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Enhanced synaptic transmission at the squid giant synapse by artificial seawater based on physically modified saline

Choi, Soonwook; Yu, Eunah; Rabello, Guilherme; Merlo, Suelen; Zemmar, Ajmal; Walton, Kerry D; Moreno, Herman; Moreira, Jorge E; Sugimori, Mutsuyuki; Llinas, Rodolfo R
Superfusion of the squid giant synapse with artificial seawater (ASW) based on isotonic saline containing oxygen nanobubbles (RNS60 ASW) generates an enhancement of synaptic transmission. This was determined by examining the postsynaptic response to single and repetitive presynaptic spike activation, spontaneous transmitter release, and presynaptic voltage clamp studies. In the presence of RNS60 ASW single presynaptic stimulation elicited larger postsynaptic potentials (PSP) and more robust recovery from high frequency stimulation than in control ASW. Analysis of postsynaptic noise revealed an increase in spontaneous transmitter release with modified noise kinetics in RNS60 ASW. Presynaptic voltage clamp demonstrated an increased EPSP, without an increase in presynaptic ICa(++) amplitude during RNS60 ASW superfusion. Synaptic release enhancement reached stable maxima within 5-10 min of RNS60 ASW superfusion and was maintained for the entire recording time, up to 1 h. Electronmicroscopic morphometry indicated a decrease in synaptic vesicle density and the number at active zones with an increase in the number of clathrin-coated vesicles (CCV) and large endosome-like vesicles near junctional sites. Block of mitochondrial ATP synthesis by presynaptic injection of oligomycin reduced spontaneous release and prevented the synaptic noise increase seen in RNS60 ASW. After ATP block the number of vesicles at the active zone and CCV was reduced, with an increase in large vesicles. The possibility that RNS60 ASW acts by increasing mitochondrial ATP synthesis was tested by direct determination of ATP levels in both presynaptic and postsynaptic structures. This was implemented using luciferin/luciferase photon emission, which demonstrated a marked increase in ATP synthesis following RNS60 administration. It is concluded that RNS60 positively modulates synaptic transmission by up-regulating ATP synthesis, thus leading to synaptic transmission enhancement.
PMCID:3921564
PMID: 24575037
ISSN: 1663-3563
CID: 820782

Frequency-pattern functional tomography of magnetoencephalography data allows new approach to the study of human brain organization

Llinas, Rodolfo R; Ustinin, Mikhail N
A method based on a set of new theorems for the analysis of multichannel time series is described, based on precise Fourier transform and coherence analysis of the restored signals from a detailed set of frequency components. Magnetic field recordings of spontaneous and evoked activity by means of magnetic encephalography demonstrated that multichannel precise Fourier spectrum contains a very large set of harmonics with high coherence. The inverse problem can be solved with great precision based on coherent harmonics, so the technique is a promising platform of general analysis in brain imaging. The analysis method makes it possible to reconstruct sites and timing of electrical activity generated by both spontaneous and evoked brain function at different depths in the brain in the millisecond time range.
PMCID:4010750
PMID: 24808829
ISSN: 1662-5110
CID: 970312

Intrinsic electrical properties of mammalian neurons and CNS function: a historical perspective

Llinas, Rodolfo R
This brief review summarizes work done in mammalian neuroscience concerning the intrinsic electrophysiological properties of four neuronal types; Cerebellar Purkinje cells, inferior olivary cells, thalamic cells, and some cortical interneurons. It is a personal perspective addressing an interesting time in neuroscience when the reflex view of brain function, as the paradigm to understand global neuroscience, began to be modified toward one in which sensory input modulates rather than dictates brain function. The perspective of the paper is not a comprehensive description of the intrinsic electrical properties of all nerve cells but rather addresses a set of cell types that provide indicative examples of mechanisms that modulate brain function.
PMCID:4219458
PMID: 25408634
ISSN: 1662-5102
CID: 1355902

Do you still maintain that the only significant difference between waking and REM sleep-dreaming is due to the subtraction of sensory input in REM? What is your view of the aminergic demodulation hypothesis that derives from AIM?

