keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38309665/early-chronic-fasudil-treatment-rescues-hippocampal-alterations-in-the-ts65dn-model-for-down-syndrome
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Rosa López-Hidalgo, Raúl Ballestín, Lorena Lorenzo, Sandra Sánchez, José Miguel Blasco-Ibáñez, Carlos Crespo, Juan Nacher, Emilio Varea
Down syndrome (DS) is the most common genetic disorder associated with intellectual disability. To study this syndrome, several mouse models have been developed. Among the most common is the Ts65Dn model, which mimics most of the alterations observed in DS. Ts65Dn mice, as humans with DS, show defects in the structure, density, and distribution of dendritic spines in the cerebral cortex and hippocampus. Fasudil is a potent inhibitor of the RhoA kinase pathway, which is involved in the formation and stabilization of dendritic spines...
February 1, 2024: Neurochemistry International
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38308520/no-major-effect-of-dopamine-receptor-1-5-antagonist-sch-23390-on-epileptic-activity-in-the-tg2576-mouse-model-of-amyloidosis
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Anna B Szabo, Farès Sayegh, Sèbastien Gauzin, Camille Lejards, Bruno Guiard, Luc Valton, Laure Verret, Claire Rampon, Lionel Dahan
The excitation-inhibition imbalance manifesting as epileptic activities in Alzheimer's disease is gaining more and more attention, and several potentially involved cellular and molecular pathways are currently under investigation. Based on in vitro studies, dopamine D1-type receptors in the anterior cingulate cortex and the hippocampus have been proposed to participate in this peculiar co-morbidity in mouse models of amyloidosis. Here, we tested the implication of dopaminergic transmission in vivo in the Tg2576 mouse model of Alzheimer's disease by monitoring epileptic activities via intracranial EEG before and after treatment with dopamine antagonists...
February 3, 2024: European Journal of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38293183/neuromodulation-via-muscarinic-acetylcholine-pathway-can-facilitate-distinct-complementary-and-sequential-roles-for-nrem-and-rem-states-during-sleep-dependent-memory-consolidation
#23
Michael Satchell, Blaine Fry, Zahraa Noureddine, Alexis Simmons, Nicolette N Ognjanovski, Sara J Aton, Michal R Zochowski
UNLABELLED: Across vertebrate species, sleep consists of repeating cycles of NREM followed by REM. However, the respective functions of NREM, REM, and their stereotypic cycling pattern are not well understood. Using a simplified biophysical network model, we show that NREM and REM sleep can play differential and critical roles in memory consolidation primarily regulated, based on state-specific changes in cholinergic signaling. Within this network, decreasing and increasing muscarinic acetylcholine (ACh) signaling during bouts of NREM and REM, respectively, differentially alters neuronal excitability and excitatory/inhibitory balance...
January 16, 2024: bioRxiv
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38261402/amygdalar-excitation-of-hippocampal-interneurons-can-lead-to-emotion-driven-overgeneralization-of-context
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yohan J John, Jingyi Wang, Daniel Bullock, Helen Barbas
Context is central to cognition: Detailed contextual representations enable flexible adjustment of behavior via comparison of the current situation with prior experience. Emotional experiences can greatly enhance contextual memory. However, sufficiently intense emotional signals can have the opposite effect, leading to weaker or less specific memories. How can emotional signals have such intensity-dependent effects? A plausible mechanistic account has emerged from recent anatomical data on the impact of the amygdala on the hippocampus in primates...
January 19, 2024: Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38243766/dysfunction-of-specific-auditory-fibers-impacts-cortical-oscillations-driving-an-autism-phenotype-despite-near-normal-hearing
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Philine Marchetta, Konrad Dapper, Morgan Hess, Dila Calis, Wibke Singer, Jakob Wertz, Stefan Fink, Steffen R Hage, Mesbah Alam, Kerstin Schwabe, Robert Lukowski, Jerome Bourien, Jean-Luc Puel, Michele H Jacob, Matthias H J Munk, Rüdiger Land, Lukas Rüttiger, Marlies Knipper
Autism spectrum disorder is discussed in the context of altered neural oscillations and imbalanced cortical excitation-inhibition of cortical origin. We studied here whether developmental changes in peripheral auditory processing, while preserving basic hearing function, lead to altered cortical oscillations. Local field potentials (LFPs) were recorded from auditory, visual, and prefrontal cortices and the hippocampus of BdnfPax2 KO mice. These mice develop an autism-like behavioral phenotype through deletion of BDNF in Pax2+ interneuron precursors, affecting lower brainstem functions, but not frontal brain regions directly...
