Brief Communications

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  • The amygdala is known to process information about faces, but it has remained unclear whether eye gaze is also encoded. Recording single neurons in the amygdalae of neurosurgical patients, the authors found responses to identity of the faces, but not to gaze direction.

    • Florian Mormann
    • Johannes Niediek
    • Ralph Adolphs
    Brief Communication
  • Anorexia nervosa provides a compelling example of persistent maladaptive behavior: the severe restriction of caloric intake. Activity in the dorsal striatum was greater in patients than in controls during food choice and correlated with subsequent caloric intake, suggesting that dorsal fronto-striatal circuits are involved in this disorder.

    • Karin Foerde
    • Joanna E Steinglass
    • B Timothy Walsh
    Brief Communication
  • People with autism are known for their inflexible behavior. Using a perceptual learning protocol, the authors demonstrate initially efficient learning in observers with autism, followed by anomalously poor learning when the target location is changed (over-specificity). Furthermore, over-specificity can be circumvented by a specifically designed protocol that reduces stimulus repetitions.

    • Hila Harris
    • David Israeli
    • Dov Sagi
    Brief Communication
  • This protein quantitative trait analysis in monocytes evaluates cross-talk between Alzheimer risk loci and finds that the NME8 locus influences PTK2B, the CD33 risk allele leads to greater TREM2 expression, and the TREM1 risk allele is associated with a decreased TREM1/TREM2 ratio.

    • Gail Chan
    • Charles C White
    • Philip L De Jager
    Brief Communication
  • Using data from the Human Connectome Project, a single holistic multivariate analysis identified one strong mode of population co-variation: subjects were predominantly spread along a single ‘positive-negative’ axis linking lifestyle, demographic and psychometric measures to each other and to a specific pattern of functional brain connectivity.

    • Stephen M Smith
    • Thomas E Nichols
    • Karla L Miller
    Brief Communication
  • Misfolded Aβ proteins can form proteopathic seeds that drive initiation, progression, and spreading of amyloidosis in the brain. Jucker and colleagues report that Aβ seeds can persist in mouse brain for months in the absence of host-derived Aβ and can then regain propagative and pathogenic activity in the presence of host Aβ.

    • Lan Ye
    • Sarah K Fritschi
    • Mathias Jucker
    Brief Communication
  • C9orf72 mutations are the most common cause of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and frontotemporal dementia. With unbiased screens in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Jovicic et al. identified potent modifiers of toxicity of dipeptide repeat proteins produced by unconventional translation of the C9orf72 repeat expansions, pointing to nucleocytoplasmic transport impairments as potential disease mechanisms.

    • Ana Jovičić
    • Jerome Mertens
    • Aaron D Gitler
    Brief Communication
  • Humans learn about people and objects through positive and negative experiences, yet they can look beyond rewards to encode trait-level attributes such as generosity. The authors show that neural activity and choices reflect feedback-based learning about rewards and traits of people and slot machines and that trait learning strongly drives decisions about new social interactions.

    • Leor M Hackel
    • Bradley B Doll
    • David M Amodio
    Brief Communication
  • It is widely assumed that D1 and D2 dopamine receptor-expressing striatal neurons code for discrete pathways in the basal ganglia. Combining optogenetics and electrophysiology, the authors show that this output architecture does not apply to nucleus accumbens neurons. Current thinking attributing D1/D2 selectivity to accumbens projections thus should be reconsidered.

    • Yonatan M Kupchik
    • Robyn M Brown
    • Peter W Kalivas
    Brief Communication
  • A large literature has demonstrated the important role of spinal microglia in chronic pain processing. This paper demonstrates that microglia are required in male but not female mice. In female mice, a similar function appears to be subserved by adaptive immune cell, likely T lymphocytes.

    • Robert E Sorge
    • Josiane C S Mapplebeck
    • Jeffrey S Mogil
    Brief Communication
  • The authors show that changes in nuclear dynamics of p75NTR by γ-secretase cleavage are a novel molecular switch that determines TGF-β signaling in astrocytes. Cleaved p75NTR acts as a component of the nuclear pore complex, regulating nuclear import of Smad-2 in astrocytes. The authors find that p75NTR is required in mice for TGF-β-induced glial scar formation and reduced neuronal activity.

    • Christian Schachtrup
    • Jae Kyu Ryu
    • Katerina Akassoglou
    Brief Communication
  • Genetic risk scores derived from GWAS of psychotic disorders are greater in creative professionals unaffected by psychosis. This association cannot be explained by shared environment or education. Thus, a shared genetic architecture underlies the propensity for creativity and psychosis.

    • Robert A Power
    • Stacy Steinberg
    • Kari Stefansson
    Brief Communication
  • Chronic social stress has adverse behavioral consequences and can result in the development of depression in humans. Using a rodent social stress model, we report increased synaptic connectivity between the thalamus and striatum in susceptible mice that controls behavioral coping mechanisms relevant to depression.

    • Daniel J Christoffel
    • Sam A Golden
    • Scott J Russo
    Brief Communication
  • Gancarz et al. identify Activin-receptor signaling—including the downstream transcription factor Smad3—as an intracellular signaling pathway that is regulated in the nucleus accumbens following abstinence from cocaine. The authors demonstrate that altering Activin-receptor signaling bi-directionally regulates relapse behavior and dendritic spine plasticity.

    • Amy M Gancarz
    • Zi-Jun Wang
    • David M Dietz
    Brief Communication
  • Mensch et al. investigate how neuronal activity regulates CNS myelination in vivo, using zebrafish as a model. They find that blocking synaptic vesicle release reduces, and that stimulating neuronal activity increases, the number of myelin sheath made by the myelinating glia of the CNS (oligodendrocytes). These data show that neuronal activity regulates the myelinating capacity of individual oligodendrocytes.

    • Sigrid Mensch
    • Marion Baraban
    • David A Lyons
    Brief Communication
  • Using a quantitative perfusion imaging technique, the authors investigated in healthy humans what brain regions encode a slowly varying tonic pain state. Only a small region in the contralateral dorsal posterior insula tracked the full pain experience, suggesting it is the homolog of a nociception-specific region found in animals.

    • Andrew R Segerdahl
    • Melvin Mezue
    • Irene Tracey
    Brief Communication
  • The authors used rewarding stimulations triggered by place cell activity during sleep to create a place preference for the related place field in mice once they woke up. This shows that an explicit memory trace can be created during sleep and demonstrates a causal role of place cells in spatial navigation.

    • Gaetan de Lavilléon
    • Marie Masako Lacroix
    • Karim Benchenane
    Brief Communication
  • This study utilizes in vivo clonal lineage tracing of adult subependymal zone neural stem cells in mice to reveal frequent stem cells divisions and significant progeny expansion, thus allowing rapid clonal growth. The authors also show that neural stem cells lacked significant long-term self-renewal abilities which led to clonal exhaustion. Olfactory bulb neuronal diversity emerges at the population level, as single stem cells show restricted diversity in neuronal subtype production.

    • Filippo Calzolari
    • Julia Michel
    • Jovica Ninkovic
    Brief Communication
  • Ling and colleagues report evidence for orientation selective responses in the human lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN). Moreover, they found that the nature of these orientation representations depend on attentional feedback, suggesting that the LGN serves as an early filter for sensory information, altering contour signals before they reach cortex.

    • Sam Ling
    • Michael S Pratte
    • Frank Tong
    Brief Communication