keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/28482675/a-novel-diagnostic-biomarker-for-human-uterine-leiomyosarcoma-psmb9-%C3%AE-1i
#21
LETTER
Takuma Hayashi, Miki Kawano, Kenji Sano, Tomoyuki Ichimura, Gal Gur, Pnina Yaish, Dorit Zharhary, Yae Kanai, Susumu Tonegawa, Tanri Shiozawa, Nobuo Yaegashi, Ikuo Konishi
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
April 2017: Chinese Clinical Oncology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/28386011/engrams-and-circuits-crucial-for-systems-consolidation-of-a-memory
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Takashi Kitamura, Sachie K Ogawa, Dheeraj S Roy, Teruhiro Okuyama, Mark D Morrissey, Lillian M Smith, Roger L Redondo, Susumu Tonegawa
Episodic memories initially require rapid synaptic plasticity within the hippocampus for their formation and are gradually consolidated in neocortical networks for permanent storage. However, the engrams and circuits that support neocortical memory consolidation have thus far been unknown. We found that neocortical prefrontal memory engram cells, which are critical for remote contextual fear memory, were rapidly generated during initial learning through inputs from both the hippocampal-entorhinal cortex network and the basolateral amygdala...
April 7, 2017: Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/28334609/basolateral-to-central-amygdala-neural-circuits-for-appetitive-behaviors
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Joshua Kim, Xiangyu Zhang, Shruti Muralidhar, Sarah A LeBlanc, Susumu Tonegawa
Basolateral amygdala (BLA) principal cells are capable of driving and antagonizing behaviors of opposing valence. BLA neurons project to the central amygdala (CeA), which also participates in negative and positive behaviors. However, the CeA has primarily been studied as the site for negative behaviors, and the causal role for CeA circuits underlying appetitive behaviors is poorly understood. Here, we identify several genetically distinct populations of CeA neurons that mediate appetitive behaviors and dissect the BLA-to-CeA circuit for appetitive behaviors...
March 22, 2017: Neuron
https://read.qxmd.com/read/27798858/molecular-pathology-and-novel-clinical-therapy-for-uterine-leiomyosarcoma
#24
REVIEW
Takuma Hayashi, Miki Kawano, Tomoyuki Ichimura, Koichi Ida, Hirofumi Ando, Dorit Zharhary, Yae Kanai, Hiroyuki Aburatani, Susumu Tonegawa, Tanri Shiozawa, Nobuo Yaegashi, Ikuo Konishi
Patients with uterine leiomyosarcoma (LMS) typically present with vaginal bleeding, pain, and a pelvic mass, with atypical presentations of hypercalcemia and eosinophilia also being reported. Radiographic evaluation with combined positron-emission tomography/computed tomography may assist in diagnosis and surveillance in women with uterine LMS; these are commonly used with stage and tumour grade as prognostic indicators and a recently developed risk-assessment index to predict disease-specific survival. Recent studies have shown that the addition of adjuvant therapy after surgical management does not seem to improve survival, and ovarian preservation does not appear to negatively impact outcome...
2016: Anticancer Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/27749826/antagonistic-negative-and-positive-neurons-of-the-basolateral-amygdala
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Joshua Kim, Michele Pignatelli, Sangyu Xu, Shigeyoshi Itohara, Susumu Tonegawa
The basolateral amygdala (BLA) is a site of convergence of negative and positive stimuli and is critical for emotional behaviors and associations. However, the neural substrate for negative and positive behaviors and relationship between negative and positive representations in the basolateral amygdala are unknown. Here we identify two genetically distinct, spatially segregated populations of excitatory neurons in the mouse BLA that participate in valence-specific behaviors and are connected through mutual inhibition...
December 2016: Nature Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/27708103/ventral-ca1-neurons-store-social-memory
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Teruhiro Okuyama, Takashi Kitamura, Dheeraj S Roy, Shigeyoshi Itohara, Susumu Tonegawa
The medial temporal lobe, including the hippocampus, has been implicated in social memory. However, it remains unknown which parts of these brain regions and their circuits hold social memory. Here, we show that ventral hippocampal CA1 (vCA1) neurons of a mouse and their projections to nucleus accumbens (NAc) shell play a necessary and sufficient role in social memory. Both the proportion of activated vCA1 cells and the strength and stability of the responding cells are greater in response to a familiar mouse than to a previously unencountered mouse...