January 31, 2024: FASEB Journal: Official Publication of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38199274/trpm4-blocking-antibody-reduces-neuronal-excitotoxicity-by-specifically-inhibiting-glutamate-induced-calcium-influx-under-chronic-hypoxia
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Charlene P Poore, Nurul A M N Hazalin, Shunhui Wei, See Wee Low, Bo Chen, Bernd Nilius, Zurina Hassan, Ping Liao
Excitotoxicity arises from unusually excessive activation of excitatory amino acid receptors such as glutamate receptors. Following an energy crisis, excitotoxicity is a major cause for neuronal death in neurological disorders. Many glutamate antagonists have been examined for their efficacy in mitigating excitotoxicity, but failed to generate beneficial outcome due to their side effects on healthy neurons where glutamate receptors are also blocked. In this study, we found that during chronic hypoxia there is upregulation and activation of a nonselective cation channel TRPM4 that contributes to the depolarized neuronal membrane potential and enhanced glutamate-induced calcium entry...
January 8, 2024: Neurobiology of Disease
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38198539/silencing-dentate-newborn-neurons-alters-excitatory-inhibitory-balance-and-impairs-behavioral-inhibition-and-flexibility
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Haowei Li, Risako Tamura, Daiki Hayashi, Hirotaka Asai, Junya Koga, Shota Ando, Sayumi Yokota, Jun Kaneko, Keisuke Sakurai, Akira Sumiyoshi, Tadashi Yamamoto, Keigo Hikishima, Kazumasa Z Tanaka, Thomas J McHugh, Tatsuhiro Hisatsune
Adult neurogenesis confers the hippocampus with unparalleled neural plasticity, essential for intricate cognitive functions. The specific influence of sparse newborn neurons (NBNs) in modulating neural activities and subsequently steering behavior, however, remains obscure. Using an engineered NBN-tetanus toxin mouse model (NBN-TeTX), we noninvasively silenced NBNs, elucidating their crucial role in impulse inhibition and cognitive flexibility as evidenced through Morris water maze reversal learning and Go/Nogo task in operant learning...
January 12, 2024: Science Advances
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38155547/increased-a1-astrocyte-activation-driven-hippocampal-neural-network-abnormality-mediates-delirium-like-behavior-in-aged-mice-undergoing-cardiac-surgery
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Wenxue Liu, Min Jia, Keyin Zhang, Jiang Chen, Xiyu Zhu, Ruisha Li, Zhenjun Xu, Yanyu Zang, Yapeng Wang, Jun Pan, Daqing Ma, Jianjun Yang, Dongjin Wang
Delirium is the most common neurological complication after cardiac surgery with adverse impacts on surgical outcomes. Advanced age is an independent risk factor for delirium occurrence but its underlying mechanisms are not fully understood. Although increased A1 astrocytes and abnormal hippocampal networks are involved in neurodegenerative diseases, whether A1 astrocytes and hippocampal network changes are involved in the delirium-like behavior of aged mice remains unknown. In the present study, a mice model of myocardial ischemia-reperfusion mimicking cardiac surgery and various assessments were used to investigate the different susceptibility of the occurrence of delirium-like behavior between young and aged mice and the underlying mechanisms...
December 28, 2023: Aging Cell
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38145281/acute-stress-modulates-hippocampal-to-entorhinal-cortex-communication
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Azat Nasretdinov, David Jappy, Alina Vazetdinova, Fliza Valiullina-Rakhmatullina, Andrei Rozov
Feed-forward inhibition is vital in the transfer and processing of synaptic information within the hippocampal-entorhinal loop by controlling the strength and direction of excitation flow between different neuronal populations and individual neurons. While the cellular targets in the hippocampus that receive excitatory inputs from the entorhinal cortex have been well studied, and the role of feedforward inhibitory neurons has been attributed to neurogliafom cells, the cortical interneurons providing feed-forward control over receiving layer V in the entorhinal cortex remain unknown...
2023: Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38110609/taar1-agonist-ulotaront-modulates-striatal-and-hippocampal-glutamate-function-in-a-state-dependent-manner
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sung M Yang, Ayan Ghoshal, Jeffrey M Hubbard, Florian Gackière, Romain Teyssié, Stuart A Neale, Seth C Hopkins, Kenneth S Koblan, Linda J Bristow, Nina Dedic
Aberrant dopaminergic and glutamatergic function, particularly within the striatum and hippocampus, has repeatedly been associated with the pathophysiology of schizophrenia. Supported by preclinical and recent clinical data, trace amine-associated receptor 1 (TAAR1) agonism has emerged as a potential new treatment approach for schizophrenia. While current evidence implicates TAAR1-mediated regulation of dopaminergic tone as the primary circuit mechanism, little is known about the effects of TAAR1 agonists on the glutamatergic system and excitation-inhibition balance...
