Search results for "NEUROSCIENCE"

showing 10 items of 8040 documents

Genetic association study of childhood aggression across raters, instruments, and age

2021

AbstractChildhood aggressive behavior (AGG) has a substantial heritability of around 50%. Here we present a genome-wide association meta-analysis (GWAMA) of childhood AGG, in which all phenotype measures across childhood ages from multiple assessors were included. We analyzed phenotype assessments for a total of 328 935 observations from 87 485 children aged between 1.5 and 18 years, while accounting for sample overlap. We also meta-analyzed within subsets of the data, i.e., within rater, instrument and age. SNP-heritability for the overall meta-analysis (AGGoverall) was 3.31% (SE = 0.0038). We found no genome-wide significant SNPs for AGGoverall. The gene-based analysis returned three sign…

0301 basic medicineDISORDER/45/43Genome-wide association study3124 Neurology and psychiatry0302 clinical medicineChildPsychiatry0303 health sciences:trastornos mentales [PSIQUIATRÍA Y PSICOLOGÍA]HERITABILITYMental DisordersCognitionGenomicsExplained variationJustice and Strong InstitutionsAggressionPsychiatry and Mental healthMeta-analysisADOLESCENCEChild Preschool:conducta y mecanismos de la conducta::conducta::síntomas conductuales::agresión [PSIQUIATRÍA Y PSICOLOGÍA]/631/208/212/dk/atira/pure/sustainabledevelopmentgoals/good_health_and_well_beingFemaleBiological psychiatrymedicine.symptomLife Sciences & Biomedicine:Investigative Techniques::Genetic Techniques::Genetic Association Studies [ANALYTICAL DIAGNOSTIC AND THERAPEUTIC TECHNIQUES AND EQUIPMENT]BEHAVIORRC321-571Childhood aggressionClinical psychologySDG 16 - PeaceAdolescent:Mental Disorders [PSYCHIATRY AND PSYCHOLOGY]Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. NeuropsychiatrySingle-nucleotide polymorphismBiology3121 Internal medicineMalalties mentals - Aspectes genèticsGenetic correlationArticle1117 Public Health and Health ServicesCellular and Molecular Neuroscience03 medical and health sciences/631/477/2811SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-beingHuman behaviourmedicineSNPHumansGENOME-WIDE ASSOCIATIONBiological PsychiatryGenetic Association Studies030304 developmental biologyGenetic associationRetrospective Studies:técnicas de investigación::técnicas genéticas::estudios de asociación genética [TÉCNICAS Y EQUIPOS ANALÍTICOS DIAGNÓSTICOS Y TERAPÉUTICOS]Science & TechnologyAggressionSDG 16 - Peace Justice and Strong InstitutionsInfant:Behavior and Behavior Mechanisms::Behavior::Behavioral Symptoms::Aggression [PSYCHIATRY AND PSYCHOLOGY]1103 Clinical SciencesAgressivitat en els infantsHeritability/dk/atira/pure/sustainabledevelopmentgoals/peace_justice_and_strong_institutions030104 developmental biology1701 PsychologyORIGINSResearch Programm of Donders Centre for Neuroscience3111 BiomedicineTRAJECTORIES030217 neurology & neurosurgeryDemographyGenome-Wide Association Study
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Bumetanide prevents brain trauma-induced depressive-like behavior

2019

AbstractBrain trauma triggers a cascade of deleterious events leading to enhanced incidence of drug resistant epilepsies, depression and cognitive dysfunctions. The underlying mechanisms leading to these alterations are poorly understood and treatment that attenuates those sequels not available. Using controlled-cortical impact (CCI) as experimental model of brain trauma in adult mouse we found a strong suppressive effect of the sodium-potassium-chloride importer (NKCC1) specific antagonist bumetanide on appearance of depression-like behavior. We demonstrate that this alteration in behavior is associated with a block of CCI-induced decrease in parvalbumin-positive interneurons and impairmen…

