213 research outputs found
Early Presymptomatic and Long-Term Changes of Rest Activity Cycles and Cognitive Behavior in a MPTP-Monkey Model of Parkinson's Disease
It is increasingly recognized that non-motor symptoms are a prominent feature of Parkinson's disease and in the case of cognitive deficits can precede onset of the characteristic motor symptoms. Here, we examine in 4 monkeys chronically treated with low doses of the neurotoxin MPTP the early and long-term alterations of rest-activity rhythms in relationship to the appearance of motor and cognitive symptoms.Behavioral activity recordings as well as motor and cognitive assessments were carried out continuously and in parallel before, during and for several months following MPTP-treatment (12–56 weeks). Cognitive abilities were assessed using a task that is dependent on the functional integrity of the fronto-striatal axis. Rest-activity cycles were monitored continuously using infrared movement detectors of locomotor activity. Motor impairment was evaluated using standardized scales for primates. Results show that MPTP treatment led to an immediate alteration (within one week) of rest-activity cycles and cognitive deficits. Parkinsonian motor deficits only became apparent 3 to 5 weeks after initiating chronic MPTP administration. In three of the four animals studied, clinical scores returned to control levels 5–7 weeks following cessation of MPTP treatment. In contrast, both cognitive deficits and chronobiological alterations persisted for many months. Levodopa treatment led to an improvement of cognitive performance but did not affect rest-activity rhythms in the two cases tested.Present results show that i) changes in the rest activity cycles constituted early detectable consequences of MPTP treatment and, along with cognitive alterations, characterize the presymptomatic stage; ii) following motor recovery there is a long-term persistence of non-motor symptoms that could reflect differential underlying compensatory mechanisms in these domains; iii) the progressive MPTP-monkey model of presymptomatic ongoing parkinsonism offers possibilities for in-depth studies of early non-motor symptoms including sleep alterations and cognitive deficits
Non-Opsonic Phagocytosis of Legionella pneumophila by Macrophages Is Mediated by Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinase
Background: Legionella pneumophila, is an intracellular pathogen that causes Legionnaires ’ disease in humans, a potentially lethal pneumonia. L. pneumophila has the ability to enter and replicate in the host and is essential for pathogenesis. Methodology/Principal Findings: Phagocytosis was measured by cell invasion assays. Construction of PI3K mutant by PCR cloning and expression of dominant negative mutant was detected by Western blot. PI3K activity was measured by 32 P labeling and detection of phospholipids products by thin layer chromatography. Infection of macrophages with virulent L. pneumophila stimulated the formation of phosphatidylinositol 3-phosphate (PIP3), a phosphorylated lipid product of PI3K whereas two structurally distinct phosphatidylinositol 3 kinase (PI3K) inhibitors, wortmannin and LY294002, reduced L. pneumophila entry into macrophages in a dose-dependent fashion. Furthermore, PI3K activation led to Akt stimulation, a serine/threonine kinase, which was also inhibited by wortmannin and LY294002. In contrast, PI3K and protein kinase B (PKB/Akt) activities were lower in macrophages infected with an avirulent bacterial strain. Only virulent L. pneumophila increased lipid kinase activity present in immunoprecipitates of the p85a subunit of class I PI3K and tyrosine phosphorylated proteins. In addition, macrophages expressing a specific dominant negative mutant of PI3K reduced L. pneumophila entry into these cells. Conclusion/Significance: Entry of L. pneumophila is mediated by PI3K/Akt signaling pathway. These results suggest an important role for PI3K and Akt in the L. pneumophila infection process. They point to possible novel strategies fo
Forebrain NR2B Overexpression Facilitating the Prefrontal Cortex Long-Term Potentiation and Enhancing Working Memory Function in Mice
Prefrontal cortex plays an important role in working memory, attention regulation and behavioral inhibition. Its functions are associated with NMDA receptors. However, there is little information regarding the roles of NMDA receptor NR2B subunit in prefrontal cortical synaptic plasticity and prefrontal cortex-related working memory. Whether the up-regulation of NR2B subunit influences prefrontal cortical synaptic plasticity and working memory is not yet clear. In the present study, we measured prefrontal cortical synaptic plasticity and working memory function in NR2B overexpressing transgenic mice. In vitro electrophysiological data showed that overexpression of NR2B specifically in the forebrain region resulted in enhancement of prefrontal cortical long-term potentiation (LTP) but did not alter long-term depression (LTD). The enhanced LTP was completely abolished by a NR2B subunit selective antagonist, Ro25-6981, indicating that overexpression of NR2B subunit is responsible for enhanced LTP. In addition, NR2B transgenic mice exhibited better performance in a set of working memory paradigms including delay no-match-to-place T-maze, working memory version of water maze and odor span task. Our study provides evidence that NR2B subunit of NMDA receptor in prefrontal cortex is critical for prefrontal cortex LTP and prefrontal cortex-related working memory