December 19, 2023: Neuropsychopharmacology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38107777/contribution-of-the-roman-rat-lines-strains-to-personality-neuroscience-neurobehavioral-modeling-of-internalizing-externalizing-psychopathologies
#31
REVIEW
Alberto Fernández-Teruel, Toni Cañete, Daniel Sampedro-Viana, Ignasi Oliveras, Rafael Torrubia, Adolf Tobeña
The Roman high-avoidance (RHA) and low-avoidance (RLA) rat lines/strains were established in Rome through bidirectional selection of Wistar rats for rapid (RHA) or extremely poor (RLA) acquisition of a two-way active avoidance task. Relative to RHAs, RLA rats exhibit enhanced threat sensitivity, anxiety, fear and vulnerability to stress, a passive coping style and increased sensitivity to frustration. Thus, RLA rats' phenotypic profile falls well within the "internalizing" behavior spectrum. Compared with RLAs and other rat strains/stocks, RHAs present increased impulsivity and reward sensitivity, deficits in social behavior and attentional/cognitive processes, novelty-induced hyper-locomotion and vulnerability to psychostimulant sensitization and drug addiction...
2023: Personality Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38107412/rescue-of-sharp-wave-ripples-and-prevention-of-network-hyperexcitability-in-the-ventral-but-not-the-dorsal-hippocampus-of-a-rat-model-of-fragile-x-syndrome
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Leonidas J Leontiadis, George Trompoukis, Giota Tsotsokou, Athina Miliou, Panagiotis Felemegkas, Costas Papatheodoropoulos
Fragile X syndrome (FXS) is a genetic neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by intellectual disability and is related to autism. FXS is caused by mutations of the fragile X messenger ribonucleoprotein 1 gene ( Fmr1 ) and is associated with alterations in neuronal network excitability in several brain areas including hippocampus. The loss of fragile X protein affects brain oscillations, however, the effects of FXS on hippocampal sharp wave-ripples (SWRs), an endogenous hippocampal pattern contributing to memory consolidation have not been sufficiently clarified...
2023: Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38075288/sepsis-induced-modulation-of-long-term-potentiation-induced-by-theta-burst-stimulation-in-the-rat-hippocampus
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ryuichiro Kakizaki, Eichi Narimatsu, Takehiko Kasai, Kazuhito Nomura
We investigated the influences of sepsis on central synaptic plasticity in vitro . Cecal ligation and puncture (CLP) was performed by creating rat sepsis models, which were divided into early and late sepsis groups (8 and 16 h after CLP, respectively). In the CA1 of the rat hippocampal slices, orthodromically elicited population spikes (PSs) and field excitatory postsynaptic potentials (fEPSPs) were simultaneously recorded, and their long-term potentiation (LTP) was induced by theta burst stimulation (TBS)...
2023: Frontiers in Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38060673/glud1-binds-gaba-and-controls-inhibitory-plasticity
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Laura Piot, Christina Heroven, Simon Bossi, Joseph Zamith, Tomas Malinauskas, Chris Johnson, Doris Wennagel, David Stroebel, Cécile Charrier, A Radu Aricescu, Laetitia Mony, Pierre Paoletti
Fast synaptic neurotransmission in the vertebrate central nervous system relies primarily on ionotropic glutamate receptors (iGluRs), that drive neuronal excitation, and type A γ-aminobutyric acid receptors (GABAA Rs), responsible for neuronal inhibition. However, the GluD1 receptor, an iGluR family member, is present at both excitatory and inhibitory synapses. Whether and how GluD1 activation may impact inhibitory neurotransmission is unknown. Here, using a combination of biochemical, structural and functional analyses, we demonstrate that GluD1 binds GABA, an unprecedented feature for iGluRs...
December 7, 2023: Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38036056/ltp-is-absent-in-the-ca1-region-of-the-hippocampus-of-male-and-female-rett-syndrome-mouse-models
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Azam Asgarihafshejani, Vineeth Andisseryparambi Raveendran, Jessica C Pressey, Melanie A Woodin
Rett syndrome (RTT) is a debilitating neurodevelopmental disorder caused by mutations in the X-linked methyl-CpG-binding protein 2 (MeCP2) gene, resulting in severe deficits in learning and memory. Alterations in synaptic plasticity have been reported in RTT, however most electrophysiological studies have been performed in male mice only, despite the fact that RTT is primarily found in females. In addition, most studies have focused on excitation, despite the emerging evidence for the important role of inhibition in learning and memory...
