nucleus) contains a large population of neurons that localize the stress-related neuropeptide, corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH) and project to neurons in the spinal cord to regulate micturition. How the PMC and CRH-expressing neurons in the PMC control volitional micturition is of critical importance for human voiding disorders. To investigate the specific role of CRH in the PMC, neurons in the PMC-expressing CRH were optogenetically activated during in vivo cystometry in unanesthetized mice of either sex. Optogenetic activation of CRH-PMC neurons led to increased intermicturition interval and voided volume, similar to the altered voiding phenotype produced by social stress. Female mice showed a significantly more pronounced phenotype change compared with male mice. Th...
    Aug 25, 2021 Jason P. Van Batavia
  • Journal Article
    Neural Representations in the Prefrontal Cortex Are Task Dependent for Scene Attributes But Not for Scene Categories | Journal of Neuroscience
    Natural scenes deliver rich sensory information about the world. Decades of research has shown that the scene-selective network in the visual cortex represents various aspects of scenes. However, less is known about how such complex scene information is processed beyond the visual cortex, such as in the prefrontal cortex. It is also unknown how task context impacts the process of scene perception, modulating which scene content is represented in the brain. In this study, we investigate these questions using scene images from four natural scene categories, which also depict two types of scene attributes, temperature (warm or cold), and sound level (noisy or quiet). A group of healthy human subjects from both sexes participated in the present study using fMRI. In the study, participants viewed scene images under two different task conditions: temperature judgment and sound-level judgment. We analyzed how these scene attributes and categories are represented across the brain under these task conditions. Our f...
    Aug 25, 2021 Yaelan Jung
  • Journal Article
    Dopamine Axons in Dorsal Striatum Encode Contralateral Visual Stimuli and Choices | Journal of Neuroscience
    The striatum plays critical roles in visually-guided decision-making and receives dense axonal projections from midbrain dopamine neurons. However, the roles of striatal dopamine in visual decision-making are poorly understood. We trained male and female mice to perform a visual decision task with asymmetric reward payoff, and we recorded the activity of dopamine axons innervating striatum. Dopamine axons in the dorsomedial striatum (DMS) responded to contralateral visual stimuli and contralateral rewarded actions. Neural responses to contralateral stimuli could not be explained by orienting behavior such as eye movements. Moreover, these contralateral stimulus responses persisted in sessions where the animals were instructed to not move to obtain reward, further indicating that these signals are stimulus-related. Lastly, we show that DMS dopamine signals were qualitatively different from dopamine signals in the ventral striatum (VS), which responded to both ipsilateral and contralateral stimuli, conformin...
    Aug 25, 2021 Morgane M. Moss
  • Journal Article
    Divergence in Population Coding for Space between Dorsal and Ventral CA1 | eNeuro
    Molecular, anatomic, and behavioral studies show that the hippocampus is structurally and functionally heterogeneous, with dorsal hippocampus implicated in mnemonic processes and spatial navigation and ventral hippocampus involved in affective processes. By performing electrophysiological recordings of large neuronal populations in dorsal and ventral CA1 in head-fixed mice navigating a virtual environment, we found that this diversity resulted in different strategies for population coding of space. Populations of neurons in dorsal CA1 showed more complex patterns of activity, which resulted in a higher dimensionality of neural representations that translated to more information being encoded, as compared ensembles in vCA1. Furthermore, a pairwise maximum entropy model was better at predicting the structure of these global patterns of activity in ventral CA1 as compared to dorsal CA1. Taken together, the different coding strategies we uncovered likely emerge from anatomical and physiological differences alo...
    Aug 25, 2021 Udaysankar Chockanathan
  • Journal Article
    Asymmetric frequency-specific feedforward and feedback information flow between hippocampus and prefrontal cortex during verbal memory encoding and recall | Journal of Neuroscience
    Hippocampus and prefrontal cortex (PFC) circuits are thought to play a prominent role in human episodic memory, but the precise nature, and electrophysiological basis, of directed information flow between these regions and their role in verbal memory formation has remained elusive. Here we investigate nonlinear causal interactions between hippocampus and lateral PFC using intracranial EEG recordings (from both sexes) during verbal memory encoding and recall tasks. Direction-specific information theoretic analysis revealed higher causal information flow from the hippocampus to PFC than in the reverse direction. Crucially, this pattern was observed during both memory encoding and recall, and the strength of causal interactions was significantly greater during memory task performance than resting baseline. Further analyses revealed frequency-specificity of interactions with greater causal information flow from hippocampus to the PFC in the delta-theta frequency band (0.5-8 Hz); in contrast, PFC to hippocampus...
