205 research outputs found
Sleep deprivation directly following eyeblink-conditioning impairs memory consolidation
The relation between sleep and different forms of memory formation continues to be a relevant topic in our daily life. Sleep has been found to affect cerebellum-dependent procedural memory formation, but it remains to be elucidated to what extent the level of sleep deprivation directly after motor training also influences our ability to store and retrieve memories. Here, we studied the effect of disturbed sleep in mice during two different time-windows, one covering the first four hours following eyeblink conditioning (EBC) and another window following the next period of four hours. Compared to control mice with sleep ad libitum, the percentage of conditioned responses and their amplitude were impaired when mice were deprived of sleep directly after conditioning
Cerebellum: What is in a Name? Historical Origins and First Use of This Anatomical Term
In this paper, we study who first used the Latin anatomical term “cerebellum” for the posterior part of the brain. The suggestion that this term was introduced by Leonardo da Vinci is unlikely. Just before the start of the da Vinci era in the fifteenth century, several authors referred to the cerebellum as “cerebri posteriorus.” Instead, in his translation of Galen’s anatomical text De utilitare particularum of 1307, Nicolo da Reggio used the Latinized Greek word “parencephalon.” More peculiar was the Latin nautical term “puppi,” referring to the stern of a ship, that was applied to the cerebellum by Constantine the African in his translation of the Arabic Liber regius in the eleventh century. The first to use the term “cerebellum” appears to be Magnus Hundt in his Anthropologia from 1501. Like many of the anatomists of this period, he was a humanist with an interest in classical literature. They may have encountered the term “cerebellum” in the writings by classical authors such as Celsus, where it was used as the diminutive of “cerebrum” for the small brains of small animals, and, subsequently, applied the term to the posterior part of the brain. In the subsequent decades of the sixteenth century, an increasing number of pre-Vesalian authors of anatomical texts started to use the name “cerebellum,” initially often combined with one or more of the earlier terms, but eventually more frequently in isolation. We found that a woodcut in Dryander’s Anatomia capitis humani of 1536 is the first realistic picture of the cerebellum
Ultrastructure of the cat inferior olive : an anatomical study using three new combination techniques
The present ultrastructural study focuses
on two of the subnuclei of the IO: The medial
accessory olive (MAO) and the principal
olive (PO). These subnuclei, which are
predominantly innervated by descending
systems and by a recurrent pathway from the
central cerebellar nuclei, may be involved in
the preparation and execution of movements.
Accurate timing obviously is essential in
these processes. The morphological observations
of this study will be discussed in
relation to the electrophysiological properties
of the olivary neurons (Chapter V). It will be
attempted to show that the specific formation
of the dendritic elements of these cells
together with their synaptic input are well
suited to serve as a timing devic
Forward Signaling by Unipolar Brush Cells in the Mouse Cerebellum
Unipolar brush cells (UBCs) are glutamatergic interneurons prominently present in the granular layer of the vestibulocerebellum. UBCs engage in extensive synaptic contact with a single presynaptic mossy fiber and signal to downstream granule cells through an elaborate network of mossy fiber-like axons. Ultrastructural examinations and electrophysiological recordings in organotypic slice cultures have indicated that UBCs target not only granule cells but also other UBCs, thus forming chains of two or perhaps more interconnected UBCs. In this report, we show recordings of spontaneous and evoked (di)synaptic events in granule cells and UBCs in fresh cerebellar slices from juvenile mice (5–7 weeks). The patterns of arrival of synaptic events were consistent with the presence of a presynaptic UBC, and recordings from UBCs displayed spontaneous protracted synaptic events characteristic of UBC excitatory synaptic transmission. These results highlight that chains of UBCs could further extend the temporal range of delayed and protracted signaling in the cerebellar cortical network
Editorial: The olivo-cerebellar system
Investigation on the olivo-cerebellum system has attained a high level of sophistication leading to define several structural and functional properties of neurons, synapses, connections and circuits. Research has expanded and deepened in so many directions, and so many theories and models have been proposed, that an ensemble review of the matter is now neede
Repeated mild injury causes cumulative damage to hippocampal cells
An interesting hypothesis in the study of neurotrauma is that repeated
traumatic brain injury may result in cumulative damage to cells of the
brain. However, post-injury sequelae are difficult to address at the
cellular level in vivo. Therefore, it is necessary to complement these
studies with experiments conducted in vitro. In this report, the effects
of single and repeated traumatic injury in vitro were investigated in
cultured mouse hippocampal cells using a well characterized model of
stretch-induced injury. Cell damage was assessed by the level of propidium
iodide (PrI) uptake and retention of fluorescein diacetate (FDA).
Uninjured control wells displayed minimal PrI uptake and high levels of
FDA retention. Mild, moderate and severe levels of stretch caused
increasing amounts of PrI uptake, respectively, when measured at 15 min
and 24 h post-injury, indicating increased cellular damage with increasing
amounts of stretch. For repeated injury studies, cultures received a
second injury 1 h after the initial insult. Repeated mild injury caused a
slight increase in PrI uptake compared with single injury at 15 min and 24
h post-injury, which was evident primarily in glial cells. However, the
neurites of neurones in cultures that received repeated insults showed
signs of damage that were not evident after a single mild injury. The
release of neurone-specific enolase (NSE) and S-100beta protein, two
common clinical markers of CNS damage, was also measured following the
repeated injuries paradigm. When measured at 6 h post-injury, both NSE and
S-100beta were found to be elevated after repeated mild injuries when
compared with the single injury group. These results suggest that cells of
the hippocampus may be susceptible to cumulative damage following repeated
mild traumatic insults. Both glial cells and neurones appear to exhibit
increased signs of damage after repetitive injury. To our knowledge, this
study represents the first report on the effects of repeated mechanical
insults on specific cells of the brain using an in vitro model system. The
biochemical pathways of cellular degradation following repeated mild
injuries may differ considerably from those that are activated by a single
mild insult. Therefore, we hope to use this model in order to investigate
secondary pathways of cellular damage after repeated mild traumatic
injury, and as a rapid and economical means of screening possibilities for
treatment strategies, including pharmaceutical intervention
The dynamic characteristics of the mouse horizontal vestibulo-ocular and optokinetic response
In the present study the optokinetic reflex, vestibulo-ocular reflex and their interaction were investigated in the mouse, using a modified subconjunctival search coil technique. Gain of the ocular response to sinusoidal optokinetic stimulation was relatively constant for peak velocities lower than 8°/s, ranging from 0.7 to 0.8. Gain decreased proportionally to velocity for faster stimuli. The vestibulo-ocular reflex acted to produce a sinusoidal compensatory eye movement in response to sinusoidal stimuli. The phase of the eye movement with respect to head movement advanced as stimulus frequency decreased, the familiar signature of the torsion pendulum behavior of the semicircular canals. The first-order time constant of the vestibulo-ocular reflex, as measured from the eye velocity decay after a vestibular velocity step, was 660 ms. The response of the vestibulo-ocular reflex changed with stimulus amplitude, having a higher gain and smaller phase lead when stimulus amplitude was increased. As a result of this nonlinear behavior, reflex gain correlated strongly with stimulus acceleration over the 0.1-1.6 Hz frequency range. When whole body rotation was performed in the light the optokinetic and vestibular system combined to generate nearly constant response gain (approximately 0.8) and phase (approximately 0°) over the tested frequency range of 0.1-1.6 Hz. We conclude that the compensatory eye movements of the mouse are similar to those found in other afoveate mammals, but there are also significant differences, namely shorter apparent time constants of the angular VOR and stronger nonlinearities
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