0301 basic medicineDOWN-REGULATIONpotassium chloride cotransporter 2 (KCC2)[SDV.NEU.NB]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Neurons and Cognition [q-bio.NC]/NeurobiologyHippocampusUP-REGULATION0302 clinical medicineMedicineCOTRANSPORTER KCC2NEURAL STEM-CELLBrain traumaDepression (differential diagnoses)Original Research0303 health sciencesNeurogenesisDepolarizationNeural stem cell3. Good healthADULT HIPPOCAMPAL NEUROGENESISneurogenesis[SDV.SP.PHARMA] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Pharmaceutical sciences/PharmacologydepressionBumetanidemedicine.druginterneuron cell deathpsychiatric diseaseINHIBITIONbumetanidelcsh:RC321-571Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience03 medical and health sciencesINJURYlcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. NeuropsychiatryMolecular Biology030304 developmental biologybusiness.industryMechanism (biology)GRANULE CELLSDentate gyrusAntagonist3112 Neurosciences[SDV.NEU.NB] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Neurons and Cognition [q-bio.NC]/Neurobiology030104 developmental biologyDENTATE GYRUSDIURETIC BUMETANIDE[SDV.SP.PHARMA]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Pharmaceutical sciences/PharmacologybusinessNeuroscience030217 neurology & neurosurgeryNeuroscience
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Reactome graph database: Efficient access to complex pathway data

2018

Reactome is a free, open-source, open-data, curated and peer-reviewed knowledgebase of biomolecular pathways. One of its main priorities is to provide easy and efficient access to its high quality curated data. At present, biological pathway databases typically store their contents in relational databases. This limits access efficiency because there are performance issues associated with queries traversing highly interconnected data. The same data in a graph database can be queried more efficiently. Here we present the rationale behind the adoption of a graph database (Neo4j) as well as the new ContentService (REST API) that provides access to these data. The Neo4j graph database and its qu…

0301 basic medicineDatabases FactualComputer scienceData managementKnowledge BasesSocial SciencesInformation Storage and RetrievalNoSQLcomputer.software_genreComputer ApplicationsDatabase and Informatics MethodsUser-Computer Interface0302 clinical medicineKnowledge extractionPsychologyDatabase Searchinglcsh:QH301-705.5Data ManagementLanguageBiological dataEcologySystems BiologyGenomicsGenomic DatabasesComputational Theory and MathematicsModeling and SimulationWeb-Based ApplicationsGraph (abstract data type)Information TechnologyResearch ArticleComputer and Information SciencesRelational databaseQuery languageResearch and Analysis MethodsEcosystems03 medical and health sciencesCellular and Molecular NeuroscienceDatabasesGeneticsComputer GraphicsHumansMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsInternetInformation retrievalGraph databasebusiness.industryEcology and Environmental SciencesCognitive PsychologyBiology and Life SciencesComputational BiologyGenome AnalysisRelational Databases030104 developmental biologyBiological Databaseslcsh:Biology (General)Cognitive Sciencebusinesscomputer030217 neurology & neurosurgerySoftwareNeurosciencePLoS Computational Biology
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Cofilin and Neurodegeneration: New Functions for an Old but Gold Protein

2021

Cofilin is an actin-binding protein that plays a major role in the regulation of actin dynamics, an essential cellular process. This protein has emerged as a crucial molecule for functions of the nervous system including motility and guidance of the neuronal growth cone, dendritic spine organization, axonal branching, and synaptic signalling. Recently, other important functions in cell biology such as apoptosis or the control of mitochondrial function have been attributed to cofilin. Moreover, novel mechanisms of cofilin function regulation have also been described. The activity of cofilin is controlled by complex regulatory mechanisms, with phosphorylation being the most important, since t…

0301 basic medicineDendritic spine organizationCellMotilityNeurosciences. Biological psychiatry. NeuropsychiatryReviewmacromolecular substancescofilinBiologyenvironment and public health03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinemedicineneurodegenerative diseasescofilin–actin rodsGeneral Neurosciencemitochondrial fissionNeurodegenerationapoptosisCofilinmedicine.diseaseCell biologymicrotubule instability030104 developmental biologymedicine.anatomical_structurePhosphorylationMitochondrial fission030217 neurology & neurosurgeryFunction (biology)RC321-571Brain Sciences
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The activation of NMDA receptors alters the structural dynamics of the spines of hippocampal interneurons

2017

N-Methyl-d-Aspartate receptors (NMDARs) are present in both pyramidal neurons and interneurons of the hippocampus. These receptors play a key role in the structural plasticity of excitatory neurons, but to date little is known about their influence on the remodeling of interneurons. Among hippocampal interneurons, the somatostatin expressing cells in the CA1 stratum oriens are of special interest because of their functional importance and structural characteristics: they display dendritic spines, which change their density in response to different stimuli. In order to understand the role of NMDAR activation on the structural dynamics of the spines of somatostatin expressing interneurons in …

