journal
Journals Brain Research. Developmental ...

Brain Research. Developmental Brain Research

https://read.qxmd.com/read/16168493/germinal-matrix-cells-associate-with-veins-and-a-glial-scaffold-in-the-human-fetal-brain
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
John A Anstrom, Clara R Thore, Dixon M Moody, Venkata R Challa, Steven M Block, William R Brown
Germinal matrix (GM) in the subventricular zone (SVZ) includes progenitor cells of neurons and glia, which migrate from the SVZ to regions where they become integrated into the developing brain. In the human fetal brain, GM cells pack into high density clusters that encircle GM veins producing a profile we describe as a venous cuff. Venous cuffs are, in turn, encircled by GFAP-positive astrocytes that project processes through the cuff to the venous wall. The high cell density exhibited by cuffs, as well as their association with astrocytes, are reminiscent of features associated with chain migration...
November 7, 2005: Brain Research. Developmental Brain Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/16165221/butyrate-a-gut-derived-environmental-signal-regulates-tyrosine-hydroxylase-gene-expression-via-a-novel-promoter-element
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Pranav Patel, Bistra B Nankova, Edmund F LaGamma
Butyrate is a diet-derived, gut fermentation product with an array of effects on cultured mammalian cells including inhibition of proliferation, induction of differentiation and regulation of gene expression. We showed that physiological concentrations of butyrate can regulate transcription of tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) and preproenkephalin (ppEnk) gene in PC12 cells. In promoter deletion studies, electrophoretic mobility shift assays and by site-directed mutagenesis, we identified a novel butyrate response element (BRE) in the 5' upstream region of the rat TH gene, homologous to the previously mapped motif in the ppEnk promoter...
November 7, 2005: Brain Research. Developmental Brain Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/16154638/prenatal-hypoxia-impairs-memory-function-but-does-not-result-in-overt-structural-alterations-in-the-postnatal-chick-brain
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Emily J Camm, Marie E Gibbs, Richard Harding, Twan Mulder, Sandra M Rees
We showed previously that hypoxia in ovo impairs memory consolidation in the chick tested 2 days after hatching. Our present aim was to investigate whether we could detect any morphological effects of the same prenatal hypoxia. Hypoxia was induced by half-wrapping the egg with an impermeable membrane from either days 10-18 (W10-18 chicks) or days 14-18 (W14-18 chicks) of incubation (hatching approximately 21 days). Measurement of blood gases showed that reducing the surface area of the egg for gas exchange resulted in reduced pO2 and increased pCO2 2 days after wrapping...
November 7, 2005: Brain Research. Developmental Brain Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/16154637/embryonic-cerebellar-granule-cells-are-resistant-to-necrosis-induced-by-homocysteine
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nicola S L Foister, Ceri E Oldreive, John B Mackie, Gayle H Doherty
Hyperhomocysteinemia is a risk factor for a range of neurodegenerative conditions, yet its effects in the developing nervous system have been poorly elucidated. We studied the in vitro response of cerebellar granule neurons (CGCs) to homocysteine. We have shown that embryonic CGCs are resistant to homocysteine-induced neurotoxicity, whilst postnatal CGCs are not. This is the first demonstration of a neuronal population undergoing a developmental switch in their response to homocysteine. Greater understanding of this change may have important implications for both neurodegenerative conditions and neurodevelopmental disorders...
November 7, 2005: Brain Research. Developmental Brain Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/16154207/abnormal-neocortical-development-in-mice-lacking-cgmp-dependent-protein-kinase-i
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Galina P Demyanenko, Ari I Halberstadt, Katherine B Pryzwansky, Claudia Werner, Franz Hofmann, Patricia F Maness
Cyclic GMP-dependent protein kinase type I (cGKI) is a key signaling intermediate important for synaptic potentiation in the hippocampus and cerebellum, but its expression and function in cortical development have not been elucidated. The expression of cGKI in the developing mouse neocortex was evaluated by immunofluorescence labeling, and effect of cGKI deletion on cortical development was studied in adult cGKI knockout mice. cGKI was expressed at highest levels at embryonic stages in young neurons and radial glial fibers, corresponding to the major period of radial migration and laminar development of pyramidal neurons (embryonic day E13...
