keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36735531/positive-feedback-of-efferent-copy-via-pontine-nucleus-facilitates-cerebellum-mediated-associative-learning
#41
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Na Xiao, Guangyan Wu, Zhanhong Zhou, Juan Yao, Bing Wu, Jianfeng Sui, Chung Tin
The cerebellum is critical for motor coordination and learning. However, the role of feedback circuitry in this brain region has not been fully explored. Here, we characterize a nucleo-ponto-cortical feedback pathway in classical delayed eyeblink conditioning (dEBC) of rats. We find that the efference copy is conveyed from the interposed cerebellar nucleus (Int) to cerebellar cortex through pontine nucleus (PN). Inhibiting or exciting the projection from the Int to the PN can decelerate or speed up acquisition of dEBC, respectively...
February 2, 2023: Cell Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36430459/choline-improves-neonatal-hypoxia-ischemia-induced-changes-in-male-but-not-female-rats
#42
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Tayo Adeyemo, Ayodele Jaiyesimi, Jill G Bumgardner, Charity Lohr, Aditi Banerjee, Mary C McKenna, Jaylyn Waddell
Choline is an essential nutrient with many roles in brain development and function. Supplementation of choline in early development can have long-lasting benefits. Our experiments aimed to determine the efficacy of choline supplementation in a postnatal day (PND) 10 rat model of neonatal hypoxia ischemia (HI) at term using both male and female rat pups. Choline (100 mg/kg) or saline administration was initiated the day after birth and given daily for 10 or 14 consecutive days. We determined choline's effects on neurite outgrowth of sex-specific cultured cerebellar granule cells after HI with and without choline...
November 12, 2022: International Journal of Molecular Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36405788/quantitative-properties-of-the-creation-and-activation-of-a-cell-intrinsic-duration-encoding-engram
#43
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Charles Randy Gallistel, Fredrik Johansson, Dan-Anders Jirenhed, Anders Rasmussen, Matthew Ricci, Germund Hesslow
The engram encoding the interval between the conditional stimulus (CS) and the unconditional stimulus (US) in eyeblink conditioning resides within a small population of cerebellar Purkinje cells. CSs activate this engram to produce a pause in the spontaneous firing rate of the cell, which times the CS-conditional blink. We developed a Bayesian algorithm that finds pause onsets and offsets in the records from individual CS-alone trials. We find that the pause consists of a single unusually long interspike interval...
2022: Frontiers in Computational Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36352508/pre-ataxic-loss-of-intrinsic-plasticity-and-motor-learning-in-a-mouse-model-of-sca1
#44
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Catarina Osório, Joshua J White, Heiling Lu, Gerrit C Beekhof, Francesca Romana Fiocchi, Charlotte A Andriessen, Stephanie Dijkhuizen, Laura Post, Martijn Schonewille
Spinocerebellar ataxias are neurodegenerative diseases the hallmark symptom of which is the development of ataxia due to cerebellar dysfunction. Purkinje cells (PCs), the principal neurons of the cerebellar cortex, are the main cells affected in these disorders but the sequence of pathological events leading to their dysfunction is poorly understood. Understanding the origins of PC dysfunction before it manifests is imperative to interpret the functional and behavioural consequences of cerebellar-related disorders, providing an optimal timeline for therapeutic interventions...
November 10, 2022: Brain
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36351971/cerebellum-dependent-associative-learning-is-not-impaired-in-a-mouse-model-of-neurofibromatosis-type-1
#45
JOURNAL ARTICLE
M J Ottenhoff, S Dijkhuizen, A C H Ypelaar, N L de Oude, S K E Koekkoek, S S-H Wang, C I De Zeeuw, Y Elgersma, H J Boele
Individuals with Neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF1) experience a high degree of motor problems. The cerebellum plays a pivotal role in motor functioning and the NF1 gene is highly expressed in cerebellar Purkinje cells. However, it is not well understood to what extent NF1 affects cerebellar functioning and how this relates to NF1 motor functioning. Therefore, we subjected global Nf1+/- mice to a cerebellum-dependent associative learning task, called Pavlovian eyeblink conditioning. Additionally, we assessed general motor function and muscle strength in Nf1+/- mice...