January 26, 2024: Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38034589/conditional-knockout-of-rest-nrsf-in-excitatory-neurons-reduces-seizure-susceptibility-to-chemical-kindling
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Giulia Natali, Caterina Michetti, Alicja Krawczun-Rygmaczewska, Thomas Floss, Fabrizia Cesca, Fabio Benfenati
The repressor element-1 silencing transcription factor/neuron-restrictive silencer factor (REST/NRSF) is an epigenetic master regulator that plays a crucial role during nervous system development and maturation. REST function was originally described during development, where it determines neuronal phenotype. However, recent studies showed that REST participates in several processes in the adult brain, including neuronal plasticity and epileptogenesis. In this regard, the relationships between REST and epilepsy are still controversial and need further investigation...
2023: Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38026701/inhibitory-neuron-map-of-sevoflurane-induced-neurotoxicity-model-in-young-primates
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yixuan Niu, Yanyong Cheng, Zhengjie Miao, Jinnan Xu, Hong Jiang, Jia Yan
INTRODUCTION: Sevoflurane, one of the most commonly used anesthetic agents in children, may induce neuronal dysfunction and cognitive impairment. Exposure to sevoflurane might induce an imbalance between neural excitation and inhibition which could be a mechanism behind anesthesia-induced cognitive and affective dysfunctions. However, the underlying mechanisms remain unclear. METHODS: In this study, we used two rhesus macaques in the control group, and one rhesus macaques in the anesthesia group...
2023: Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38002556/increased-inhibition-may-contribute-to-maintaining-normal-network-function-in-the-ventral-hippocampus-of-a-fmr1-targeted-transgenic-rat-model-of-fragile-x-syndrome
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Leonidas J Leontiadis, George Trompoukis, Panagiotis Felemegkas, Giota Tsotsokou, Athina Miliou, Costas Papatheodoropoulos
A common neurobiological mechanism in several neurodevelopmental disorders, including fragile X syndrome (FXS), is alterations in the balance between excitation and inhibition in the brain. It is thought that in the hippocampus, as in other brain regions, FXS is associated with increased excitability and reduced inhibition. However, it is still not known whether these changes apply to both the dorsal and ventral hippocampus, which appear to be differently involved in neurodegenerative disorders. Using a Fmr1 knock-out (KO) rat model of FXS, we found increased neuronal excitability in both the dorsal and ventral KO hippocampus and increased excitatory synaptic transmission in the dorsal hippocampus...
November 17, 2023: Brain Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37979171/entorhinohippocampal-cholecystokinin-modulates-spatial-learning-by-facilitating-neuroplasticity-of-hippocampal-ca3-ca1-synapses
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Junfeng Su, Fengwen Huang, Yu Tian, Ran Tian, Gao Qianqian, Stephen Temitayo Bello, Dingxaun Zeng, Peter Jendrichovsky, C Geoffrey Lau, Wenjun Xiong, Daiguan Yu, Micky Tortorella, Xi Chen, Jufang He
The hippocampus is broadly impacted by neuromodulations. However, how neuropeptides shape the function of the hippocampus and the related spatial learning and memory remains unclear. Here, we discover the crucial role of cholecystokinin (CCK) in heterosynaptic neuromodulation from the medial entorhinal cortex (MEC) to the hippocampus. Systematic knockout of the CCK gene impairs CA3-CA1 LTP and space-related performance. The MEC provides most of the CCK-positive neurons projecting to the hippocampal region, which potentiates CA3-CA1 long-term plasticity heterosynaptically in a frequency- and NMDA receptor (NMDAR)-dependent manner...
November 17, 2023: Cell Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/37977430/hippocampal-seizures-differentially-modulate-locus-coeruleus-activity-and-result-in-consistent-time-locked-release-of-noradrenaline-in-rat-hippocampus
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lars Emil Larsen, Sielke Caestecker, Latoya Stevens, Pieter van Mierlo, Evelien Carrette, Paul Boon, Kristl Vonck, Robrecht Raedt
The locus coeruleus (LC) is a small brainstem nucleus and is the sole source of noradrenaline in the neocortex, hippocampus and cerebellum. Noradrenaline is a powerful neuromodulator involved in the regulation of excitability and plasticity of large-scale brain networks. In this study, we performed a detailed assessment of the activity of locus coeruleus neurons and changes in noradrenergic transmission during acute hippocampal seizures evoked with perforant path stimulation, using state-of-the-art methodology...
November 15, 2023: Neurobiology of Disease
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