0301 basic medicineDendritic spineDendritic SpinesHippocampusHippocampal formationBiologyHippocampusReceptors N-Methyl-D-Aspartate03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineInterneuronsAnimalsReceptorCells CulturedMice KnockoutPyramidal Cellsmusculoskeletal neural and ocular physiologyGeneral NeuroscienceLong-term potentiationSpine030104 developmental biologySomatostatinnervous systemExcitatory postsynaptic potentialNMDA receptorSomatostatinNeuroscience030217 neurology & neurosurgeryNeuroscience Letters
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Intra-neuronal Competition for Synaptic Partners Conserves the Amount of Dendritic Building Material

2017

Brain development requires correct targeting of multiple thousand synaptic terminals onto staggeringly complex dendritic arbors. The mechanisms by which input synapse numbers are matched to dendrite size, and by which synaptic inputs from different transmitter systems are correctly partitioned onto a postsynaptic arbor, are incompletely understood. By combining quantitative neuroanatomy with targeted genetic manipulation of synaptic input to an identified Drosophila neuron, we show that synaptic inputs of two different transmitter classes locally direct dendrite growth in a competitive manner. During development, the relative amounts of GABAergic and cholinergic synaptic drive shift dendrit…

0301 basic medicineDendritic spinePresynaptic TerminalsBiologyReceptors NicotinicArticleSynapse03 medical and health sciencesDendrite (crystal)Calcium Channels T-Type0302 clinical medicinePostsynaptic potentialSynaptic augmentationmedicineAnimalsDrosophila ProteinsCalcium Signalinggamma-Aminobutyric AcidNeuronsNeuronal PlasticityGeneral NeuroscienceDendritesReceptors GABA-AAcetylcholine030104 developmental biologySynaptic fatiguemedicine.anatomical_structurenervous systemSynaptic plasticitySynapsesDrosophilaNeuronNeuroscience030217 neurology & neurosurgery
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Regulation of Dendritic Spine Morphology in Hippocampal Neurons by Copine-6.

2015

Dendritic spines compartmentalize information in the brain, and their morphological characteristics are thought to underly synaptic plasticity. Here we identify copine-6 as a novel modulator of dendritic spine morphology. We found that brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) - a molecule essential for long-term potentiation of synaptic strength - upregulated and recruited copine-6 to dendritic spines in hippocampal neurons. Overexpression of copine-6 increased mushroom spine number and decreased filopodia number, while copine-6 knockdown had the opposite effect and dramatically increased the number of filopodia, which lacked PSD95. Functionally, manipulation of post-synaptic copine-6 level…

0301 basic medicineDendritic spineVesicular Inhibitory Amino Acid Transport Proteinsdrug effects [Synapses]Tropomyosin receptor kinase BHippocampal formationgenetics [Carrier Proteins]pharmacology [Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor]Hippocampusmetabolism [Vesicular Inhibitory Amino Acid Transport Proteins]Mtap2 protein ratMice0302 clinical medicineNeurotrophic factorsdrug effects [Synaptic Vesicles]genetics [Nerve Tissue Proteins]Cells Culturedultrastructure [Neurons]NeuronsChemistryLong-term potentiationSynaptic Potentialsphysiology [Neurons]physiology [Dendritic Spines]Cell biologyultrastructure [Dendritic Spines]metabolism [Receptor trkB]Synaptic VesiclesFilopodiaultrastructure [Synaptosomes]Disks Large Homolog 4 ProteinMicrotubule-Associated ProteinsCognitive NeuroscienceDendritic Spinesmetabolism [Disks Large Homolog 4 Protein]Nerve Tissue Proteinsgenetics [Receptor trkB]03 medical and health sciencesCellular and Molecular NeuroscienceOrgan Culture Techniquesphysiology [Synaptic Vesicles]metabolism [Vesicular Glutamate Transport Protein 1]TrkB protein ratdrug effects [Synaptic Potentials]Synaptic vesicle recyclingAnimalsHumansReceptor trkBddc:610metabolism [Synaptosomes]metabolism [Nerve Tissue Proteins]Viaat protein ratBrain-Derived Neurotrophic Factormetabolism [Microtubule-Associated Proteins]Rats030104 developmental biologygenetics [Synaptic Potentials]nervous systemcytology [Hippocampus]Synaptic plasticityultrastructure [Synapses]SynapsesVesicular Glutamate Transport Protein 1CPNE6 protein ratphysiology [Synapses]Carrier Proteins030217 neurology & neurosurgerymetabolism [Carrier Proteins]SynaptosomesCerebral cortex (New York, N.Y. : 1991)
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NMDA Receptors Regulate the Structural Plasticity of Spines and Axonal Boutons in Hippocampal Interneurons