November 9, 2022: Scientific Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36324646/sensory-over-responsivity-and-aberrant-plasticity-in-cerebellar-cortex-in-a-mouse-model-of-syndromic-autism
#46
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Dana H Simmons, Silas E Busch, Heather K Titley, Giorgio Grasselli, Justine Shih, Xiaofei Du, Cenfu Wei, Christopher M Gomez, Claire Piochon, Christian Hansel
Background: Patients with autism spectrum disorder often show altered responses to sensory stimuli as well as motor deficits, including an impairment of delay eyeblink conditioning, which involves integration of sensory signals in the cerebellum. Here, we identify abnormalities in parallel fiber (PF) and climbing fiber (CF) signaling in the mouse cerebellar cortex that may contribute to these pathologies. Methods: We used a mouse model for the human 15q11-13 duplication (patDp/+) and studied responses to sensory stimuli in Purkinje cells from awake mice using two-photon imaging of GCaMP6f signals...
October 2022: Biol Psychiatry Glob Open Sci
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36197002/contextual-effects-in-sensorimotor-adaptation-adhere-to-associative-learning-rules
#47
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Guy Avraham, Jordan A Taylor, Assaf Breska, Richard B Ivry, Samuel David McDougle
Traditional associative learning tasks focus on the formation of associations between salient events and arbitrary stimuli that predict those events. This is exemplified in cerebellar-dependent delay eyeblink conditioning, where arbitrary cues such as a light or tone act as conditioning stimuli (CSs) that predict aversive sensations at the cornea (unconditioned stimulus, US). Here we ask if a similar framework could be applied to another type of cerebellar-dependent sensorimotor learning - sensorimotor adaptation...
October 5, 2022: ELife
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36185409/role-of-cerebellar-cortex-in-associative-learning-and-memory-in-guinea-pigs
#48
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Rui Li, Qi Li, Xiaolei Chu, Lan Li, Xiaoyi Li, Juan Li, Zhen Yang, Mingjing Xu, Changlu Luo, Kui Zhang
Time-related cognitive function refers to the capacity of the brain to store, extract, and process specific information. Previous studies demonstrated that the cerebellar cortex participates in advanced cognitive functions, but the role of the cerebellar cortex in cognitive functions is unclear. We established a behavioral model using classical eyeblink conditioning to study the role of the cerebellar cortex in associative learning and memory and the underlying mechanisms. We performed an investigation to determine whether eyeblink conditioning could be established by placing the stimulating electrode in the middle cerebellar peduncle...
2022: Open Life Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36167784/sustained-activity-of-hippocampal-parvalbumin-expressing-interneurons-supports-trace-eyeblink-conditioning-in-mice
#49
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Rongrong Li, Weiwei Zhang, Jie Zhang, Haibo Zhang, Hui Chen, Zhian Hu, Zhongxiang Yao, Hao Chen, Bo Hu
While recent studies have revealed an involvement of hippocampal interneurons in learning the association among time-separated events, its underlying cellular mechanisms remained not fully clarified. Here, we combined multi-channel recording and optogenetics to elucidate how the hippocampal parvalbumin-expressing interneurons (PV-IN) support associative learning. To address this issue, we trained the mice (box sexes) to learn hippocampus-dependent trace eyeblink conditioning (tEBC) where they associated a light flash conditioned stimulus (CS) with a corneal airpuff unconditioned stimuli (US) separated by a 250-ms time interval...
September 27, 2022: Journal of Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36086302/cerebellum-involvement-in-dystonia-insights-from-a-spiking-neural-network-model-during-associative-learning
#50
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Alice Geminiani, Aurimas Mockevicius, Egidio D'Angelo, Claudia Casellato
Dystonia is a neurological movement disorder characterized by twisting and repetitive movements or abnormal fixed postures. This complex brain disease has usually been associated with damages to the Basal Ganglia. However, recent studies point out the potential role of the cerebellum. Indeed, motor learning is impaired in dystonic patients, e.g. during eyeblink classical conditioning, a typical cerebellum-driven associative learning protocol, and rodents with local cerebellar damages exhibit dystonic movements...
