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1.
PLoS Biol ; 21(1): e3001985, 2023 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36716348

RESUMEN

Humans have been shown to strategically explore. They can identify situations in which gathering information about distant and uncertain options is beneficial for the future. Because primates rely on scarce resources when they forage, they are also thought to strategically explore, but whether they use the same strategies as humans and the neural bases of strategic exploration in monkeys are largely unknown. We designed a sequential choice task to investigate whether monkeys mobilize strategic exploration based on whether information can improve subsequent choice, but also to ask the novel question about whether monkeys adjust their exploratory choices based on the contingency between choice and information, by sometimes providing the counterfactual feedback about the unchosen option. We show that monkeys decreased their reliance on expected value when exploration could be beneficial, but this was not mediated by changes in the effect of uncertainty on choices. We found strategic exploratory signals in anterior and mid-cingulate cortex (ACC/MCC) and dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC). This network was most active when a low value option was chosen, which suggests a role in counteracting expected value signals, when exploration away from value should to be considered. Such strategic exploration was abolished when the counterfactual feedback was available. Learning from counterfactual outcome was associated with the recruitment of a different circuit centered on the medial orbitofrontal cortex (OFC), where we showed that monkeys represent chosen and unchosen reward prediction errors. Overall, our study shows how ACC/MCC-dlPFC and OFC circuits together could support exploitation of available information to the fullest and drive behavior towards finding more information through exploration when it is beneficial.


Asunto(s)
Conducta de Elección , Corteza Prefrontal , Humanos , Animales , Conducta de Elección/fisiología , Corteza Prefrontal/fisiología , Lóbulo Frontal/fisiología , Recompensa , Macaca mulatta
2.
Mol Psychiatry ; 2024 Feb 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38321122

RESUMEN

Psychedelic drugs can aid fast and lasting remission from various neuropsychiatric disorders, though the underlying mechanisms remain unclear. Preclinical studies suggest serotonergic psychedelics enhance neuronal plasticity, but whether neuroplastic changes can also be seen at cognitive and behavioural levels is unexplored. Here we show that a single dose of the psychedelic 2,5-dimethoxy-4-iodoamphetamine ((±)-DOI) affects structural brain plasticity and cognitive flexibility in young adult mice beyond the acute drug experience. Using ex vivo magnetic resonance imaging, we show increased volumes of several sensory and association areas one day after systemic administration of 2 mgkg-1 (±)-DOI. We then demonstrate lasting effects of (±)-DOI on cognitive flexibility in a two-step probabilistic reversal learning task where 2 mgkg-1 (±)-DOI improved the rate of adaptation to a novel reversal in task structure occurring one-week post-treatment. Strikingly, (±)-DOI-treated mice started learning from reward omissions, a unique strategy not typically seen in mice in this task, suggesting heightened sensitivity to previously overlooked cues. Crucially, further experiments revealed that (±)-DOI's effects on cognitive flexibility were contingent on the timing between drug treatment and the novel reversal, as well as on the nature of the intervening experience. (±)-DOI's facilitation of both cognitive adaptation and novel thinking strategies may contribute to the clinical benefits of psychedelic-assisted therapy, particularly in cases of perseverative behaviours and a resistance to change seen in depression, anxiety, or addiction. Furthermore, our findings highlight the crucial role of time-dependent neuroplasticity and the influence of experiential factors in shaping the therapeutic potential of psychedelic interventions for impaired cognitive flexibility.

3.
Mol Psychiatry ; 28(2): 579-587, 2023 02.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36460723

RESUMEN

Psychosis in disorders like schizophrenia is commonly associated with aberrant salience and elevated striatal dopamine. However, the underlying cause(s) of this hyper-dopaminergic state remain elusive. Various lines of evidence point to glutamatergic dysfunction and impairments in synaptic plasticity in the etiology of schizophrenia, including deficits associated with the GluA1 AMPAR subunit. GluA1 knockout (Gria1-/-) mice provide a model of impaired synaptic plasticity in schizophrenia and exhibit a selective deficit in a form of short-term memory which underlies short-term habituation. As such, these mice are unable to reduce attention to recently presented stimuli. In this study we used fast-scan cyclic voltammetry to measure phasic dopamine responses in the nucleus accumbens of Gria1-/- mice to determine whether this behavioral phenotype might be a key driver of a hyper-dopaminergic state. There was no effect of GluA1 deletion on electrically-evoked dopamine responses in anaesthetized mice, demonstrating normal endogenous release properties of dopamine neurons in Gria1-/- mice. Furthermore, dopamine signals were initially similar in Gria1-/- mice compared to controls in response to both sucrose rewards and neutral light stimuli. They were also equally sensitive to changes in the magnitude of delivered rewards. In contrast, however, these stimulus-evoked dopamine signals failed to habituate with repeated presentations in Gria1-/- mice, resulting in a task-relevant, hyper-dopaminergic phenotype. Thus, here we show that GluA1 dysfunction, resulting in impaired short-term habituation, is a key driver of enhanced striatal dopamine responses, which may be an important contributor to aberrant salience and psychosis in psychiatric disorders like schizophrenia.


