Articles in 2013

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  • The brain selects stimuli for preferential processing on the basis of both their physical salience and their relevance to behavior. Recording from the midbrain of the barn owl, the authors show that a single inhibitory circuit is critical for both physical salience-driven (exogenous) and internally driven (endogenous) control of stimulus selection.

    • Shreesh P Mysore
    • Eric I Knudsen
    Article
  • The authors show that reducing histone deacetylase 1 expression or activity in the nucleus accumbens increases global levels of histone acetylation but also increases histone methylation, leading to reduced cocaine-induced changes in behavior. This effect is mediated in part by decreased GABAA receptor expression and decreased inhibitory tone on nucleus accumbens neurons.

    • Pamela J Kennedy
    • Jian Feng
    • Eric J Nestler
    Article
  • This Technical Report describes light-activatable metabotropic glutamate receptors based on synthetic photoswitchable tethered ligands, and demonstrates optogenetic control of G protein–coupled receptor activity in neurons in vivo and ex vivo.

    • Joshua Levitz
    • Carlos Pantoja
    • Ehud Y Isacoff
    Technical Report
  • This study shows that Parkinson's disease–associated mutant forms of leucine-rich repeat kinase 2 (LRRK2) impair chaperone-mediated autophagy in neurons, thereby reducing degradation of α-synuclein by this pathway and contributing to the accumulation of this protein observed in brain tissue from patients with Parkinson's disease.

    • Samantha J Orenstein
    • Sheng-Han Kuo
    • Ana Maria Cuervo
    Article
  • Neurofibromatosis type 2 (NF2) is caused by inactivation of the NF2 gene, which encodes merlin. NF2 patients develop peripheral neuropathies. The authors show that NF2 inactivation decreases axonal integrity in mice and NF2 patient tissue. Their data suggest that merlin activates RhoA and promotes neurofilament heavy chain phosphorylation to maintain axonal integrity.

    • Alexander Schulz
    • Stephan L Baader
    • Helen Morrison
    Article
  • A study recording directly from the human brain shows that connectivity between the prefrontal cortex, parietal cortex and the medial temporal lobe across different frequency bands underlies successful memory retrieval.

    • Robert T Knight
    • Howard Eichenbaum
    News & Views
  • The onset of puberty in mammals is determined by a poorly understood mix of genetics and environment. A survey of the epigenetic methylation landscape provides insight into a potential mechanism for the onset of puberty in females involving emancipation from a repressive gene complex in hypothalamic neurons.

    • Margaret M McCarthy
    News & Views
  • Two studies show that local inhibitory connectivity and hippocampal excitatory input support the spatial firing patterns of entorhinal grid cells, providing support for continuous attractor model of grid cell firing.

    • Matthew Lovett-Barron
    • Attila Losonczy
    News & Views
  • Microglia have been regarded as the tissue macrophages of the brain. A study now finds that microglia are quite distinct from blood-borne macrophages and derive from an erythromyeloid precursor cell of the embryonic hematopoiesis.

    • Harald Neumann
    • Hartmut Wekerle
    News & Views
  • In this Perspective, the author examines how reading and writing the neural code may be linked. He reviews evidence defining the nature of neural coding of sensory input and asks how these constraints, particularly precise timing, might be critical for approaches that seek to ‘write the neural code’ through the artificial control of microcircuits to activate downstream structures.

    • Garrett B Stanley
    Perspective
  • When sleep followed implicit training on a motor sequence, children showed greater gains in explicit sequence knowledge after sleep than adults. Measurements of slow-wave sleep and hippocampal activation suggest that the children's superior performance could be a result of enhanced reprocessing of hippocampal memory representations during slow-wave sleep.

    • Ines Wilhelm
    • Michael Rose
    • Jan Born
    Brief Communication
  • Here the authors demonstrate that the long-term behavioral expression of fear memory can be predicted from neural patterns at the time of learning by applying multi-voxel pattern analysis to single-trial functional magnetic resonance imaging data.

    • Renée M Visser
    • H Steven Scholte
    • Merel Kindt
    Brief Communication
  • Patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) have attenuated reward anticipatory activity in the nucleus accumbens (NAc), and deep brain stimulation (DBS) of the NAc is used to treat OCD. The authors show that NAc DBS normalizes NAc activity, reduces connectivity between NAc and prefrontal cortex, and decreases frontal low-frequency oscillations in OCD patients.

    • Martijn Figee
    • Judy Luigjes
    • Damiaan Denys
    Brief Communication
  • Sensory signals are transduced at high resolution, but their structure must be stored in a more compact format. Here the authors show that the auditory system summarizes the temporal details of sounds using time-averaged statistics. Such statistical representations produce good categorical discrimination, but limit the ability to discern temporal detail.

    • Josh H McDermott
    • Michael Schemitsch
    • Eero P Simoncelli
    Article
  • In embryonic development, epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) is the process whereby epithelial cells delaminate from the epithelial sheet and adopt a mesenchymal phenotype in cell motility and migration. This study shows that the Snail superfamily transcription factors Scratch 1 and 2 regulate an EMT-like process in newborn neurons derived from neuroepithelial cells in the developing mouse cortex. This process affects subsequent initiation of radial migration and ultimately neuronal cell positioning.

    • Yasuhiro Itoh
    • Yasunobu Moriyama
    • Yukiko Gotoh
    Article
  • Trovò and colleagues find that aging is accompanied by a decrease in the levels of the phosphoinositide PI(4,5)P2, PLCγ activity and the PI(4,5)P2-clustering molecule MARCKS in mouse hippocampal synaptic membranes. Moreover, increasing MARCKS levels in old mice corrects some of the synaptic plasticity and memory deficits associated with aging.

    • Laura Trovò
    • Tariq Ahmed
    • Carlos G Dotti
    Article
  • Research on event perception has focused on transient elevations in predictive uncertainty or surprise as the primary signal driving event segmentation. Here the authors report behavioral and neuroimaging evidence that suggests that event representations can emerge even in the absence of such cues. They propose that this learning occurs in a manner analogous to the learning of semantic categories.

    • Anna C Schapiro
    • Timothy T Rogers
    • Matthew M Botvinick
    Article
  • In this study, the authors show that, in newborn cortical neurons, the TrkB and TrkC receptors are transactivated by the EGF receptor, rather than by their traditional ligands, BDNF and NT-3. This transactivation appears to be involved in the migration of these neurons from the ventricular zone to the cortical plate.

    • Dirk Puehringer
    • Nadiya Orel
    • Michael Sendtner
    Article