July 2022: Annual International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36018285/learning-related-changes-in-cellular-activity-within-mouse-dentate-gyrus-during-trace-eyeblink-conditioning
#51
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lisa N Miller, Craig Weiss, John F Disterhoft
Because the dentate gyrus serves as the first site for information processing in the hippocampal trisynaptic circuit, it an important structure for the formation of associative memories. Previous findings in rabbit had recorded populations of cells within dentate gyrus that may bridge the temporal gap between stimuli to support memory formation during trace eyeblink conditioning, an associative learning task. However, this previous work was unable to identify the types of cells demonstrating this type of activity...
October 2022: Hippocampus
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36006500/trace-classical-conditioning-impairment-after-lesion-of-the-lateral-part-of-the-goldfish-telencephalic-pallium-suggests-a-long-ancestry-of-the-episodic-memory-function-of-the-vertebrate-hippocampus
#52
JOURNAL ARTICLE
A Gómez, B Rodríguez-Expósito, F M Ocaña, C Salas, F Rodríguez
There is an ongoing debate on the evolutionary origin of the episodic memory function of the hippocampus. A widely accepted hypothesis claims that the hippocampus first evolved as a dedicated system for spatial navigation in ancestral vertebrates, being transformed later in phylogeny to support a broader role in episodic memory with the emergence of mammals. On the contrary, an alternative hypothesis holds that the hippocampus of ancestral vertebrates originally encoded both the spatial and temporal dimensions of relational memories since its evolutionary appearance, thus suggesting that the episodic-like memory function of the hippocampus could be the primitive condition in vertebrate forebrain evolution...
August 25, 2022: Brain Structure & Function
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35932812/neuronal-tract-tracing-with-two-strains-of-herpes-simplex-virus-1
#53
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Deidre E O'Dell, Carrie A Smith-Bell, Lynn W Enquist, Esteban A Engel, Bernard G Schreurs
BACKGROUND: Neuroinvasive herpes simplex-1 (HSV-1) isolates including H129 and McIntyre cross at or near synapses labeling higher-order neurons directly connected to infected cells. H129 spreads predominately in the anterograde direction while McIntyre strains spread only in the retrograde direction. However, it is unknown if neurons are functional once infected with derivatives of H129 or McIntyre. New Method We describe a previously unpublished HSV-1 recombinant derived from H129 (HSV-373) expressing mCherry fluorescent reporters and one new McIntyre recombinant (HSV-780) expressing the mCherry fluorophore and demonstrate how infections affect neuron viability...
August 3, 2022: Brain Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35918313/acute-orexin-antagonism-selectively-modulates-anticipatory-anxiety-in-humans-implications-for-addiction-and-anxiety
#54
RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL
Stephanie M Gorka, Kia J Khorrami, Charles A Manzler, K Luan Phan
Research indicates that heightened anticipatory anxiety underlies several forms of psychopathology. Anticipatory anxiety can be reliably and objectively measured in the laboratory using the No-Predictable-Unpredictable (NPU) threat paradigm. The NPU paradigm is an ideal research tool for the NIH 'Fast-Fail' approach of screening promising compounds and testing human target engagement. Evidence from preclinical studies suggests that the hypocretin/orexin (ORX) hypothalamic neuropeptide system is a potential means for modulating anticipatory anxiety and disrupting stress-related alcohol use...
August 2, 2022: Translational Psychiatry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35902465/cerebellum-and-emotion-memory
#55
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Melanie Mark, Johanna Pakusch, Thomas M Ernst, Dagmar Timmann
Fear is an important emotion for survival, and the cerebellum has been found to contribute not only to innate affective and defensive behavior, but also to learned fear responses. Acquisition and retention of fear conditioned bradycardia and freezing have been shown to depend on the integrity of the cerebellar vermis in rodents. There is a considerable number of brain imaging studies, which observe activation of the human cerebellum in fear conditioning paradigms. Different to what one may expect based on the initial cerebellar lesion studies, activations related to the learned prediction of threat go well beyond the vermis, and are most prominent in the lateral cerebellum...