    Aug 25, 2021 Anup Das
  • Journal Article
    Midbrain-Level Neural Correlates of Behavioral Tone-in-Noise Detection: Dependence on Energy and Envelope Cues | Journal of Neuroscience
    Hearing in noise is a problem often assumed to depend on encoding of energy level by channels tuned to target frequencies, but few studies have tested this hypothesis. The present study examined neural correlates of behavioral tone-in-noise (TIN) detection in budgerigars ( Melopsittacus undulatus , either sex), a parakeet species with human-like behavioral sensitivity to many simple and complex sounds. Behavioral sensitivity to tones in band-limited noise was assessed using operant-conditioning procedures. Neural recordings were made in awake animals from midbrain-level neurons in the inferior colliculus, the first processing stage of the ascending auditory pathway with pronounced rate-based encoding of stimulus amplitude modulation. Budgerigar TIN detection thresholds were similar to human thresholds across the full range of frequencies (0.5–4 kHz) and noise levels (45–85 dB SPL) tested. Also as in humans, thresholds were minimally affected by a challenging roving-level condition with random variation in ...
    Aug 25, 2021 Yingxuan Wang
  • Journal Article
    Regulation of Synapse Weakening through Interactions of the Microtubule Associated Protein Tau with PACSIN1 | Journal of Neuroscience
    Hyperphosphorylation of the microtubule associated protein tau (tau) is inextricably linked to several neurodegenerative diseases, collectively termed tauopathies, in which synapse dysfunction occurs through largely unidentified mechanisms. Our research aimed to uncover molecular mechanisms by which phosphorylation of tau (pTau) affects synapse function. Using combined molecular and electrophysiological analysis with in vitro genetic knock-in of phosphorylation mutant human tau in male rat CA1 hippocampal neurons, we show an interplay between tau and protein kinase C and casein kinase substrate in neurons protein 1 (PACSIN1) that regulates synapse function. pTau at serine residues 396/404 decreases tau:PACSIN1 binding and evokes PACSIN1-dependent functional and structural synapse weakening. Knock-down of tau or PACSIN1 increases AMPA receptor (AMPAR)-mediated current at extrasynaptic regions, supporting a role for these proteins in affecting AMPAR trafficking. The pTau-induced PACSIN1 dissociation may repr...
    Aug 25, 2021 Philip Regan
  • Journal Article
    Table of Contents — August 25, 2021, 41 (34) | Journal of Neuroscience
    Aug 25, 2021
  • Journal Article
    Flexible versus Fixed Spatial Self-Ordered Response Sequencing: Effects of Inactivation and Neurochemical Modulation of Ventrolateral Prefrontal Cortex | Journal of Neuroscience
    Previously, studies using human neuroimaging and excitotoxic lesions in non-human primate have demonstrated an important role of ventrolateral prefrontal cortex (vlPFC) in higher order cognitive functions such as cognitive flexibility and the planning of behavioral sequences. In the present experiments, we tested effects on performance of temporary inactivation (using GABA receptor agonists) and dopamine (DA) D2 and 5-HT2A-receptor (R) blockade of vlPFC via local intracerebral infusions in the marmoset. We trained common marmosets to perform spatial self-ordered sequencing tasks in which one cohort of animals performed two and three response sequences on a continuously varying spatial array of response options on a touch-sensitive screen. Inactivation of vlPFC produced a marked disruption of accuracy of sequencing which also exhibited significant error perseveration. There were somewhat contrasting effects of D2 and 5-HT2A-R blockade, with the former producing error perseveration on incorrect trials, thoug...
    Aug 25, 2021 S. F. A. Axelsson
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