Solubility of Anthracene in Ternary 1,4-Dioxane + Alcohol + Heptane Solvent Mixtures at 298.15 K
Differential Encoding of Factors Influencing Predicted Reward Value in Monkey Rostral Anterior Cingulate Cortex
Background: The value of a predicted reward can be estimated based on the conjunction of both the intrinsic reward value and the length of time to obtain it. The question we addressed is how the two aspects, reward size and proximity to reward, influence the responses of neurons in rostral anterior cingulate cortex (rACC), a brain region thought to play an important role in reward processing. Methods and Findings: We recorded from single neurons while two monkeys performed a multi-trial reward schedule task. The monkeys performed 1–4 sequential color discrimination trials to obtain a reward of 1–3 liquid drops. There were two task conditions, a valid cue condition, where the number of trials and reward amount were associated with visual cues, and a random cue condition, where the cue was picked from the cue set at random. In the valid cue condition, the neuronal firing is strongly modulated by the predicted reward proximity during the trials. Information about the predicted reward amount is almost absent at those times. In substantial subpopulations, the neuronal responses decreased or increased gradually through schedule progress to the predicted outcome. These two gradually modulating signals could be used to calculate the effect of time on the perception of reward value. In the random cue condition, little information about the reward proximity or reward amount is encoded during the course of the trial before reward delivery, but when the reward is actually delivered the responses reflect both the reward proximity and reward amount
Solubility of Anthracene in Ternary 1,4-Dioxane + Alcohol + Cyclohexane Solvent Mixtures at 298.15 K
Solubility of Anthracene in Ternary 1,4-Dioxane + Alcohol + 2,2,4-Trimethylpentane Solvent Mixtures at 298.15 K
Accelerating the Evolution of Nonhuman Primate Neuroimaging
Nonhuman primate neuroimaging is on the cusp of a transformation, much in the same way its human counterpart was in 2010, when the Human Connectome Project was launched to accelerate progress. Inspired by an open data-sharing initiative, the global community recently met and, in this article, breaks through obstacles to define its ambitions
L’adaptation cognitive, un processus sensorimoteur ? Homologies cingulaires entre le singe et l’homme
Le dysfonctionnement des mécanismes d’adaptation cognitive se retrouve dans diverses pathologies et sous différentes formes : altérations de l’organisation temporelle du comportement, hyper- ou hypo-réactivité aux feedbacks de l’action, persévérations, etc. Le cortex frontal des primates est une des pièces maîtresses de l’adaptation cognitive et, de fait, une cible privilégiée pour les études fondamentales et cliniques. Cet exposé se concentre sur une subdivision du cortex frontal des primates humain et non humain, le cortex cingulaire médian. Le rôle précis de cette région est extrêmement débattu, et son organisation fonctionnelle méconnue même si elle est la cible d’approches thérapeutiques modernes, notamment pour le traitement de dépressions ou de TOC résistants, qui peuvent être considérés sous l’angle de dysfonctionnements adaptatifs. Nous proposons ici d’éclairer le débat en combinant recherches fondamentales chez le singe et neuro-imagerie individuelle chez l’Homme. Nous montrerons, sur la base d’études histologiques, électrophysiologiques et d’IRM fonctionnelle chez l’Homme et le singe, que les cartes somatomotrices identifiables dans le cortex cingulaire médian traitent les informations pertinentes pour l’adaptation. Nos expériences ont deux caractéristiques importantes. Elles utilisent tout d’abord des protocoles comportementaux similaires chez l’humain et le singe. Par ailleurs, elles tirent partie des variations morphologiques cérébrales inter-individuelles chez l’Homme, afin d’affiner au mieux les cartographies fonctionnelles obtenues par l’imagerie fonctionnelle. Nos expériences chez le singe, puis leur réplication chez l’Homme, montrent que le cortex cingulaire médian traite en priorité les feedbacks de l’action qui sont pertinents pour l’adaptation, mais pas ceux obtenus lorsque l’adaptation n’est pas nécessaire [2,3]. De façon remarquable, le traitement des feedbacks de l’action implique les représentations somatomotrices cingulaires correspondantes à la nature de ces feedbacks (gustatifs, tactiles) [1]. Ces approches comparatives chez le singe et l’Homme suggèrent donc que le cortex cingulaire médian fonctionne comme un système de surveillance incarné des informations nécessaires ou pertinentes pour l’adaptation cognitive.</jats:p
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