November 7, 2005: Brain Research. Developmental Brain Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/16153714/differential-expression-of-the-regulator-of-g-protein-signaling-rgs9-protein-in-nociceptive-pathways-of-different-age-rats
#26
COMPARATIVE STUDY
Ki Jun Kim, Kumi Moriyama, Kyung Ream Han, Manohar Sharma, Xiaokang Han, Guo-xi Xie, Pamela Pierce Palmer
Regulators of G protein signaling (RGS) proteins are GTPase-activating proteins which act as modulators of G-protein-coupled receptors. RGS9 has two alternative splicing variants. RGS9-1 is expressed in the retina. RGS9-2 is expressed in the brain, especially abundant in the striatum. It is believed to be an essential regulatory component of dopamine and opioid signaling. In this study, we compared the expression of RGS9 proteins in the nervous system of different age groups of rats employing immunocytochemistry...
November 7, 2005: Brain Research. Developmental Brain Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/16153713/effect-of-nmda-on-staurosporine-induced-activation-of-caspase-3-and-ldh-release-in-mouse-neocortical-and-hippocampal-cells
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Malgorzata Kajta, Andreas Trotter, Wladyslaw Lasoń, Cordian Beyer
To achieve a better understanding of developmentally regulated NMDA- and staurosporine-induced apoptotic processes, we investigated the concerted action of these agents on caspase-3 activity and LDH release in neocortical and hippocampal cell cultures at different stages in vitro (DIV). Hoechst 33342 and MAP-2 stainings were additionally employed to visualize apoptotic changes and cell damage. The vulnerability of neocortical cells to NMDA was more prominent at later culture stages, whereas hippocampal neurons were more susceptible to NMDA treatment at earlier stages...
November 7, 2005: Brain Research. Developmental Brain Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/16150495/expression-of-gata6-in-the-human-and-mouse-central-nervous-system
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Deepak Kamnasaran, Abhijit Guha
The mammalian GATA family of transcription factors comprises of 6 members that are involved in diverse roles. The expression profile of GATA6 has been poorly defined in the central nervous system (CNS). In this report, we identify GATA6 expression in the normal mouse and human CNS, using Northern blot analyses, immunohistochemistry (IHC), and immunofluorescence (IF). GATA6 is expressed as a 2.2 kb transcript in the adult mouse brain and several regions of the adult human brain. Furthermore, cellular characterization demonstrates GATA6 nuclear expression in neurons, astrocytes, choroids plexus epithelium, and endothelial cells...
November 7, 2005: Brain Research. Developmental Brain Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/16140394/correlation-of-aggression-with-serum-igm-level-in-autoimmune-prone-nzb-mice
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kazuhiro Nakamura, Hiroyuki Nishimura, Sachiko Hirose
Neurological symptoms are often found in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus, an autoimmune disease. We found an enhanced aggression in young autoimmune-prone NZB mice before expression of autoimmune hemolytic anemia, which was accompanied by an increase in neural activity in the accessory olfactory bulb. The performance of aggressive behavior was correlated with serum IgM level. These results indicate that IgM class autoantibodies could be implicated in brain dysfunction without apparent pathological changes of autoimmune disease...
October 6, 2005: Brain Research. Developmental Brain Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/16139897/expression-of-a-heparan-sulfate-remodeling-enzyme-heparan-sulfate-6-o-endosulfatase-sulfatase-fp2-in-the-rat-nervous-system
#30
COMPARATIVE STUDY
Satoshi Nagamine, Seiichi Koike, Kazuko Keino-Masu, Masayuki Masu
A new class of sulfatases, SulfFP1/sulf-1 and SulfFP2/sulf-2, has been implicated in the modulation of extracellular signaling by remodeling heparan sulfate through 6-O-endosulfatase activity. Here, we isolated rat SulfFP2 cDNA and examined its expression by in situ hybridization. SulfFP2 expression is abundant and dynamically regulated in the nervous system during development, whereas it is confined to the cerebral cortex, hippocampal CA3 region, and medial habenular nucleus in the adult brain.
