collection
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26186190/elucidating-an-affective-pain-circuit-that-creates-a-threat-memory
#1
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sung Han, Matthew T Soleiman, Marta E Soden, Larry S Zweifel, Richard D Palmiter
Animals learn to avoid harmful situations by associating a neutral stimulus with a painful one, resulting in a stable threat memory. In mammals, this form of learning requires the amygdala. Although pain is the main driver of aversive learning, the mechanism that transmits pain signals to the amygdala is not well resolved. Here, we show that neurons expressing calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) in the parabrachial nucleus are critical for relaying pain signals to the central nucleus of amygdala and that this pathway may transduce the affective motivational aspects of pain...
July 16, 2015: Cell
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24121436/genetic-identification-of-a-neural-circuit-that-suppresses-appetite
#2
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Matthew E Carter, Marta E Soden, Larry S Zweifel, Richard D Palmiter
Appetite suppression occurs after a meal and in conditions when it is unfavourable to eat, such as during illness or exposure to toxins. A brain region proposed to play a role in appetite suppression is the parabrachial nucleus, a heterogeneous population of neurons surrounding the superior cerebellar peduncle in the brainstem. The parabrachial nucleus is thought to mediate the suppression of appetite induced by the anorectic hormones amylin and cholecystokinin, as well as by lithium chloride and lipopolysaccharide, compounds that mimic the effects of toxic foods and bacterial infections, respectively...
November 7, 2013: Nature
https://read.qxmd.com/read/27301688/genetically-and-functionally-defined-nts-to-pbn-brain-circuits-mediating-anorexia
#3
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Carolyn W Roman, Victor A Derkach, Richard D Palmiter
The central nervous system controls food consumption to maintain metabolic homoeostasis. In response to a meal, visceral signals from the gut activate neurons in the nucleus of the solitary tract (NTS) via the vagus nerve. These NTS neurons then excite brain regions known to mediate feeding behaviour, such as the lateral parabrachial nucleus (PBN). We previously described a neural circuit for appetite suppression involving calcitonin gene-related protein (CGRP)-expressing PBN (CGRP(PBN)) neurons; however, the molecular identity of the inputs to these neurons was not established...
June 15, 2016: Nature Communications
https://read.qxmd.com/read/9495559/identification-of-rat-brainstem-multisynaptic-connections-to-the-oral-motor-nuclei-in-the-rat-using-pseudorabies-virus-ii-facial-muscle-motor-systems
#4
REVIEW
R A Fay, R Norgren
The present experiments continue our investigations of the higher order afferent systems controlling the orofacial musculature. Pseudorabies virus (PRV) was injected into the buccinator, platysma, posterior digastric, and zygomatic muscles in bilaterally sympathectomized rats. Injection volumes ranged from 6 to 12 microl with average titers of 7 x 10(8) pfu/ml and maximum survival times of 96 h. The labeling patterns and distributions were similar across the individual muscles and between muscle groups (perioral vs...
December 1997: Brain Research. Brain Research Reviews
https://read.qxmd.com/read/19330820/corticofugal-projections-to-trigeminal-motoneurons-innervating-antagonistic-jaw-muscles-in-rats-as-demonstrated-by-anterograde-and-retrograde-tract-tracing
#5
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Atsushi Yoshida, Ikuro Taki, Zheng Chang, Chie Iida, Tahsinul Haque, Akiko Tomita, Shinichiro Seki, Shinya Yamamoto, Yuji Masuda, Masayuki Moritani, Yoshio Shigenaga
Little is known about the organization of corticofugal projections controlling antagonistic jaw muscles. To address this issue, we employed retrograde (Fluorogold; FG) and anterograde (biotinylated dextran amine; BDA) tracing techniques in rats. Three groups of premotoneurons were identified by injecting FG into the jaw-closing (JC) and -opening (JO) subdivisions of the trigeminal motor nucleus (Vmo). These were 1) the intertrigeminal region (Vint) and principal trigeminal sensory nucleus for JC nucleus; 2) the reticular region medial to JO nucleus (RmJO) for JO nucleus; and 3) the parabrachial (Pb) and supratrigeminal (Vsup) nuclei, reticular regions medial and ventral to JC nucleus, rostrodorsomedial oralis (Vor), and juxtatrigeminal region (Vjuxt) containing a mixture of premotoneurons to both the nuclei...
June 1, 2009: Journal of Comparative Neurology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26031605/anatomical-organization-of-descending-cortical-projections-orchestrating-the-patterns-of-cortically-induced-rhythmical-jaw-muscle-activity-in-guinea-pigs
#6
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Takafumi Kato, Shinichiro Seki, Makoto Higashiyama, Yuji Masuda, Seiichiro Kitamura, Atsushi Yoshida
Repetitive electrical microstimulation to the cortical masticatory area (CMA) evokes distinct patterns of rhythmical jaw muscle activities (RJMAs) in animals. This study aimed to investigate the characteristics of the descending projections from the CMA, associated with distinct patterns of RJMAs, to the thalamus, midbrain, pons and medulla in guinea pigs. RJMAs with continuous masseter and digastric bursts (CB-RJMAs) and stimulus-locked digastric sub-bursts (SLB-RJMAs) were induced from the anterior and posterior areas of the rostral region of the lateral agranular cortex, and chewing-like RJMAs from the rostral region of the granular cortex...
October 2015: Neuroscience Research
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