Searched for: school:SOM
Department/Unit:Neuroscience Institute
Segmental organization of hindbrain functional circuits in adult anamniotes [Meeting Abstract]
Straka, H; Baker, R; Gilland, E
ISI:000251266000482
ISSN: 0362-2525
CID: 87179
Alpha7 nicotinic receptor up-regulation in cholinergic basal forebrain neurons in Alzheimer disease
Counts, Scott E; He, Bin; Che, Shaoli; Ikonomovic, Milos D; DeKosky, Steven T; Ginsberg, Stephen D; Mufson, Elliott J
BACKGROUND: Dysfunction of basocortical cholinergic projection neurons of the nucleus basalis (NB) correlates with cognitive deficits in Alzheimer disease (AD). Nucleus basalis neurons receive cholinergic inputs and express nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs) and muscarinic AChRs (mAChRs), which may regulate NB neuron activity in AD. Although alterations in these AChRs occur in the AD cortex, there is little information detailing whether defects in nAChR and mAChR gene expression occur in cholinergic NB neurons during disease progression. OBJECTIVE: To determine whether nAChR and mAChR gene expression is altered in cholinergic NB neurons during the progression of AD. DESIGN: Individual NB neurons from subjects diagnosed ante mortem as having no cognitive impairment (NCI), mild cognitive impairment (MCI), or mild to moderate AD were analyzed by single-cell AChR expression profiling via custom-designed microarrays. SETTING: Academic research. PARTICIPANTS: Participants were members of the Rush Religious Orders Study cohort. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction was performed to validate microarray findings. RESULTS: Cholinergic NB neurons displayed a statistically significant up-regulation of alpha7 nAChR messenger RNA expression in subjects with mild to moderate AD compared with those with NCI and MCI (P<.001). No differences were found for other nAChR and mAChR subtypes across the cohort. Expression levels of alpha7 nAChRs were inversely associated with Global Cognitive Score and with Mini-Mental State Examination performance. CONCLUSIONS: Up-regulation of alpha7 nAChRs may signal a compensatory response to maintain basocortical cholinergic activity during AD progression. Alternatively, putative competitive interactions of this receptor with beta-amyloid may provide a pathogenic mechanism for NB dysfunction. Increasing NB alpha7 nAChR expression may serve as a marker for the progression of AD.
PMID: 18071042
ISSN: 0003-9942
CID: 165459
All optical interface for parallel, remote, and spatiotemporal control of neuronal activity
Wang, Sheng; Szobota, Stephanie; Wang, Yuan; Volgraf, Matthew; Liu, Zhaowei; Sun, Cheng; Trauner, Dirk; Isacoff, Ehud Y; Zhang, Xiang
A key technical barrier to furthering our understanding of complex neural networks has been the lack of tools for the simultaneous spatiotemporal control and detection of activity in a large number of neurons. Here, we report an all-optical system for achieving this kind of parallel and selective control and detection. We do this by delivering spatiotemporally complex optical stimuli through a digital micromirror spatiotemporal light modulator to cells expressing the light-activated ionotropic glutamate receptor (LiGluR), which have been labeled with a calcium dye to provide a fluorescent report of activity. Reliable and accurate spatiotemporal stimulation was obtained on HEK293 cells and cultured rat hippocampal neurons. This technique should be adaptable to in vivo applications and could serve as an optical interface for communicating with complex neural circuits.
PMID: 18034506
ISSN: 1530-6984
CID: 2485382
Synaptic differentiation is defective in mice lacking acetylcholine receptor beta-subunit tyrosine phosphorylation
Friese, Matthew B; Blagden, Chris S; Burden, Steven J
Agrin activates MuSK, a receptor tyrosine kinase expressed in skeletal muscle, leading to tyrosine phosphorylation of the acetylcholine receptor (AChR) beta-subunit and clustering of AChRs. The importance of AChR beta-subunit tyrosine phosphorylation in clustering AChRs and regulating synaptic differentiation is poorly understood. We generated mice with targeted mutations in the three intracellular tyrosines of the AChR beta-subunit (AChR-beta(3F/3F)). Mice lacking AChR beta-subunit tyrosine phosphorylation thrive postnatally and have no overt behavioral defects, indicating that AChR beta-subunit tyrosine phosphorylation is not essential for the formation of neuromuscular synapses. Nonetheless, the size of synapses and the density of synaptic AChRs are reduced in AChR- beta(3F/3F) mutant mice. Moreover, synapses are structurally simplified and the organization of postjunctional folds is aberrant in mice lacking tyrosine phosphorylation of the AChR beta-subunit. Furthermore, mutant AChRs cluster poorly in response to agrin and are readily extracted from the cell surface of cultured myotubes by non-ionic detergent. These data indicate that tyrosine phosphorylation of the AChR beta-subunit has an important role in organizing AChRs and regulating synaptic differentiation
PMID: 17959719
ISSN: 0950-1991
CID: 76142
The role of impaired neuronal communication in neurological disorders
He, Biyu J; Shulman, Gordon L; Snyder, Abraham Z; Corbetta, Maurizio
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Basic and translational neuroscience findings indicate that normal brain function depends on activity synchronization within distributed brain networks. This conclusion suggests a view of how brain injury causes behavioral deficits that differs from traditional localizationist views. RECENT FINDINGS: Novel functional neuroimaging methods demonstrate coherent activity in large-scale networks not only during task performance but also, surprisingly, at rest (i.e. in the absence of stimuli, tasks, or overt responses). Furthermore, breakdown of activity coherence at rest, even in regions of the brain that are structurally intact, correlates with behavioral deficits and their recovery after injury. Breakdown of functional connectivity appears to occur not just after local injury but also in other conditions that affect large-scale neural communication. SUMMARY: A network perspective is fundamental to appreciating the pathophysiology of brain injury at the systems level and the underlying mechanisms of recovery, and for developing novel strategies of rehabilitation.