October 6, 2005: Brain Research. Developmental Brain Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/16139370/ectopic-hoxa5-expression-results-in-abnormal-differentiation-migration-and-p53-independent-cell-death-of-superficial-dorsal-horn-neurons
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Matthew A Abbott, Milan Joksimovic, Christopher K Tuggle
Previously, we reported a line of mice (Hoxa5SV2) that ectopically expresses HOXA5 in the developing cervical and brachial dorsal spinal cord. Animals from this line exhibited a clear loss of cells in the outer lamina of the mature dorsal horn that coincided with an adult phenotype of sensory and motor defects of the forelimb. In this report, we examined the etiology of lost dorsal horn cells. Cells normally fated to populate the outer laminae I-III of the dorsal horn migrated inappropriately, as the percentage of laterally positioned cells in the dorsal horn was significantly reduced in Hoxa5SV2 transgenics...
October 6, 2005: Brain Research. Developmental Brain Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/16139369/expression-of-reelin-in-the-dorsal-cochlear-nucleus-of-the-mouse
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yuka Takaoka, Tomiyoshi Setsu, Kazuyo Misaki, Takashi Yamauchi, Toshio Terashima
The cytoarchitecture of dorsal cochlear nucleus (DCN), characterized by a distinct laminar structure similar to the cerebellar cortex of the normal mouse, is known to be disrupted in the Reelin-deficient mouse, reeler. Here, we have reexamined both the cytoarchitecture and myeloarchitecture of this nucleus and described expression pattern of Reelin protein during perinatal periods. Reelin-immunopositive granule cells were firstly recognized in the external granular layer of the DCN at embryological day 16 (E16)...
October 6, 2005: Brain Research. Developmental Brain Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/16137769/beneficial-effects-of-melatonin-on-morphological-changes-in-postnatal-cerebellar-tissue-owing-to-epileptiform-activity-during-pregnancy-in-rats-light-and-immunohistochemical-study
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yiğit Uyanikgil, Mehmet Turgut, Utku Ateş, Meral Baka, Mine E Yurtseven
Although it has been demonstrated that maternal epilepsy has some harmful effects on newborn individuals, current data concerning the effects of epileptic phenomena in pregnant mothers on newborn pups are still limited. This study was undertaken to investigate the changes in the cerebellum of newborns of pinealectomized rats subjected to experimental epilepsy during pregnancy. In our study, the rats were randomly divided into six groups: intact control group, anesthesia control group, epilepsy group, melatonin-treated epileptic group, surgical pinealectomy group, and group of melatonin treatment following pinealectomy procedure...
October 6, 2005: Brain Research. Developmental Brain Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/16125793/simultaneous-glutamate-and-gaba-a-receptor-agonist-administration-increases-calbindin-levels-and-prevents-hippocampal-damage-induced-by-either-agent-alone-in-a-model-of-perinatal-brain-injury
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Genell D Hilton, Adanma Ndubuizu, Joseph L Nunez, Margaret M McCarthy
Perinatal brain injury is associated with the release of amino acids, principally glutamate and GABA, resulting in massive increases in intracellular calcium and eventual cell death. We have previously demonstrated that independent administration of kainic acid (KA), an AMPA/kainate receptor agonist, or muscimol, a GABA(A) receptor agonist, to newborn rats results in hippocampal damage [Hilton, G.D., Ndubuizu, A., and McCarthy, M.M., 2004. Neuroprotective effects of estradiol in newborn female rat hippocampus...
October 6, 2005: Brain Research. Developmental Brain Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/16112204/a-single-course-of-antenatal-betamethasone-reduces-neurotrophic-factor-s100b-concentration-in-the-hippocampus-and-serum-in-the-neonatal-rat
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Matteo Bruschettini, Daniël L A van den Hove, Diego Gazzolo, Pierluigi Bruschettini, Carlos E Blanco, Harry W M Steinbusch
The effects of a single course of antenatal betamethasone on S100B protein concentration were investigated in Fisher 344 rats. On day 20 of gestation, pregnant rats were injected twice 8 h apart with either (1) 170 microg kg(-1) body weight betamethasone ("clinically-equivalent dose", equivalent to 12 mg twice, 24 h apart in humans), (2) half of this dose (equivalent to 6 mg) or (3) vehicle. We report reference values for S100B protein in the serum and different brain regions in both genders at 1, 2, and 21 days after birth...
