journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38621997/temporal-sensitivity-for-achromatic-and-chromatic-flicker-across-the-visual-cortex
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Carlyn Patterson Gentile, Manuel Spitschan, Huseyin O Taskin, Andrew S Bock, Geoffrey K Aguirre
The retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) receive different combinations of L, M, and S cone inputs and give rise to one achromatic and two chromatic post-receptoral channels. Beyond the retina, RGC outputs are subject to filtering and normalization along the geniculo-striate pathway, ultimately producing the properties of human vision. The goal of the current study was to determine temporal sensitivity across the three post-receptoral channels in subcortical and cortical regions involved in vision. We measured functional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) responses at 7 Tesla from three participants (two males, one female) viewing a high-contrast, flickering, spatially-uniform wide field (∼140°)...
April 15, 2024: Journal of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38621996/neural-reward-representations-enable-utilitarian-welfare-maximization
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alexander Soutschek, Christopher J Burke, Pyungwon Kang, Nuri Wieland, Nick Netzer, Philippe N Tobler
From deciding which meal to prepare for our guests to trading-off the pro-environmental effects of climate protection measures against their economic costs, we often must consider the consequences of our actions for the well-being of others (welfare). Vexingly, the tastes and views of others can vary widely. To maximize welfare according to the utilitarian philosophical tradition, decision makers facing conflicting preferences of others should choose the option that maximizes the sum of subjective value (utility) of the entire group...
April 15, 2024: Journal of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38604780/mapping-early-brain-body-interactions-associations-of-fetal-heart-rate-variation-with-newborn-brainstem-hypothalamic-and-dorsal-anterior-cingulate-cortex-functional-connectivity
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Angeliki Pollatou, Cristin M Holland, Thirsten J Stockton, Bradley S Peterson, Dustin Scheinost, Catherine Monk, Marisa N Spann
The autonomic nervous system (ANS) regulates the body's physiology, including cardiovascular function. As the ANS develops during the second to third trimester, fetal heart rate variability (HRV) increases while fetal heart rate (HR) decreases. In this way, fetal HR and HRV provide an index of fetal autonomic nervous system development and future neurobehavioral regulation. Fetal HR and HRV have been associated with child language ability and psychomotor development behavior in toddlerhood. However, their associations with post-birth autonomic brain systems, such as the brainstem, hypothalamus, and dorsal anterior cingulate cortex (dACC), have yet to be investigated even though brain pathways involved in autonomic regulation are well established in older individuals...
April 11, 2024: Journal of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38604779/memory-reactivation-during-sleep-does-not-act-holistically-on-object-memory
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
E M Siefert, S Uppuluri, J Mu, M C Tandoc, J W Antony, A C Schapiro
Memory reactivation during sleep is thought to facilitate memory consolidation. Most sleep reactivation research has examined how reactivation of specific facts, objects, and associations benefits their overall retention. However, our memories are not unitary, and not all features of a memory persist in tandem over time. Instead, our memories are transformed, with some features strengthened and others weakened. Does sleep reactivation drive memory transformation? We leveraged the Targeted Memory Reactivation technique in an object category learning paradigm to examine this question...
April 11, 2024: Journal of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38604778/optogenetic-determination-of-dynamic-and-cell-type-specific-inhibitory-reversal-potentials
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Richard J Burman, Tara Diviney, Alexandru Călin, Gemma Gothard, Jean-Sébastien M Jouhanneau, James F A Poulet, Arjune Sen, Colin J Akerman
The reversal potential refers to the membrane potential at which the net current flow through a channel reverses direction. The reversal potential is determined by transmembrane ion gradients and, in turn, determines how the channel's activity will affect the membrane potential. Traditional investigation into the reversal potential of inhibitory ligand-gated ion channels (EInh ) has relied upon the activation of endogenous receptors, such as the GABA-A receptor (GABAA R). There are, however, challenges associated with activating endogenous receptors, including agonist delivery, isolating channel responses, and the effects of receptor saturation and desensitization...
