95 research outputs found
Serotoninergic modulation of sensory transmission to brainstem reticulospinal cells
Sensory inputs are subjected to modulation by central neural networks involved in controlling movements. It has been shown that serotonin (5âHT) modulates sensory transmission. This study examines in lampreys the effects of 5âHT on sensory transmission to brainstem reticulospinal (RS) neurons and the distribution of 5âHT cells that innervate RS cells. Cells were recorded intracellularly in the in vitro isolated brainstem of larval lampreys. Trigeminal nerve stimulation elicited disynaptic excitatory responses in RS neurons, and bath application of 5âHT reduced the response amplitude with maximum effect at 10âÎŒm. Local ejection of 5âHT either onto the RS cells or onto the relay cells decreased sensoryâevoked excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs) in RS cells. The monosynaptic EPSPs elicited from stimulation of the relay cells were also reduced by 5âHT. The reduction was maintained after blocking either Nâmethylâdâaspartate (NMDA) or αâaminoâ3âhydroxyâ5âmethylisoxazoleâ4âpropionic acid (AMPA) receptors. The local ejection of glutamate over RS cells elicited excitatory responses that were only slightly depressed by 5âHT. In addition, 5âHT increased the threshold for eliciting sustained depolarizations in response to trigeminal nerve stimulation but did not prevent them. Combined 5âHT immunofluorescence with axonal tracing revealed that the 5âHT innervation of RS neurons of the middle rhombencephalic reticular nucleus comes mainly from neurons in the isthmic region, but also from neurons located in the pretectum and caudal rhombencephalon. Our results indicate that 5âHT modulates sensory transmission to lamprey brainstem RS cells
A Cellular Mechanism for the Transformation of a Sensory Input into a Motor Command
International audienceThe initiation and control of locomotion largely depend on processing of sensory inputs. The cellular bases of locomotion have been extensively studied in lampreys where reticulospinal (RS) neurons constitute the main descending system activating and controlling the spinal locomotor networks. Ca 2Ï© imaging and intracellular recordings were used to study the pattern of activation of RS neurons in response to cutaneous stimulation. Pressure applied to the skin evoked a linear input/output relationship in RS neurons until a threshold level, at which a depolarizing plateau was induced, the occurrence of which was associated with the onset of swimming activity in a semi-intact preparation. The occurrence of a depolarizing plateau was abolished by blocking the NMDA receptors that are located on RS cells. Moreover, the depolarizing plateaus were accompanied by a rise in [Ca 2Ï© ] i , and an intracellular injection of the Ca 2Ï© chelator BAPTA into single RS cells abolished the plateaus, suggesting that the latter are Ca 2Ï© dependent and rely on intrinsic properties of RS cells. The plateaus were shown to result from the activation of a Ca 2Ï©-activated nonselective cation current that maintains the cell in a depolarized state. It is concluded that this intrinsic property of the RS neuron is then responsible for the transformation of an incoming sensory signal into a motor command that is then forwarded to the spinal locomotor networks
A Novel Neural Substrate for the Transformation of Olfactory Inputs into Motor Output
Anatomical and physiological experiments in the lamprey reveal the neural circuit involved in transforming olfactory inputs into motor outputs, which was previously unknown in a vertebrate
Deletion of Abi3 gene locus exacerbates neuropathological features of Alzheimer's disease in a mouse model of AÎČ amyloidosis
Recently, large-scale human genetics studies identified a rare coding variant in the ABI3 gene that is associated with an increased risk of Alzheimerâs disease (AD). However, pathways by which ABI3 contributes to the pathogenesis of AD are unknown. To address this question, we determined whether loss of ABI3 function affects pathological features of AD in the 5XFAD mouse model. We demonstrate that the deletion of Abi3 locus significantly increases amyloid ÎČ (AÎČ) accumulation and decreases microglia clustering around the plaques. Furthermore, long-term potentiation is impaired in 5XFAD;Abi3 knockout (âAbi3â/ââ) mice. Moreover, we identified marked changes in the proportion of microglia subpopulations in Abi3â/â mice using a single-cell RNA sequencing approach. Mechanistic studies demonstrate that Abi3 knockdown in microglia impairs migration and phagocytosis. Together, our study provides the first in vivo functional evidence that loss of ABI3 function may increase the risk of developing AD by affecting AÎČ accumulation and neuroinflammation
Septal projections to the nucleus incertus in the rat: Bidirectional pathways for modulation of hippocampal function
Projections from the nucleus incertus (NI) to the septum have been implicated in the modulation of hippocampal theta rhythm. In this study we describe a previously uncharacterized projection from the septum to the NI, which may provide feedback modulation of the ascending circuitry. Fluorogold injections into the NI resulted in retrograde labeling in the septum that was concentrated in the horizontal diagonal band and areas of the posterior septum including the septofimbrial and triangular septal nuclei. Double-immunofluorescent staining indicated that the majority of NI-projecting septal neurons were calretinin-positive and some were parvalbumin-, calbindin-, or glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD)â67-positive. Choline acetyltransferase-positive neurons were Fluorogold-negative. Injection of anterograde tracers into medial septum, or triangular septal and septofimbrial nuclei, revealed fibers descending to the supramammillary nucleus, median raphe, and the NI. These anterogradely labeled varicosities displayed synaptophysin immunoreactivity, indicating septal inputs form synapses on NI neurons. Anterograde tracer also colocalized with GAD-67-positive puncta in labeled fibers, which in some cases made close synaptic contact with GAD-67-labeled NI neurons. These data provide evidence for the existence of an inhibitory descending projection from medial and posterior septum to the NI that provides a "feedback loop" to modulate the comparatively more dense ascending NI projections to medial septum and hippocampus. Neural processes and associated behaviors activated or modulated by changes in hippocampal theta rhythm may depend on reciprocal connections between ascending and descending pathways rather than on unidirectional regulation via the medial septum.Grant sponsors: FundaciĂłn Alicia Koplowitz Fellowship (to A.M.S.P.), CAPES-Brasil Bex - 4494/09-1 (to F.N.S.) and 4496/09-4 (to C.W.P.) and Fapitec edital #01/08 (to F.N.S.), FIS-isciiiPI10/01399 (to J.S.), National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia - 520299 (to S.M.), 509246, 1005985, and 1005988 (to A.L.G.), the Florey Foundation (to S.M., A.L.G.), Besen Family Foundation (to A.L.G.) and a NEUREN project, FP7-PEOPLE-IRSES PIRSES-GA-2012-318997 (to A.L.G., F.E.O.-B.)
- âŠ