1,415 research outputs found
Dorsal-CA1 hippocampal neuronal ensembles encode nicotine-reward contextual associations
Natural and drug rewards increase the motivational valence of stimuli in the environment that, through Pavlovian learning mechanisms, become conditioned stimuli that directly motivate behavior in the absence of the original unconditioned stimulus. While the hippocampus has received extensive attention for its role in learning and memory processes, less is known regarding its role in drug-reward associations. We used in vivo Ca2+ imaging in freely moving mice during the formation of nicotine preference behavior to examine the role of the dorsal-CA1 region of the hippocampus in encoding contextual reward-seeking behavior. We show the development of specific neuronal ensembles whose activity encodes nicotine-reward contextual memories and that are necessary for the expression of place preference. Our findings increase our understanding of CA1 hippocampal function in general and as it relates to reward processing by identifying a critical role for CA1 neuronal ensembles in nicotine place preference
Superconductivity in the Nb-Ru-Ge -Phase
We show that the previously unreported ternary -phase material
NbRuGe is a superconductor with a critical temperature
of 2.2 K. Temperature-dependent magnetic susceptibility, resistance, and
specific heat measurements were used to characterize the superconducting
transition. The Sommerfeld constant for
NbRuGe is 91 mJ mol-f.u.K and the
specific heat anomaly at the superconducting transition,
C/T, is approximately 1.38. The zero-temperature upper
critical field (H(0)) was estimated to be 2 T by resistance data.
Field-dependent magnetization data analysis estimated H(0) to be
5.5 mT. Thus, the characterization shows NbRuGe to be
a type II BCS superconductor. This material appears to be the first reported
ternary phase in the Nb-Ru-Ge system, and the fact that there are no previously
reported binary Nb-Ru, Nb-Ge, or Ru-Ge -phases shows that all three
elements are necessary to stabilize the material. A -phase in the
Ta-Ru-Ge system was synthesized but did not display superconductivity above 1.7
K, which suggests that electron count cannot govern the superconductivity
observed. Preliminary characterization of a possible superconducting
-phase in the Nb-Ru-Ga system is also reported.Comment: 7 pages, 8 figures, 3 table
RXTE Spectral Observations of the 1996-97 Outburst of the Microquasar GRO J1655-40
Excellent coverage of the entire 16-month 1996-97 outburst cycle of GRO
J1655-40 was provided by RXTE. We present a full spectral analysis of these
data, which includes 52 PCA spectra from 2.5-20 keV and HEXTE spectra above 20
keV. We also include a nearly continuous ASM light curve with several intensity
measurements per day. The data are interpreted in the context of the multicolor
blackbody disk/power-law model. The source is observed in the very high,
high/soft, and low/hard outburst states. During the very high state, the source
exhibits intense hard flares on time scales of hours to days which are
correlated with changes in both the fitted temperature and radius of the inner
accretion disk. During the high/soft state, the spectrum is dominated by the
soft thermal emission from the accretion disk with spectral parameters that
suggest approximately constant inner disk radius and temperature. We find that
a tight relationship exists between the observed inner radius of the disk and
the flux in the power-law component. During intense hard flares, the inner disk
radius is observed to decrease by as much as a factor of three on a time scale
of days. The apparent decrease of the inner disk radius observed during the
flares may be due to the failure of the multicolor disk model caused by a
steepening of the radial temperature profile in the disk coupled with increased
spectral hardening and not physical changes of the inner disk radius. Assuming
that our spectral model is valid during periods of weak power-law emission, our
most likely value for the inner disk radius implies a* < 0.7. Such a low value
for the black hole angular momentum is inconsistent with the relativistic frame
dragging and the `diskoseismic' models as interpretations for the 300 Hz X-ray
QPO seen during some of these RXTE observations.Comment: 34 pages including 9 figures and 3 tables. Accepted for publication
in the Astrophysical Journal. Our interpretation of the data and the main
conclusions have been significantly revise
Stress-induced reinstatement of nicotine preference requires dynorphin/kappa opioid activity in the basolateral amygdala