April 11, 2024: Journal of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38594070/erratum-shannonhouse-et-al-meclizine-and-metabotropic-glutamate-receptor-agonists-attenuate-severe-pain-and-ca-2-activity-of-primary-sensory-neurons-in-chemotherapy-induced-peripheral-neuropathy
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38594069/cholinergic-neurotransmission-controls-orexigenic-endocannabinoid-signaling-in-the-gut-in-diet-induced-obesity
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Courtney P Wood, Camila Alvarez, Nicholas V DiPatrizio
The brain bidirectionally communicates with the gut to control food intake and energy balance, which becomes dysregulated in obesity. For example, endocannabinoid (eCB) signaling in the small-intestinal epithelium (SI) is upregulated in diet-induced obese mice (DIO) and promotes overeating by a mechanism that includes inhibiting gut-brain satiation signaling. Upstream neural and molecular mechanism(s) involved in overproduction of orexigenic gut eCBs in DIO, however, are unknown. We tested the hypothesis that overactive parasympathetic signaling at muscarinic acetylcholine receptors (mAChRs) in the SI increases biosynthesis of the eCB, 2-arachidonoyl- sn -glycerol (2-AG), which drives hyperphagi-a via local CB1 Rs in DIO...
April 9, 2024: Journal of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38589232/impaired-cortical-tracking-of-speech-in-children-with-developmental-language-disorder
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Anni Nora, Oona Rinkinen, Hanna Renvall, Elisabet Service, Eva Arkkila, Sini Smolander, Marja Laasonen, Riitta Salmelin
In developmental language disorder (DLD), learning to comprehend and express oneself with spoken language is impaired, but the reason for this remains unknown. Using millisecond scale magnetoencephalography (MEG) recordings combined with machine learning models, we investigated whether the possible neural basis of this disruption lies in poor cortical tracking of speech. The stimuli were common spoken words (e.g., 'dog', 'car', 'hammer') and sounds with corresponding meanings (e.g., dog bark, car engine, hammering)...
April 8, 2024: Journal of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38589231/distinctive-and-complementary-roles-of-default-mode-network-subsystems-in-semantic-cognition
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ximing Shao, Katya Krieger-Redwood, Meichao Zhang, Paul Hoffman, Lucilla Lanzoni, Robert Leech, Jonathan Smallwood, Elizabeth Jefferies
The default mode network (DMN) typically deactivates to external tasks, yet supports semantic cognition. It comprises medial temporal (MT), core, and fronto-temporal (FT) subsystems, but its functional organisation is unclear: the requirement for perceptual coupling versus decoupling, input modality (visual/verbal), type of information (social/spatial) and control demands all potentially affect its recruitment. We examined the effect of these factors on activation and deactivation of DMN subsystems during semantic cognition, across four task-based human functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) datasets, and localised these responses in whole-brain state space defined by gradients of intrinsic connectivity...
April 8, 2024: Journal of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38589230/developmentally-unique-cerebellar-processing-prioritizes-self-over-other-generated-movements
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Angela M Richardson, Greta Sokoloff, Mark S Blumberg
Animals must distinguish the sensory consequences of self-generated movements (reafference) from those of other-generated movements (exafference). Only self-generated movements entail the production of motor copies (i.e., corollary discharges), which are compared with reafference in the cerebellum to compute predictive or internal models of movement. Internal models emerge gradually over the first three postnatal weeks in rats through a process that is not yet fully understood. Previously, we demonstrated in postnatal day (P) P8 and P12 rats that precerebellar nuclei convey corollary discharge and reafference to the cerebellum during active (REM) sleep when pups produce limb twitches...
April 8, 2024: Journal of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38589229/differential-modulation-of-local-field-potentials-in-the-primary-and-premotor-cortices-during-ipsilateral-and-contralateral-reach-to-grasp-in-macaque-monkeys
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ali Falaki, Stephan Quessy, Numa Dancause
Hand movements are associated with modulations of neuronal activity across several interconnected cortical areas, including the primary motor cortex (M1), and the dorsal and ventral premotor cortices (PMd and PMv). Local field potentials (LFPs) provide a link between neuronal discharges and synaptic inputs. Our current understanding of how LFPs vary in M1, PMd, and PMv during contralateral and ipsilateral movements is incomplete. To help reveal unique features in the pattern of modulations, we simultaneously recorded LFPs in these areas in two macaque monkeys performing reach and grasp movements with either the right or left hand...