PMID: 17992085
ISSN: 1350-7540
CID: 1781282
DNA promoter hypermethylation in saliva for the early diagnosis of oral cancer
Viet, C T; Jordan, Richard C K; Schmidt, Brian L
Oral health care professionals could drastically improve the quality of life for patients with potentially malignant oral lesions by using a noninvasive test that could be used to detect cancer using saliva. Promoter DNA hypermethylation is a critical step in oral carcinogenesis and has a number of significant advantages over genetic and protein diagnostic markers. Methylight is a recently developed assay that rapidly quantifies promoter hypermethylation and could potentially be applied into a clinical setting
PMID: 18240747
ISSN: 1043-2256
CID: 132026
Human fear-related motor neurocircuitry
Butler, T; Pan, H; Tuescher, O; Engelien, A; Goldstein, M; Epstein, J; Weisholtz, D; Root, J C; Protopopescu, X; Cunningham-Bussel, A C; Chang, L; Xie, X-H; Chen, Q; Phelps, E A; Ledoux, J E; Stern, E; Silbersweig, D A
Using functional magnetic resonance imaging and an experimental paradigm of instructed fear, we observed a striking pattern of decreased activity in primary motor cortex with increased activity in dorsal basal ganglia during anticipation of aversive electrodermal stimulation in 42 healthy participants. We interpret this pattern of activity in motor neurocircuitry in response to cognitively-induced fear in relation to evolutionarily-conserved responses to threat that may be relevant to understanding normal and pathological fear in humans
PMID: 17980493
ISSN: 0306-4522
CID: 90568
The Down syndrome critical region protein RCAN1 regulates long-term potentiation and memory via inhibition of phosphatase signaling
Hoeffer, Charles A; Dey, Asim; Sachan, Nita; Wong, Helen; Patterson, Richard J; Shelton, John M; Richardson, James A; Klann, Eric; Rothermel, Beverly A
Regulator of calcineurin 1 (RCAN1/MCIP1/DSCR1) regulates the calmodulin-dependent phosphatase calcineurin. Because it is located on human chromosome 21, RCAN1 has been postulated to contribute to mental retardation in Down syndrome and has been reported to be associated with neuronal degeneration in Alzheimer's disease. The studies herein are the first to assess the role of RCAN1 in memory and synaptic plasticity by examining the behavioral and electrophysiological properties of RCAN1 knock-out mice. These mice exhibit deficits in spatial learning and memory, reduced associative cued memory, and impaired late-phase long-term potentiation (L-LTP), phenotypes similar to those of transgenic mice with increased calcineurin activity. Consistent with this, the RCAN1 knock-out mice display increased enzymatic calcineurin activity, increased abundance of a cleaved calcineurin fragment, and decreased phosphorylation of the calcineurin substrate dopamine and cAMP-regulated phosphoprotein-32. We propose a model in which RCAN1 plays a positive role in L-LTP and memory by constraining phosphatase signaling
PMID: 18045910
ISSN: 0270-6474
CID: 107622
Abnormal conduction and morphology in the atrioventricular node of mice with atrioventricular canal targeted deletion of Alk3/Bmpr1a receptor
Stroud, Dina Myers; Gaussin, Vinciane; Burch, John B E; Yu, Cindy; Mishina, Yuji; Schneider, Michael D; Fishman, Glenn I; Morley, Gregory E
BACKGROUND: The atrioventricular (AV) node is essential for the sequential excitation and optimized contraction of the adult multichambered heart; however, relatively little is known about its formation from the embryonic AV canal. A recent study demonstrated that signaling by Alk3, the type 1a receptor for bone morphogenetic proteins, in the myocardium of the AV canal was required for the development of both the AV valves and annulus fibrosus. To test the hypothesis that bone morphogenetic protein signaling also plays a role in AV node formation, we investigated conduction system function and AV node morphology in adult mice with conditional deletion of Alk3 in the AV canal. METHODS AND RESULTS: High-resolution optical mapping with correlative histological analysis of 28 mutant hearts revealed 4 basic phenotypic classes based on electrical activation patterns and volume-conducted ECGs. The frequency of AV node conduction and morphological abnormalities increased from no detectable anomalies (class I) to severe defects (class IV), which included the presence of bypass tracts, abnormal ventricular activation patterns, fibrosis of the AV node, and twin AV nodes. CONCLUSIONS: The present findings demonstrate that bone morphogenetic protein signaling is required in the myocardium of the AV canal for proper AV junction development, including the AV node
PMCID:2947829
PMID: 17998461
ISSN: 1524-4539
CID: 75196
Differential make-up of atrial and ventricular KA [Meeting Abstract]
Flagg, TP; Kurata, HT; Coetzee, WA; Lefer, DJ; Magnuson, MA; Nichols, CG
ISI:000251225000047
ISSN: 0009-7330
CID: 75214