Search results for "hippocampal"

showing 10 items of 352 documents

Neurocalcin-immunoreactive cells in the rat hippocampus are GABAergic interneurons

1998

Neurocalcin (NC) is a recently described calcium-binding protein isolated and characterized from bovine brain. NC belongs to the neural calcium-sensor proteins defined by the photoreceptor cell-specific protein recoverin that have been proposed to be involved in the regulation of calcium-dependent phosphorylation in signal transduction pathways. We analyzed the distribution and morphology of the NC-immunoreactive (IR) neurons in the rat dorsal hippocampus and the coexistence of NC with GABA and different neurochemical markers which label perisomatic inhibitory cells [parvalbumin (PV) and cholecystokinin (CCK)], mid-proximal dendritic inhibitory cells [calbindin D28k (CB)], distal dendritic …

NeurocalcinbiologyChemistryCognitive NeuroscienceDentate gyrusHippocampusHippocampal formationGranule cellmedicine.anatomical_structurenervous systemSchaffer collateralbiology.proteinmedicineCalretininNeuroscienceParvalbuminHippocampus
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Hippocampal theta activity is selectively associated with contingency detection but not discrimination in rabbit discrimination-reversal eyeblink con…

2009

The relative power of the hippocampal theta-band ( approximately 6 Hz) activity (theta ratio) is thought to reflect a distinct neural state and has been shown to affect learning rate in classical eyeblink conditioning in rabbits. We sought to determine if the theta ratio is mostly related to the detection of the contingency between the stimuli used in conditioning or also to the learning of more complex inhibitory associations when a highly demanding delay discrimination-reversal eyeblink conditioning paradigm is used. A high hippocampal theta ratio was not only associated with a fast increase in conditioned responding in general but also correlated with slow emergence of discriminative res…

NeuronsAnalysis of VarianceBlinkingCognitive NeuroscienceClassical conditioningHippocampusLocal field potentialHippocampal formationHippocampusConditioning EyelidAssociative learningElectrophysiologyElectrophysiologyDiscrimination PsychologicalAcoustic StimulationEyeblink conditioningAnimalsConditioningFemaleRabbitsTheta RhythmPsychologyNeuroscienceHippocampus
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Regular theta-firing neurons in the nucleus incertus during sustained hippocampal activation

2015

This paper describes the existence of theta-coupled neuronal activity in the nucleus incertus (NI). Theta rhythm is relevant for cognitive processes such as spatial navigation and memory processing, and can be recorded in a number of structures related to the hippocampal activation including the NI. Strong evidence supports the role of this tegmental nucleus in neural circuits integrating behavioural activation with the hippocampal theta rhythm. Theta oscillations have been recorded in the local field potential of the NI, highly coupled to the hippocampal waves, although no rhythmical activity has been reported in neurons of this nucleus. The present work analyses the neuronal activity in t…

NeuronsGeneral NeuroscienceWavelet AnalysisAction PotentialsHippocampusLocal field potentialHippocampal formationHippocampusNucleus IncertusMembrane PotentialsRats Sprague-DawleyElectrophysiologymedicine.anatomical_structurenervous systemmedicineBiological neural networkAnimalsRaphe NucleiPremovement neuronal activityFemaleTheta RhythmPsychologyNeuroscienceNucleusEuropean Journal of Neuroscience
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The role of N-methyl-D-asparate receptors in neurogenesis.

2006

The dentate gyrus continues to incorporate granule neurons during adulthood. Among the factors that we know modulate adult neurogenesis in the dentate gyrus, one of the first studied was the influence of excitatory amino-acids. These neurotransmitters, acting through NMDA receptors, are able to modulate both the proliferation of progenitor cells as well as the rate of neurogenesis in the adult dentate gyrus. However, the mechanisms by which these processes are influenced are not clearly known. Although there is no anatomical evidence of NMDA receptor expression in adult hippocampal progenitor cells or differentiating granule neurons, electrophysiological data and in vitro studies suggest th…

NeuronsNeuronal PlasticityNeuriteCognitive NeuroscienceDentate gyrusStem CellsNeurogenesisGlutamic AcidCell DifferentiationHippocampal formationBiologyReceptors N-Methyl-D-Aspartatenervous systemDentate GyrusNMDA receptorAnimalsHumansProgenitor cellReceptorLong-term depressionNeuroscienceCell ProliferationHippocampus
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Hippocampal evoked potentials to pitch deviances in an auditory oddball situation in the rabbit: no human mismatch-like dependence on standard stimul…

1995

Hippocampal auditory evoked potentials (AEP) were recorded in 10 rabbits when pitch deviant tones occurred in a series of standard tones (oddball situation). In control recordings, deviant tones were presented without intervening standard tones (deviant-alone situation). All AEP deflections observed in the oddball situation were found also in the deviant-alone situation. Thus, it appeared that none of the AEP deflections to deviant tones in the oddball situation was specific to a memory trace of preceding standard tones. This observation was in contradiction to such a specificity of the mismatch negativity (MMN) found in humans. Instead, a connection to a neuronal orienting reaction interpr…

NeuronsTime FactorsGeneral NeuroscienceAuditory oddballMismatch negativityCognitionEngramHippocampal formationHippocampusElectrophysiologyAcoustic StimulationAnimalsRabbitsPsychologyNeuroscienceEvoked PotentialsNeuroscience letters
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The effect of rewarding hypothalamic stimulation on behavioral and neural hippocampal responses during trace eyeblink conditioning in rabbit (Oryctol…