April 8, 2024: Journal of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38589228/impairment-of-the-glial-phagolysosomal-system-drives-prion-like-propagation-in-a-drosophila-model-of-huntington-s-disease
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Graham H Davis, Aprem Zaya, Margaret M Panning Pearce
Protein misfolding, aggregation, and spread through the brain are primary drivers of neurodegenerative diseases pathogenesis. Phagocytic glia are responsible for regulating the load of pathogenic protein aggregates in the brain, but emerging evidence suggests that glia may also act as vectors for aggregate spread. Accumulation of protein aggregates could compromise the ability of glia to eliminate toxic materials from the brain by disrupting efficient degradation in the phagolysosomal system. A better understanding of phagocytic glial cell deficiencies in the disease state could help to identify novel therapeutic targets for multiple neurological disorders...
April 8, 2024: Journal of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38575343/exploratory-rearing-is-governed-by-hypothalamic-mch-neurons-according-to-locus-coeruleus
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Cristina Concetti, Paulius Viskaitis, Nikola Grujic, Sian N Duss, Mattia Privitera, Johannes Bohacek, Daria Peleg-Raibstein, Denis Burdakov
Information seeking, such as standing on tiptoes to look around in humans, is observed across animals and helps survival. Its rodent analog - unsupported rearing on hind legs - was a classic model in deciphering neural signals of cognition, and is of intense renewed interest in preclinical modeling of neuropsychiatric states. Neural signals and circuits controlling this dedicated decision to seek information remain largely unknown. While studying sub-second timing of spontaneous behavioral acts and activity of MCH neurons (MNs) in behaving male and female mice, we observed large MN activity spikes that aligned to unsupported rears...
April 4, 2024: Journal of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38575342/the-intellectual-disability-risk-gene-kdm5b-regulates-long-term-memory-consolidation-in-the-hippocampus
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Leticia Perez-Sisques, Shail Bhatt, Rugile Matuleviciute, Talia Gileadi, Eniko Kramar, Andrew Graham, Franklin G Garcia, Ashley Keiser, Dina P Matheos, James A Cain, Alan M Pittman, Laura C Andreae, Cathy Fernandes, Marcelo A Wood, K Peter Giese, M Albert Basson
The histone lysine demethylase KDM5B is implicated in recessive intellectual disability disorders and heterozygous, protein truncating variants in KDM5B are associated with reduced cognitive function in the population. The KDM5 family of lysine demethylases has developmental and homeostatic functions in the brain, some of which appear to be independent of lysine demethylase activity. To determine the functions of KDM5B in hippocampus-dependent learning and memory, we first studied male and female mice homozygous for a Kdm5b Δ ARID allele that lacks demethylase activity...
April 4, 2024: Journal of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38569927/rare-gpr37l1-variants-reveal-potential-association-between-gpr37l1-and-disorders-of-anxiety-and-migraine
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Gerda E Breitwieser, Andrea Cippitelli, Yingcai Wang, Oliver Pelletier, Ridge Dershem, Jianning Wei, Lawrence Toll, Bianca Fakhoury, Gloria Brunori, Raghu Metpally, David J Carey, Janet Robishaw
GPR37L1 is an orphan receptor that couples through heterotrimeric G proteins to regulate physiological functions. Since its role in humans is not fully defined, we used an unbiased computational approach to assess the clinical significance of rare GPR37L1 genetic variants found among 51,289 whole exome sequences from the DiscovEHR cohort. Briefly, rare GPR37L1 coding variants were binned according to predicted pathogenicity and analyzed by Sequence Kernel Association testing to reveal significant associations with disease diagnostic codes for epilepsy and migraine, among others...
