Research articles

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  • Pregnancy in mice is aborted if a female smells the urine of a new male up to 3 days after insemination, but not later. What changes? Dopamine increased in the female main olfactory bulb after copulation, peaking at 4 days. This diminished the mice's ability to recognize male urine. A dopamine receptor inhibitor improved recognition of male urine, and thereby increased the probability of abort.

    • Che Serguera
    • Viviana Triaca
    • Liliana Minichiello
    Article
  • This study identifies a dystroglycan-interacting protein, pikachurin, that is localized in the extracellular space between photoreceptors and bipolar cells. The authors also demonstrate its requirement in normal ribbon synapse development and function. Kevin Campbell and Jakob Satz discuss this paper in an accompanying News and Views article.

    • Shigeru Sato
    • Yoshihiro Omori
    • Takahisa Furukawa
    Article
  • Mice lacking the metabotropic glutamate receptor mGluR7 are hypersensitive to convulsant drugs. But how does mGluR7 act to prevent seizures? Here the authors show that interfering with the interaction between mGluR7 and the intracellular adaptor protein PICK1 causes a phenotype in mice and rats that is reminiscent of human absence epilepsy.

    • Federica Bertaso
    • Chuansheng Zhang
    • Mireille Lerner-Natoli
    Article
  • Although the existence of face-selective processing in the temporal lobes is well-accepted, the existence of similar patches in frontal cortex is debated, with contradictory evidence. This study used fMRI in alert macaques to identify three face-selective regions in ventral prefrontal cortex, one of which was strongly lateralized to the right hemisphere.

    • Doris Y Tsao
    • Nicole Schweers
    • Winrich A Freiwald
    Brief Communication
  • Adult neurogenesis in hippocampus yields newly born granule cells that receive synaptic inputs from existing neurons. Characterizing morphological and functional features of newborn neurons in adult mice, Toni et al. demonstrate the functional maturation of their synaptic output onto the appropriate target cells in the hippocampus.

    • Nicolas Toni
    • Diego A Laplagne
    • Alejandro F Schinder
    Article
  • DARPP-32 phosphorylation is crucial to the actions of both psychostimulant and antipsychotic drugs. By using BAC transgenic mice to tag DARPP32 selectively in either striatonigral or striatopallidal neurons, the authors show that cocaine (a psychostimulant) and haloperidol (an antipsychotic) exert different effects on DARPP-32 in these two neuronal populations. This may help explain the opposing behavioral effects of these drugs.

    • Helen S Bateup
    • Per Svenningsson
    • Paul Greengard
    Article
  • Spatial attention works to modulate neuronal responses as early as V1, according to this study. Using electrophysiological recordings in monkey primary visual cortex, the authors found that there are two distinct cell populations (differentiated by direction selectivity, spike width, interspike interval distribution and contrast sensitivity) whose responses are either suppressed or enhanced by attention.

    • Yao Chen
    • Susana Martinez-Conde
    • Jose-Manuel Alonso
    Article
  • C.elegans do not possess eyes and are believed to lack responses to light. Ward et al. report a photophobic response in these worms and map this behavior to a group of sensory neurons. Their results also suggest that there could be some conservation in phototransduction between nematodes and vertebrates.

    • Alex Ward
    • Jie Liu
    • X Z Shawn Xu
    Article
  • The neural circuitry of primary auditory cortex is known to have a critical period during which the representation of sound frequency is shaped to represent the external world. De Villers-Sidani and colleagues now show that the end of this critical period is driven by local patterns of activity reflecting environmental stimuli.

    • Etienne de Villers-Sidani
    • Kimberly L Simpson
    • Michael M Merzenich
    Article
  • The physical properties of nematode neurons have led many to believe that neuronal signals in worms are passively propagated. Here, the authors present evidence for the production of regenerative action potentials in some nematode neurons, which can participate in the control of a bistable state.

    • Jerry E Mellem
    • Penelope J Brockie
    • Andres V Maricq
    Brief Communication
  • People can moderate their aversive emotional reactions. Delgado and colleagues now show that people can also downregulate expectations of reward, which can at times be maladaptive (for example, drug cravings), and that this results in an attenuation of the physiological and neural correlates of reward expectation.

    • Mauricio R Delgado
    • M Meredith Gillis
    • Elizabeth A Phelps
    Brief Communication
  • The multipotency of adult CNS stem cells has been shown in vitro, but not in vivo. Progenitors in the adult hippocampal subgranular zone normally generate only granule neurons. Retrovirus-mediated expression of the transcription factor Ascl1, however, resulted in the generation of immature and mature oligodendrocytes, demonstrating the progenitors' latent multipotency.

    • Sebastian Jessberger
    • Nicolas Toni
    • Fred H Gage
    Article
  • Trimeric P2X receptor channels are activated by ATP and function in neural signaling, pain transmission and inflammation-based pathways. Cysteine scanning analysis of the transmembrane regions revealed that the second domain lines the central ion-conductance pore and acts like a gate to limit ion flow in the closed state.

    • Mufeng Li
    • Tsg-Hui Chang
    • Kenton J Swartz
    Article
  • Perinatal lack of oxygen can impair brain development. In the worm C. elegans, this study shows that oxygen deprivation during embryogenesis caused specific axon-pathfinding errors. The defects were absent in worms lacking the hypoxia-response transcription factor HIF-1. Overexpression of HIF-1 replicated the hypoxia-induced defects. Hypoxia or HIF-1 induced the Eph receptor Vab-1, which may in part explain the pathfinding errors.

    • Roger Pocock
    • Oliver Hobert
    Article
  • Beuming and colleagues determined that the binding site for cocaine overlaps with that of dopamine on the dopamine transporter. Detailed modeling and mutagenesis experiments revealed that this site is deeply buried amongst several transmembrane domains.

    • Thijs Beuming
    • Julie Kniazeff
    • Claus J Loland
    Article
  • In vivo, synaptic receptor densities were maintained over minutes by a rapid exchange with nonsynaptic receptor pools and over hours through turnover. These changes and receptor dynamics may represent the initial phases of synaptic efficacy modulation before eventual structural modification involving spine growth or retraction.

    • Corey M McCann
    • Juan Carlos Tapia
    • Jeff W Lichtman
    Article
  • The peptide hormone ghrelin has previously been linked to the regulation of metabolism. This study in mice finds that increasing levels of ghrelin, either through subcutaneous injections or calorie restriction, has an anxiolytic and antidepressive effect. This reveals a previously unknown function for ghrelin.

    • Michael Lutter
    • Ichiro Sakata
    • Jeffrey M Zigman
    Brief Communication
  • Greenberg and colleagues directly compare the activity of cortical neurons in awake and subsequently anesthetized rats, finding that anesthesia modulates the relationship between firing rate and correlation, and suggesting that brain activity during wakefulness cannot be inferred from data gathered under anesthesia.

    • David S Greenberg
    • Arthur R Houweling
    • Jason N D Kerr
    Brief Communication