Chapter by: Llinas, Rodolfo R
in: Dream consciousness: Allan Hobson's new approach to the brain and its mind by Tranquillo, Nicholas [Eds]
Cham, Switzerland : Springer International, 2014
pp. 159-159
ISBN: 978-3-319-07295-1
CID: 1450112

[New Methodology for the Analysis and Representation of Human Brain Function: MEGMRIAn]

Ustinin, MN; Sychev, VV; Walton, KD; Llinas, RR
ORIGINAL:0012215
ISSN: 1994-6538
CID: 2674242

Cortical response tracking the conscious experience of threshold duration visual stimuli indicates visual perception is all or none

Sekar, Krithiga; Findley, William M; Poeppel, David; Llinas, Rodolfo R
At perceptual threshold, some stimuli are available for conscious access whereas others are not. Such threshold inputs are useful tools for investigating the events that separate conscious awareness from unconscious stimulus processing. Here, viewing unmasked, threshold-duration images was combined with recording magnetoencephalography to quantify differences among perceptual states, ranging from no awareness to ambiguity to robust perception. A four-choice scale was used to assess awareness: "didn't see" (no awareness), "couldn't identify" (awareness without identification), "unsure" (awareness with low certainty identification), and "sure" (awareness with high certainty identification). Stimulus-evoked neuromagnetic signals were grouped according to behavioral response choices. Three main cortical responses were elicited. The earliest response, peaking at approximately 100 ms after stimulus presentation, showed no significant correlation with stimulus perception. A late response ( approximately 290 ms) showed moderate correlation with stimulus awareness but could not adequately differentiate conscious access from its absence. By contrast, an intermediate response peaking at approximately 240 ms was observed only for trials in which stimuli were consciously detected. That this signal was similar for all conditions in which awareness was reported is consistent with the hypothesis that conscious visual access is relatively sharply demarcated.
PMCID:3619304
PMID: 23509248
ISSN: 0027-8424
CID: 271342

Synaptic vesicle exocytosis in hippocampal synaptosomes correlates directly with total mitochondrial volume

Ivannikov, Maxim V; Sugimori, Mutsuyuki; Llinas, Rodolfo R
Synaptic plasticity in many regions of the central nervous system leads to the continuous adjustment of synaptic strength, which is essential for learning and memory. In this study, we show by visualizing synaptic vesicle release in mouse hippocampal synaptosomes that presynaptic mitochondria and, specifically, their capacities for ATP production are essential determinants of synaptic vesicle exocytosis and its magnitude. Total internal reflection microscopy of FM1-43 loaded hippocampal synaptosomes showed that inhibition of mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation reduces evoked synaptic release. This reduction was accompanied by a substantial drop in synaptosomal ATP levels. However, cytosolic calcium influx was not affected. Structural characterization of stimulated hippocampal synaptosomes revealed that higher total presynaptic mitochondrial volumes were consistently associated with higher levels of exocytosis. Thus, synaptic vesicle release is linked to the presynaptic ability to regenerate ATP, which itself is a utility of mitochondrial density and activity.
PMCID:3488359
PMID: 22772899
ISSN: 0895-8696
CID: 210992

The olivo-cerebellar system: a key to understanding the functional significance of intrinsic oscillatory brain properties

Llinas, Rodolfo R
The reflexological view of brain function (Sherrington, 1906) has played a crucial role in defining both the nature of connectivity and the role of the synaptic interactions among neuronal circuits. One implicit assumption of this view, however, has been that CNS function is fundamentally driven by sensory input. This view was questioned as early as the beginning of the last century when a possible role for intrinsic activity in CNS function was proposed by Thomas Graham Brow (Brown, 1911, 1914). However, little progress was made in addressing intrinsic neuronal properties in vertebrates until the discovery of calcium conductances in vertebrate central neurons leading dendritic electroresponsiveness (Llinas and Hess, 1976; Llinas and Sugimori, 1980a,b) and subthreshold neuronal oscillation in mammalian inferior olive (IO) neurons (Llinas and Yarom, 1981a,b). This happened in parallel with a similar set of findings concerning invertebrate neuronal system (Marder and Bucher, 2001). The generalization into a more global view of intrinsic rhythmicity, at forebrain level, occurred initially with the demonstration that the thalamus has similar oscillatory properties (Llinas and Jahnsen, 1982) and the ionic properties responsible for some oscillatory activity were, in fact, similar to those in the IO (Jahnsen and Llinas, 1984; Llinas, 1988). Thus, lending support to the view that not only motricity, but cognitive properties, are organized as coherent oscillatory states (Pare et al., 1992; Singer, 1993; Hardcastle, 1997; Llinas et al., 1998; Varela et al., 2001).
PMCID:3904115
PMID: 24478634
ISSN: 1662-5110
CID: 820522

Central Pain : A Thalamic Deafferentation Generating Thalamocortical Dysrhythmia

Chapter by: Llinas, Rodolfo R; Walton, Kerry D
in: Chronic pain and brain abnormalities by Saab, Carl Y [Eds]
Amsterdam : Academic Press, 2013
pp. 61-74
ISBN: 0123983894
CID: 1412652

[Integrated Software MEGMRIAn for the Analysis and Modeling of the Magnetic Encephalography Data]

Ustinin, MN; Sychev, VV; Llinas, RR
ORIGINAL:0012218
ISSN: 1994-6538
CID: 2674262