2017

N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors (NMDARs) are present in both pyramidal neurons and interneurons of the hippocampus. These receptors play an important role in the adult structural plasticity of excitatory neurons, but their impact on the remodeling of interneurons is unknown. Among hippocampal interneurons, somatostatin-expressing cells located in the stratum oriens are of special interest because of their functional importance and structural characteristics: they display dendritic spines, which change density in response to different stimuli. In order to understand the role of NMDARs on the structural plasticity of these interneurons, we have injected acutely MK-801, an NMDAR antagonist, to …

0301 basic medicineDendritic spineorganotypic culturesEn passantHippocampusHippocampal formationBiologyspine dynamicslcsh:RC321-57103 medical and health sciencesCellular and Molecular Neuroscience0302 clinical medicineReceptorlcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. NeuropsychiatryOriginal ResearchMK-801interneuronsmusculoskeletal neural and ocular physiologyaxonal boutonsNMDARSpine (zoology)030104 developmental biologynervous systemExcitatory postsynaptic potentialNMDA receptorNeuroscience030217 neurology & neurosurgeryNeuroscienceFrontiers in Cellular Neuroscience
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Enhanced Prefrontal Neuronal Activity and Social Dominance Behavior in Postnatal Forebrain Excitatory Neuron-Specific Cyfip2 Knock-Out Mice

2020

The cytoplasmic fragile X mental retardation 1 (FMR1)-interacting protein 2 (CYFIP2) gene is associated with epilepsy, intellectual disability (ID), and developmental delay, suggesting its critical role in proper neuronal development and function. CYFIP2 is involved in regulating cellular actin dynamics and also interacts with RNA-binding proteins. However, the adult brain function of CYFIP2 remains unclear because investigations thus far are limited to Cyfip2 heterozygous (Cyfip2+/- ) mice owing to the perinatal lethality of Cyfip2-null mice. Therefore, we generated Cyfip2 conditional knock-out (cKO) mice with reduced CYFIP2 expression in postnatal forebrain excitatory neurons (CaMKIIα-Cre…

0301 basic medicineDendritic spinesocial dominanceBiologyFilamentous actinneuronal activitylcsh:RC321-57103 medical and health sciencesCellular and Molecular Neuroscience0302 clinical medicineexcitabilityCYFIP2Premovement neuronal activityPrefrontal cortexlcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. NeuropsychiatryMolecular BiologyBrief Research ReportFMR1030104 developmental biologyKnockout mouseForebrainExcitatory postsynaptic potentialNeurosciencemedial prefrontal cortex030217 neurology & neurosurgeryNeuroscienceFrontiers in Molecular Neuroscience
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Generation and Coherent Control of Pulsed Quantum Frequency Combs

2018

We present a method for the generation and coherent manipulation of pulsed quantum frequency combs. Until now, methods of preparing high-dimensional states on-chip in a practical way have remained elusive due to the increasing complexity of the quantum circuitry needed to prepare and process such states. Here, we outline how high-dimensional, frequency-bin entangled, two-photon states can be generated at a stable, high generation rate by using a nested-cavity, actively mode-locked excitation of a nonlinear micro-cavity. This technique is used to produce pulsed quantum frequency combs. Moreover, we present how the quantum states can be coherently manipulated using standard telecommunications…

0301 basic medicineDensity matrixOptics and PhotonicsPhotonGeneral Chemical EngineeringSettore ING-INF/01 - ElettronicaGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology03 medical and health sciencesEngineering0302 clinical medicineQuantum stateQuantum DotsQuantumQCQuantum opticsPhysicsGeneral Immunology and Microbiologybusiness.industryGeneral NeuroscienceNonlinear opticsSettore ING-INF/02 - Campi Elettromagnetici030104 developmental biologyCoherent controlQuantum optics Integrated photonic devices Mode-locked lasers Nonlinear optics Four-wave mixing Frequency combs High- dimensional statesFrequency domainOptoelectronicsbusiness030217 neurology & neurosurgeryJournal of Visualized Experiments
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