September 30, 2016: Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/27197636/what-is-memory-the-present-state-of-the-engram
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mu-Ming Poo, Michele Pignatelli, Tomás J Ryan, Susumu Tonegawa, Tobias Bonhoeffer, Kelsey C Martin, Andrii Rudenko, Li-Huei Tsai, Richard W Tsien, Gord Fishell, Caitlin Mullins, J Tiago Gonçalves, Matthew Shtrahman, Stephen T Johnston, Fred H Gage, Yang Dan, John Long, György Buzsáki, Charles Stevens
The mechanism of memory remains one of the great unsolved problems of biology. Grappling with the question more than a hundred years ago, the German zoologist Richard Semon formulated the concept of the engram, lasting connections in the brain that result from simultaneous "excitations", whose precise physical nature and consequences were out of reach of the biology of his day. Neuroscientists now have the knowledge and tools to tackle this question, however, and this Forum brings together leading contemporary views on the mechanisms of memory and what the engram means today...
May 19, 2016: BMC Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/27144253/remembering-antibodies-coming-of-age
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Fritz Melchers
Fifty years ago, Norbert Hilschmann discovered that antibodies have variable immunoglobulin domains to bind antigens, and constant domains to carry out effector functions in the immune system. Just as this happened, the author of this perspective entered the field of immunology. Ten years later, the genetic basis of antibody variability was discovered by Susumu Tonegawa and his colleagues at the Basel Institute for Immunology, where the author had become a scientific member. At the same time, Georges Köhler, a former graduate student of the author's at the Basel Institute, invented with Cesar Milstein at the Laboratory of Molecular Biology in Cambridge, England, the method to produce monoclonal antibodies...
January 2016: European Journal of Immunology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26982728/memory-retrieval-by-activating-engram-cells-in-mouse-models-of-early-alzheimer-s-disease
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Dheeraj S Roy, Autumn Arons, Teryn I Mitchell, Michele Pignatelli, Tomás J Ryan, Susumu Tonegawa
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a neurodegenerative disorder characterized by progressive memory decline and subsequent loss of broader cognitive functions. Memory decline in the early stages of AD is mostly limited to episodic memory, for which the hippocampus has a crucial role. However, it has been uncertain whether the observed amnesia in the early stages of AD is due to disrupted encoding and consolidation of episodic information, or an impairment in the retrieval of stored memory information. Here we show that in transgenic mouse models of early AD, direct optogenetic activation of hippocampal memory engram cells results in memory retrieval despite the fact that these mice are amnesic in long-term memory tests when natural recall cues are used, revealing a retrieval, rather than a storage impairment...
March 24, 2016: Nature
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26964904/rehebbilitating-memory
#30
Tomás J Ryan, Susumu Tonegawa
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
April 2016: Neuropsychopharmacology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26657949/rehebbilitating-memory
#31
REVIEW
Tomás J Ryan, Susumu Tonegawa
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
January 2016: Neuropsychopharmacology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26488242/q-a-memory-man
#32
Susumu Tonegawa, Keikantse Matlhagela
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
October 22, 2015: Nature
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26402611/entorhinal-cortical-ocean-cells-encode-specific-contexts-and-drive-context-specific-fear-memory
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Takashi Kitamura, Chen Sun, Jared Martin, Lacey J Kitch, Mark J Schnitzer, Susumu Tonegawa
Forming distinct representations and memories of multiple contexts and episodes is thought to be a crucial function of the hippocampal-entorhinal cortical network. The hippocampal dentate gyrus (DG) and CA3 are known to contribute to these functions, but the role of the entorhinal cortex (EC) is poorly understood. Here, we show that Ocean cells, excitatory stellate neurons in the medial EC layer II projecting into DG and CA3, rapidly form a distinct representation of a novel context and drive context-specific activation of downstream CA3 cells as well as context-specific fear memory...
September 23, 2015: Neuron
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26335640/memory-engram-cells-have-come-of-age
#34
REVIEW
Susumu Tonegawa, Xu Liu, Steve Ramirez, Roger Redondo
The idea that memory is stored in the brain as physical alterations goes back at least as far as Plato, but further conceptualization of this idea had to wait until the 20(th) century when two guiding theories were presented: the "engram theory" of Richard Semon and Donald Hebb's "synaptic plasticity theory." While a large number of studies have been conducted since, each supporting some aspect of each of these theories, until recently integrative evidence for the existence of engram cells and circuits as defined by the theories was lacking...