2022: Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35835794/prefrontal-projections-to-the-nucleus-reuniens-signal-behavioral-relevance-of-stimuli-during-associative-learning
#56
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Xiaotian Yu, Fasika Jembere, Kaori Takehara-Nishiuchi
The nucleus reuniens (RE) is necessary for memories dependent on the interaction between the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) and hippocampus (HPC). One example is trace eyeblink conditioning, in which the mPFC exhibits differential activity to neutral conditioned stimuli (CS) depending on their contingency with an aversive unconditioned stimulus (US). To test if this relevancy signal is routed to the RE, we photometrically recorded mPFC axon terminals within the RE and tracked their changes with learning. As a comparison, we measured prefrontal terminal activity in the mediodorsal thalamus (MD), which lacks connectivity with the HPC...
July 14, 2022: Scientific Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35805089/mglur5-is-substitutable-for-mglur1-in-cerebellar-purkinje-cells-for-motor-coordination-developmental-synapse-elimination-and-motor-learning
#57
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Maria Harbers, Harumi Nakao, Takaki Watanabe, Kyoko Matsuyama, Shoichi Tohyama, Kazuki Nakao, Yasushi Kishimoto, Masanobu Kano, Atsu Aiba
Group I metabotropic glutamate receptors (mGluRs) include mGluR1 and mGluR5, which are coupled to the Gq family of heterotrimeric G-proteins and readily activated by their selective agonist 3,5-dihydroxyphenilglycine (DHPG). mGluR1 and mGluR5 exhibit nearly complementary distributions spatially or temporally in the central nervous system (CNS). In adult cerebellar Purkinje cells (PCs), mGluR1 is a dominant group I mGluR and mGluR5 is undetectable. mGluR1 expression increases substantially during the first three weeks of postnatal development and remains high throughout adulthood...
June 23, 2022: Cells
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35690341/sex-dependent-effects-of-chronic-microdrive-implantation-on-acquisition-of-trace-eyeblink-conditioning
#58
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Amy P Rapp, Timothy J Hark, John M Power, Jeffery N Savas, M Matthew Oh, John F Disterhoft
Neuroscience techniques, including in vivo recording, have allowed for a great expansion in knowledge; however, this technology may also affect the very phenomena researchers set out to investigate. Including both female and male mice in our associative learning experiments shed light on sex differences on the impact of chronic implantation of tetrodes on learning. While previous research showed intact female mice acquired trace eyeblink conditioning faster than male and ovariectomized females, implantation of chronic microdrive arrays showed sexually dimorphic effects on learning...
September 2022: Neurobiology of Learning and Memory
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35669201/eeg-based-index-for-timely-detecting-user-s-drowsiness-occurrence-in-automotive-applications
#59
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Gianluca Di Flumeri, Vincenzo Ronca, Andrea Giorgi, Alessia Vozzi, Pietro Aricò, Nicolina Sciaraffa, Hong Zeng, Guojun Dai, Wanzeng Kong, Fabio Babiloni, Gianluca Borghini
Human errors are widely considered among the major causes of road accidents. Furthermore, it is estimated that more than 90% of vehicle crashes causing fatal and permanent injuries are directly related to mental tiredness, fatigue, and drowsiness of the drivers. In particular, driving drowsiness is recognized as a crucial aspect in the context of road safety, since drowsy drivers can suddenly lose control of the car. Moreover, the driving drowsiness episodes mostly appear suddenly without any prior behavioral evidence...
2022: Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35609446/the-blinking-eye-as-a-window-into-tinnitus-a-new-animal-model-of-tinnitus-in-the-macaque
#60
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Lars Rogenmoser, Paweł Kuśmierek, Denis Archakov, Josef P Rauschecker
Tinnitus is a highly prevalent, largely untreatable auditory disorder, characterized by the perception of phantom sound often in the form of incessant ringing or hissing. Despite longstanding research with animal models, its underlying pathophysiological causes remain poorly understood. Given recent data characterizing tinnitus as a disorder with a strong neurocognitive component, progress in the field might be hastened by testing a wider spectrum of animal models, including nonhuman primates, and by developing alternative measurement techniques of tinnitus, especially in animals...
July 2022: Hearing Research
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