UNLABELLED: The dynorphin (DYN)/kappa-opioid receptor (KOR) system plays a conserved role in stress-induced reinstatement of drug seeking for prototypical substances of abuse. Due to nicotine\u27s high propensity for stress-induced relapse, we hypothesized that stress would induce reinstatement of nicotine seeking-like behavior in a KOR-dependent manner. Using a conditioned place preference (CPP) reinstatement procedure in mice, we show that both foot-shock stress and the pharmacological stressor yohimbine (2 mg/kg, i.p.) induce reinstatement of nicotine CPP in a norbinaltorphimine (norBNI, a KOR antagonist)-sensitive manner, indicating that KOR activity is necessary for stress-induced nicotine CPP reinstatement. After reinstatement testing, we visualized robust c-fos expression in the basolateral amygdala (BLA), which was reduced in mice pretreated with norBNI. We then used several distinct but complementary approaches of locally disrupting BLA KOR activity to assess the role of KORs and KOR-coupled intracellular signaling cascades on reinstatement of nicotine CPP. norBNI injected locally into the BLA prevented yohimbine-induced nicotine CPP reinstatement without affecting CPP acquisition. Similarly, selective deletion of BLA KORs in KOR conditional knock-out mice prevented foot-shock-induced CPP reinstatement. Together, these findings strongly implicate BLA KORs in stress-induced nicotine seeking-like behavior. In addition, we found that chemogenetic activation of Gαi signaling within CaMKIIα BLA neurons was sufficient to induce nicotine CPP reinstatement, identifying an anatomically specific intracellular mechanism by which stress leads to reinstatement. Considered together, our findings suggest that activation of the DYN/KOR system and Gαi signaling within the BLA is both necessary and sufficient to produce reinstatement of nicotine preference.
SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT: Considering the major impact of nicotine use on human health, understanding the mechanisms by which stress triggers reinstatement of drug-seeking behaviors is particularly pertinent to nicotine. The dynorphin (DYN)/kappa-opioid receptor (KOR) system has been implicated in stress-induced reinstatement of drug seeking for other commonly abused drugs. However, the specific role, brain region, and mechanisms that this system plays in reinstatement of nicotine seeking has not been characterized. Here, we report region-specific engagement of the DYN/KOR system and subsequent activation of inhibitory (Gi-linked) intracellular signaling pathways within the basolateral amygdala during stress-induced reinstatement of nicotine preference. We show that the DYN/KOR system is necessary to produce this behavioral state. This work may provide novel insight for the development of therapeutic approaches to prevent stress-related nicotine relapse
Educational studies of cosmic rays with telescope of Geiger-Muller counters
A group of high school students (XII Liceum) in the framework of the Roland
Maze Project has built a compact telescope of three Geiger-Muller counters. The
connection between the telescope and PC computer was also created and programed
by students involved in the Project. This has allowed students to use their
equipment to perform serious scientific measurements concerning the single
cosmic ray muon flux at ground level and below. These measurements were then
analyzed with the programs based on the 'nowadays' knowledge on statistics. An
overview of the apparatus, methods and results were presented at several
students conferences and recently won the first prize in a national competition
of high school students scientific work. The telescope itself, in spite of its
'scientific' purposes, is built in such a way that it is hung on a wall in a
school physics lab and counts muons continuously. This can help to raise the
interest for studying physics among others. At present a few (3) groups of
young participants of the Roland Maze Project have already built their own
telescopes for their schools and some others are working on it. This work is a
perfect example of what can be done by young people when respective
opportunities are created by more experienced researchers and a little help and
advice is given.Comment: 5 figures, 10 page
CHARACTERISTIC OF BODY POSTURE OF THE PARTICIPANTS OF THE EUROPEAN JUNIOR VOLLEYBALL CHAMPIONSHIPS.
The lecture presents methods and results of study of volleyball players posture, age17-18 of different nationalities. The results show change curves in spine and biomechanical parameters under loading influence
Antireflective photonic structure for coherent nonlinear spectroscopy of single magnetic quantum dots
This work presents epitaxial growth and optical spectroscopy of CdTe quantum
dots (QDs) in (Cd,Zn,Mg)Te barriers placed on the top of (Cd,Zn,Mg)Te
distributed Bragg reflector. The formed photonic mode in our half-cavity
structure permits to enhance the local excitation intensity and extraction
efficiency of the QD photoluminescence, while suppressing the reflectance
within the spectral range covering the QD transitions. This allows to perform
coherent, nonlinear, resonant spectroscopy of individual QDs. The coherence
dynamics of a charged exciton is measured via four-wave mixing, with the
estimated dephasing time ps. The same structure contains
QDs doped with single Mn ions, as detected in photoluminescence spectra.
Our work therefore paves the way toward investigating and controlling an
exciton coherence coupled, via ,- exchange interaction, with an
individual spin of a magnetic dopant.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
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