April 3, 2024: Journal of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38569926/tsg-6-mediated-extracellular-matrix-modifications-regulate-hypoxic-ischemic-brain-injury
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Taasin Srivastava, Hung Nguyen, Gage Haden, Parham Diba, Steven Sowa, Norah LaNguyen, William Reed-Dustin, Wenbin Zhu, Xi Gong, Edward N Harris, Selva Baltan, Stephen A Back
Proteoglycans containing link-domains modify the extracellular matrix (ECM) to regulate cellular homeostasis and can also sensitize tissues/organs to injury and stress. Hypoxic-Ischemic (H-I) injury disrupts cellular homeostasis by activating inflammation and attenuating regeneration and repair pathways. In the brain, the main component of the ECM is the glycosaminoglycan (GAG), Hyaluronic Acid (HA), but whether HA modifications of the ECM regulate cellular homeostasis and response to H-I injury is not known...
April 3, 2024: Journal of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38569925/visual-recognition-memory-of-scenes-is-driven-by-categorical-not-sensory-visual-representations
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ricardo Morales-Torres, Erik A Wing, Lifu Deng, Simon W Davis, Roberto Cabeza
When we perceive a scene, our brain processes various types of visual information simultaneously, ranging from sensory features, such as line orientations and colors, to categorical features, such as objects and their arrangements. Whereas the role of sensory and categorical visual representations in predicting subsequent memory has been studied using isolated objects, their impact on memory for complex scenes remains largely unknown. To address this gap, we conducted an fMRI study in which female and male participants encoded pictures of familiar scenes (e...
April 3, 2024: Journal of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38569924/transformation-of-motion-pattern-selectivity-from-retina-to-superior-colliculus
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Victor J DePiero, Zixuan Deng, Chen Chen, Elise L Savier, Hui Chen, Wei Wei, Jianhua Cang
The superior colliculus (SC) is a prominent and conserved visual center in all vertebrates. In mice, the most superficial lamina of the SC is enriched with neurons that are selective for the moving direction of visual stimuli. Here we study how these direction selective neurons respond to complex motion patterns known as plaids, using two-photon calcium imaging in awake male and female mice. The plaid pattern consists of two superimposed sinusoidal gratings moving in different directions, giving an apparent pattern direction that lies between the directions of the two component gratings...
April 3, 2024: Journal of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38569923/optogenetic-inhibition-of-rat-anterior-cingulate-cortex-impairs-the-ability-to-initiate-and-stay-on-task
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Daniela Vázquez, Sean R Maulhardt, Thomas A Stalnaker, Alec Solway, Caroline J Charpentier, Matthew R Roesch
Our prior research has identified neural correlates of cognitive control in the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), leading us to hypothesize that the ACC is necessary for increasing attention as rats flexibly learn new contingencies during a complex reward-guided decision-making task. Here, we tested this hypothesis by using optogenetics to transiently inhibit the ACC while rats of either sex performed the same two-choice task. ACC inhibition had a profound impact on behavior that extended beyond deficits in attention during learning when expected outcomes were uncertain...
April 3, 2024: Journal of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38565292/glp-1-in-hypothalamic-paraventricular-nucleus-promotes-sympathetic-activation-and-hypertension
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Xiao-Yu Xu, Jing-Xiao Wang, Jun-Liu Chen, Min Dai, Yi-Ming Wang, Qi Chen, Yue-Hua Li, Guo-Qing Zhu, Ai-Dong Chen
Glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) and its analogs are widely used for treatment of diabetes. Paraventricular nucleus (PVN) is crucial for regulating cardiovascular activity. This study aims to determine the roles of GLP-1 and its receptors (GLP-1R) in PVN in regulating sympathetic outflow and blood pressure. Experiments were carried out in male normotensive rats and spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR). Renal sympathetic nerve activity (RSNA) and mean arterial pressure (MAP) were recorded. GLP-1 and GLP-1R expression was present in the PVN...
April 2, 2024: Journal of Neuroscience
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