October 6, 2005: Brain Research. Developmental Brain Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/16112203/neurochemical-effects-of-cocaine-in-adolescence-compared-to-adulthood
#36
COMPARATIVE STUDY
Kirstie H Stansfield, Cheryl L Kirstein
Adolescence is a time of high risk behavior and increased exploration. This developmental period is marked by a greater probability to initiate drug use and is associated with an increased risk to develop addiction and adulthood dependency. Human adolescents are predisposed toward an increased likelihood of risk taking behaviors [M. Zuckerman, Sensation-seeking and the endogenous deficit theory of drug abuse. NIDA Res Monogr. 74 (1986) 59-70.], including drug use or initiation. In the present study, adolescent and adult animals were first tested on several behavioral measures (novel environment exploratory behavior, novel object preference, novelty-induced impulsivity and novelty-induced exploration) which were used to categorize them as high- (HR) or low-responders (LR)...
October 6, 2005: Brain Research. Developmental Brain Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/16109446/maternal-dietary-choline-availability-alters-the-balance-of-netrin-1-and-dcc-neuronal-migration-proteins-in-fetal-mouse-brain-hippocampus
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Craig D Albright, Mei-Heng Mar, Corneliu N Craciunescu, Jiannan Song, Steven H Zeisel
Alterations in maternal dietary choline availability during days 12-17 of pregnancy led to an increase in the level of immunoreactive netrin-1 and a decrease in the level of DCC protein in the developing fetal mouse brain hippocampus compared with controls. Changes in the expression of cell migration cues during development could account for some of the lifelong consequences of maternal dietary choline availability for cognitive and memory processes.
October 6, 2005: Brain Research. Developmental Brain Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/16099516/a-store-operated-ca2-influx-activated-in-response-to-the-depletion-of-thapsigargin-sensitive-ca2-stores-is-developmentally-regulated-in-embryonic-cortical-neurons-from-mice
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alexandre Bouron, Xavier Altafaj, Sylvie Boisseau, Michel De Waard
Store-operated channels (SOCs) are recruited in response to the release of Ca2+ from intracellular stores. They allow a voltage-independent entry of Ca2+ into the cytoplasm also termed capacitative Ca2+ entry (CCE). In neurons, the functional significance of this Ca2+ route remains elusive. Several reports indicate that SOCs could be developmentally regulated. We verified the presence of a CCE in freshly dissociated cortical cells from E13, E14, E16, E18 fetuses and from 1-day-old mice. Intracellular Ca2+ stores were depleted by means of the SERCA pump inhibitor thapsigargin...
September 8, 2005: Brain Research. Developmental Brain Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/16095723/identification-of-differentially-expressed-genes-in-the-developing-mouse-inferior-colliculus
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Boris Decourt, Yohan Bouleau, Didier Dulon, Aziz Hafidi
Although injured neurons of inferior colliculus (IC) display a robust axonal outgrowth through a lesion site at postnatal day six (P6) in vitro, and are capable to re-innervate their target cells, injured neurons from P10 IC are unable to regenerate their axons across the lesion site. This axonal regenerative failure has been attributed to an increase of expression of inhibitory molecules in endogenous tissue, during development. As a first step to identify such inhibitory molecules, the present study reports the isolation of molecules differentially expressed in the IC during development...
September 8, 2005: Brain Research. Developmental Brain Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/16085319/prenatal-stress-may-increase-vulnerability-to-life-events-comparison-with-the-effects-of-prenatal-dexamethasone
#40
COMPARATIVE STUDY
Karin S Hougaard, Maibritt B Andersen, Sanna L Kjaer, Ase M Hansen, Thomas Werge, Søren P Lund
Prenatal stress has been associated with a variety of alterations in the offspring. The presented observations suggest that rather than causing changes in the offspring per se, prenatal stress may increase the organism's vulnerability to aversive life events. Offspring of rat dams stressed gestationally by chronic mild stress (CMS, a variable schedule of different stressors) or dexamethasone (DEX, a synthetic glucocorticoid, i.e., a pharmacological stressor) was tested for reactivity by testing their acoustic startle response (ASR)...
September 8, 2005: Brain Research. Developmental Brain Research
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