2005

Rabbits were trace-conditioned with a tone as a conditioned stimulus and an airpuff as an unconditioned stimulus. Electrical stimulation to the medial forebrain bundle in the lateral hypothalamus was delivered either before or after the tone-airpuff pair. The purpose of the present study was to test whether the effect of post-trial hypothalamic stimulation differed from the effect of pre-trial hypothalamic stimulation on trace conditioning in the same subjects. Additionally, hippocampal responses were measured during sessions to see if hypothalamic stimulation activated dopaminergic fibres and affected hippocampal cell functioning and thus learning. The results showed that behavioral nictit…

NeuronsTime FactorsLateral hypothalamusBehavior AnimalBlinkingHypothalamusClassical conditioningHippocampusAction PotentialsStimulationHippocampal formationHippocampusConditioning EyelidBehavioral NeuroscienceEyeblink conditioningAcoustic StimulationRewardAnimalsHumansNictitating membraneRabbitsNictitating MembraneMedial forebrain bundlePsychologyNeuroscienceBehavioural brain research
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Early life adversity targets the transcriptional signature of hippocampal NG2+ glia and affects voltage gated sodium (Nav) channels properties

2021

The precise mechanisms underlying the detrimental effects of early life adversity (ELA) on adult mental health remain still elusive. To date, most studies have exclusively targeted neuronal populations and not considered neuron-glia crosstalk as a crucially important element for the integrity of stress-related brain function. Here, we have investigated the impact of ELA, in the form of a limited bedding and nesting material (LBN) paradigm, on a glial subpopulation with unique properties in brain homeostasis, the NG2+ cells. First, we have established a link between maternal behavior, activation of the offspring's stress response and heterogeneity in the outcome to LBN manipulation. We furth…

Neurophysiology and neuropsychologyCandidate geneNav-channelsPhysiologyNa-channelsNeurosciences. Biological psychiatry. NeuropsychiatryHippocampal formationBiologyBiochemistryNG2+ gliaTranscriptome03 medical and health sciencesCellular and Molecular Neuroscience0302 clinical medicineEndocrinologyMediatorDownregulation and upregulationOriginal Research ArticleRC346-429Molecular BiologyVoltage-gated ion channelEndocrine and Autonomic SystemsQP351-495Nav-channels ; Scn7a ; Transcriptome ; Early life stress ; Translational psychiatry ; NG2+ gliaEarly life stress030227 psychiatryScn7aCrosstalk (biology)nervous systemNeurology. Diseases of the nervous systemTranscriptomeNeuroscienceTranslational psychiatry030217 neurology & neurosurgeryHomeostasisRC321-571Neurobiology of Stress
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Hippocampal responses to pitch deviant tones in rabbits

1997

Neuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyPhysiology (medical)General NeuroscienceHippocampal formationBiologyNeuroscienceInternational Journal of Psychophysiology
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Neuronal receptors display cytoskeleton-independent directed motion on the plasma membrane

2018

Summary Directed transport of transmembrane proteins is generally believed to occur via intracellular transport vesicles. However, using single-particle tracking in rat hippocampal neurons with a pH-sensitive quantum dot probe that specifically reports surface movement of receptors, we have identified a subpopulation of neuronal EphB2 receptors that exhibit directed motion between synapses within the plasma membrane itself. This receptor movement occurs independently of the cytoskeleton but is dependent on cholesterol and is regulated by neuronal activity.

Neuroscience ; Optical Materials ; Molecular Neuroscienceanimal structuresHippocampal formationArticle03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinePremovement neuronal activityEphB2 Receptorslcsh:ScienceCytoskeletonReceptor030304 developmental biology0303 health sciencesOptical MaterialsChemistrymusculoskeletal neural and ocular physiologyVesiclefungiTransmembrane protein3. Good healthMembranenervous systemBiophysicslcsh:QMolecular Neuroscience030217 neurology & neurosurgeryNeuroscience
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Sensitivity of neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptors to the opiate antagonists naltrexone and naloxone: receptor blockade and up-regulation

2003

In HEK293 cells stably expressing alpha4beta2 nAChRs, naltrexone, but not naloxone, blocked alpha4beta2 nAChRs via an open-channel blocking mechanism. In primary hippocampal cultures, naltrexone inhibited alpha7 nAChRs up-regulated by nicotine, and in organotypic hippocampal cultures naltrexone caused a time-dependent up-regulation of functional alpha7 nAChRs that was detected after removal of the drug. These results indicate that naltrexone could be used as a smoking cessation aid.

NicotinePatch-Clamp TechniquesTime FactorsNarcotic AntagonistsClinical BiochemistryGene ExpressionPharmaceutical Science(+)-NaloxoneReceptors NicotinicPharmacologyHippocampal formationSensitivity and Specificitycomplex mixturesBiochemistryNaltrexoneCell LineNicotineStructure-Activity Relationshipmental disordersDrug DiscoverymedicineHumansMolecular BiologyAcetylcholine receptorNeuronsNaloxoneChemistryNarcotic antagonistmusculoskeletal neural and ocular physiologyOrganic ChemistryNaltrexoneUp-RegulationNicotinic agonistnervous systemMechanism of actionMolecular MedicineSmoking Cessationsense organsmedicine.symptommedicine.drugBioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters
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