September 2, 2015: Neuron
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26286654/entorhinal-hippocampal-neuronal-circuits-bridge-temporally-discontiguous-events
#35
REVIEW
Takashi Kitamura, Christopher J Macdonald, Susumu Tonegawa
The entorhinal cortex (EC)-hippocampal (HPC) network plays an essential role for episodic memory, which preserves spatial and temporal information about the occurrence of past events. Although there has been significant progress toward understanding the neural circuits underlying the spatial dimension of episodic memory, the relevant circuits subserving the temporal dimension are just beginning to be understood. In this review, we examine the evidence concerning the role of the EC in associating events separated by time--or temporal associative learning--with emphasis on the function of persistent activity in the medial entorhinal cortex layer III (MECIII) and their direct inputs into the CA1 region of HPC...
September 2015: Learning & Memory
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26280931/memory-engram-storage-and-retrieval
#36
REVIEW
Susumu Tonegawa, Michele Pignatelli, Dheeraj S Roy, Tomás J Ryan
A great deal of experimental investment is directed towards questions regarding the mechanisms of memory storage. Such studies have traditionally been restricted to investigation of the anatomical structures, physiological processes, and molecular pathways necessary for the capacity of memory storage, and have avoided the question of how individual memories are stored in the brain. Memory engram technology allows the labeling and subsequent manipulation of components of specific memory engrams in particular brain regions, and it has been established that cell ensembles labeled by this method are both sufficient and necessary for memory recall...
December 2015: Current Opinion in Neurobiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26174222/differentiation-of-forebrain-and-hippocampal-dopamine-1-class-receptors-d1r-and-d5r-in-spatial-learning-and-memory
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Joshua Sariñana, Susumu Tonegawa
Activation of prefrontal cortical (PFC), striatal, and hippocampal dopamine 1-class receptors (D1R and D5R) is necessary for normal spatial information processing. Yet the precise role of the D1R versus the D5R in the aforementioned structures, and their specific contribution to the water-maze spatial learning task remains unknown. D1R- and D5R-specific in situ hybridization probes showed that forebrain restricted D1R and D5R KO mice (F-D1R/D5R KO) displayed D1R mRNA deletion in the medial (m)PFC, dorsal and ventral striatum, and the dentate gyrus (DG) of the hippocampus...
January 2016: Hippocampus
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26170279/distinct-speed-dependence-of-entorhinal-island-and-ocean-cells-including-respective-grid-cells
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Chen Sun, Takashi Kitamura, Jun Yamamoto, Jared Martin, Michele Pignatelli, Lacey J Kitch, Mark J Schnitzer, Susumu Tonegawa
Entorhinal-hippocampal circuits in the mammalian brain are crucial for an animal's spatial and episodic experience, but the neural basis for different spatial computations remain unknown. Medial entorhinal cortex layer II contains pyramidal island and stellate ocean cells. Here, we performed cell type-specific Ca(2+) imaging in freely exploring mice using cellular markers and a miniature head-mounted fluorescence microscope. We found that both oceans and islands contain grid cells in similar proportions, but island cell activity, including activity in a proportion of grid cells, is significantly more speed modulated than ocean cell activity...
July 28, 2015: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26167906/conjunctive-input-processing-drives-feature-selectivity-in-hippocampal-ca1-neurons
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Katie C Bittner, Christine Grienberger, Sachin P Vaidya, Aaron D Milstein, John J Macklin, Junghyup Suh, Susumu Tonegawa, Jeffrey C Magee
Feature-selective firing allows networks to produce representations of the external and internal environments. Despite its importance, the mechanisms generating neuronal feature selectivity are incompletely understood. In many cortical microcircuits the integration of two functionally distinct inputs occurs nonlinearly through generation of active dendritic signals that drive burst firing and robust plasticity. To examine the role of this processing in feature selectivity, we recorded CA1 pyramidal neuron membrane potential and local field potential in mice running on a linear treadmill...
August 2015: Nature Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26092902/a-conversation-with-susumu-tonegawa
#40
Susumu Tonegawa, Karen Carniol
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
2014: Cold Spring Harbor Symposia on Quantitative Biology
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