Review Articles in 2015

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  • Rodents spend a large proportion of their waking time engaged in self-grooming behaviour. In this Review, Kalueff and colleagues describe the characteristics and underlying neural circuitry of rodent self-grooming, and discuss its use as a measure of repetitive behaviour in models of psychiatric disease.

    • Allan V. Kalueff
    • Adam Michael Stewart
    • John C. Fentress
    Review Article
  • Cell surface molecule diversification has been proposed to confer specific surface identities on neuronal cell types, enabling the precise pattern of connectivity that is observed between CNS neurons. In this Review, de Wit and Ghosh explore the role of various protein superfamilies in the specification of such connectivity.

    • Joris de Wit
    • Anirvan Ghosh
    Review Article
  • Recent years have seen several important advances in the tools available to interrogate the function of specific genes. Here, Heidenreich and Zhang describe the advantages of the precise and efficient CRISPR–Cas9 (clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeat–CRISPR-associated protein) system for gene editing and outline how this approach may benefit research into nervous system function and disease.

    • Matthias Heidenreich
    • Feng Zhang
    Review Article
  • Tau is a microtubule-stabilizing protein that aggregates in several neurodegenerative diseases. In this Review, Wang and Mandelkow describe the structure, expression and post-translational modifications of tau, and the functions of this protein in health and in disease.

    • Yipeng Wang
    • Eckhard Mandelkow
    Review Article
  • Endocannabinoid signalling affects the behavioural domains of acquired fear, anxiety and stress-coping by modulating synaptic functions in specific brain circuits. Lutz and colleagues discuss the cellular mechanisms involved in these effects and the potential for endocannabinoid-based therapies to treat anxiety and stress-related disorders.

    • Beat Lutz
    • Giovanni Marsicano
    • Cecilia J. Hillard
    Review Article
  • Sensory systems encode and interpret patterns of contrast in sensory signals to provide an accurate representation of an animal's environment. Maler and colleagues here outline our current understanding of the principles of contrast coding in the electrosensory system and make comparisons with contrast coding in the visual system.

    • Stephen E. Clarke
    • André Longtin
    • Leonard Maler
    Review Article
  • Cortico–basal ganglia circuits are involved in goal-directed and habitual actions. Jahanshahiet al. review evidence for the involvement of the cortico–basal ganglia network in goal-directed and habitual inhibition, and propose that some of the symptoms of basal ganglia disorders represent an imbalance between goal-directed and habitual action and inhibition.

    • Marjan Jahanshahi
    • Ignacio Obeso
    • José A. Obeso
    Review Article
  • Type 2 diabetes mellitus is associated with an increased risk of cognitive dysfunction and Alzheimer disease. In this Review, Biessels and Reagan discuss findings from human studies and animal models which suggest that hippocampal insulin resistance is one of the mechanisms underlying the links between these disorders.

    • Geert Jan Biessels
    • Lawrence P. Reagan
    Review Article
  • Ageing leads to the gradual loss of brain function and is a key risk factor for most late-onset neurological disease. In this Review, Chow and Herrup explore how the loss of DNA integrity drives brain ageing and contributes to the pathogenesis of many seemingly unrelated conditions.

    • Hei-man Chow
    • Karl Herrup
    Review Article
  • The brain is particularly sensitive to changes in cell number, which can acutely affect neural function. Here, Knoblich and colleagues describe the proliferation control mechanisms that exist inDrosophila melanogasterand mammals, and their regulation by developmental age and by metabolic and nutritional status.

    • Catarina C. F. Homem
    • Marko Repic
    • Jürgen A. Knoblich
    Review Article
  • Attention processes allow the selection of salient information over competing inputs. In this Review, Amso and Scerif propose a framework for visual attention development that incorporates its interactions with visual and memory systems and may guide the design of training programmes to alleviate attention disorders.

    • Dima Amso
    • Gaia Scerif
    Review Article
  • Impairment of social cognition is an important feature of schizophrenia. Green and colleagues review the social processes that are affected in people with this disorder and consider empathy — a complex social cognitive function that involves several of these processes — in such individuals.

    • Michael F. Green
    • William P. Horan
    • Junghee Lee
    Review Article
  • Cannabinoid receptors and their endogenous ligands, the endocannabinoids, are widely expressed in the brain, particularly in regions that are implicated in mediating reward. In this Review, Parsons and Hurd explore the role of endocannabinoid signalling in natural and drug-induced reward, as well as in addiction.

    • Loren H. Parsons
    • Yasmin L. Hurd
    Review Article
  • Fragile X syndrome (FXS) results from the loss of the RNA-binding protein fragile X mental retardation protein (FMRP). Here, Klann and colleagues discuss the ways in which FMRP loss disrupts mRNA translation in the brain and the outcomes of genetic and pharmacological attempts to reset translational homeostasis in FXS model mice.

    • Joel D. Richter
    • Gary J. Bassell
    • Eric Klann
    Review Article
  • Memory storage is thought to be mediated by lasting physical changes, or engrams, in the brain. In this Review, Josselyn and colleagues discuss characteristics of the engram and describe the recent progress that has been made in identifying neurons involved in specific engrams.

    • Sheena A. Josselyn
    • Stefan Köhler
    • Paul W. Frankland
    Review Article
  • Schizophrenia is characterized by various neurocognitive deficits, including impairments in auditory function. In this Review, Javitt and Sweet examine the behavioural, neurophysiological and structural evidence for auditory cortical dysfunction in this disorder and explore some of the possible underlying mechanisms.

    • Daniel C. Javitt
    • Robert A. Sweet
    Review Article
  • Recent years have seen considerable interest in the genetics of autism spectrum disorder (ASD). In this Review, Thomas Bourgeron examines the genetic architecture of this disorder and how ASD-linked mutations might affect synaptic plasticity, before exploring the synaptic homeostasis hypothesis of ASD.

    • Thomas Bourgeron
    Review Article
  • Various lines of evidence suggest that immune system dysregulation has a key role in autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Estes and McAllister review this evidence, covering genetic and maternal immune system-related risk factors, chronic immune system changes in individuals with ASD and in animal models, and potential pathophysiological mechanisms.

    • Myka L. Estes
    • A. Kimberley McAllister
    Review Article
  • Local circuit GABAergic inhibitory interneurons regulate almost all aspects of cortical and hippocampal circuitry. In this Review, Overstreet-Wadiche and McBain discuss how neurogliaform cells are emerging as an inhibitory interneuron type with unique cellular and signalling properties that diverge from canonical roles for interneurons.

    • Linda Overstreet-Wadiche
    • Chris J. McBain
    Review Article
  • The health of the vertebrate brain is dependent on appropriate levels of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), which is secreted by the choroid plexus (ChP). In this Review, Lehtinen and colleagues examine ChP structure and development and explore recently discovered functions of the ChP–CSF system.

    • Melody P. Lun
    • Edwin S. Monuki
    • Maria K. Lehtinen
    Review Article