Asunto(s)
Dopamina , Habituación Psicofisiológica , Ratones , Animales , Ratones Noqueados , Memoria a Corto Plazo , Fenotipo
4.
PLoS Biol ; 18(5): e3000605, 2020 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32453728

RESUMEN

One of the most influential accounts of central orbitofrontal cortex-that it mediates behavioral flexibility-has been challenged by the finding that discrimination reversal in macaques, the classic test of behavioral flexibility, is unaffected when lesions are made by excitotoxin injection rather than aspiration. This suggests that the critical brain circuit mediating behavioral flexibility in reversal tasks lies beyond the central orbitofrontal cortex. To determine its identity, a group of nine macaques were taught discrimination reversal learning tasks, and its impact on gray matter was measured. Magnetic resonance imaging scans were taken before and after learning and compared with scans from two control groups, each comprising 10 animals. One control group learned discrimination tasks that were similar but lacked any reversal component, and the other control group engaged in no learning. Gray matter changes were prominent in posterior orbitofrontal cortex/anterior insula but were also found in three other frontal cortical regions: lateral orbitofrontal cortex (orbital part of area 12 [12o]), cingulate cortex, and lateral prefrontal cortex. In a second analysis, neural activity in posterior orbitofrontal cortex/anterior insula was measured at rest, and its pattern of coupling with the other frontal cortical regions was assessed. Activity coupling increased significantly in the reversal learning group in comparison with controls. In a final set of experiments, we used similar structural imaging procedures and analyses to demonstrate that aspiration lesion of central orbitofrontal cortex, of the type known to affect discrimination learning, affected structure and activity in the same frontal cortical circuit. The results identify a distributed frontal cortical circuit associated with behavioral flexibility.


Asunto(s)
Aprendizaje Discriminativo/fisiología , Sustancia Gris/fisiología , Corteza Prefrontal/fisiología , Adaptación Psicológica/fisiología , Animales , Femenino , Sustancia Gris/diagnóstico por imagen , Macaca , Imagen por Resonancia Magnética , Masculino , Corteza Prefrontal/diagnóstico por imagen
5.
J Neurophysiol ; 128(3): 671-680, 2022 09 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35975913

RESUMEN

Previous studies have revealed unexpected relationships between the firing rates of horizontally acting motoneurons and vergence. During a vergence task, for example, antidromically identified abducens internuclear neurons show a negative correlation between vergence angle and firing rate, which is the opposite of the modulation displayed by the medial rectus motoneurons to which they project. For a given horizontal eye position, medial rectus motoneurons discharge at a higher rate if the eyes are converged than if the same eye position is reached during a task that requires version; paradoxically, however, the horizontal rectus eye muscles show corelaxation during vergence. These complex and unexpected relationships inspired the present author to investigate whether the tonic firing rates of vertically acting motoneurons in oculomotor nucleus are correlated with vergence angle. Monkeys were trained to fixate a single, randomly selected, visual target among an array of 60 red plus-shaped LEDs, arranged at 12 different distances in three-dimensional space. The targets were arranged to permit dissociation of vertical eye position and vergence angle. Here I report, for the first time, that most vertically acting motoneurons in oculomotor nucleus show a significant negative correlation between tonic firing rate and vergence angle. This suggests the possibility that there may be a general corelaxation of extraocular muscles during vergence.NEW & NOTEWORTHY An array of 60 plus-shaped LEDs, positioned at various locations in three-dimensional space, was used to elicit conjugate and disjunctive saccades while single neurons in oculomotor nucleus were recorded from rhesus monkeys. This study demonstrates that most vertically acting motoneurons in oculomotor nucleus discharge at a lower rate when the eyes are converged.


Asunto(s)
Movimientos Oculares , Neuronas Motoras , Nervio Abducens/fisiología , Animales , Macaca mulatta , Neuronas Motoras/fisiología , Músculos Oculomotores , Movimientos Sacádicos
6.
Transgenic Res ; 31(2): 167-199, 2022 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35000100

RESUMEN

Traditional breeding techniques, applied incrementally over thousands of years, have yielded huge benefits in the characteristics of agricultural animals. This is a result of significant, measurable changes to the genomes of those animal species and breeds. Genome editing techniques may now be applied to achieve targeted DNA sequence alterations, with the potential to affect traits of interest to production of agricultural animals in just one generation. New opportunities arise to improve characteristics difficult to achieve or not amenable to traditional breeding, including disease resistance, and traits that can improve animal welfare, reduce environmental impact, or mitigate impacts of climate change. Countries and supranational institutions are in the process of defining regulatory approaches for genome edited animals and can benefit from sharing approaches and experiences to institute progressive policies in which regulatory oversight is scaled to the particular level of risk involved. To facilitate information sharing and discussion on animal biotechnology, an international community of researchers, developers, breeders, regulators, and communicators recently held a series of seven virtual workshop sessions on applications of biotechnology for animal agriculture, food and environmental safety assessment, regulatory approaches, and market and consumer acceptance. In this report, we summarize the topics presented in the workshop sessions, as well as discussions coming out of the breakout sessions. This is framed within the context of past and recent scientific and regulatory developments. This is a pivotal moment for determination of regulatory approaches and establishment of trust across the innovation through-chain, from researchers, developers, regulators, breeders, farmers through to consumers.


Asunto(s)
Productos Agrícolas , Fitomejoramiento , Agricultura/métodos , Animales , Biotecnología , Productos Agrícolas/genética , Edición Génica/métodos
7.
Mol Psychiatry ; 26(12): 7188-7199, 2021 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34193974

RESUMEN

Dopamine plays a crucial role in adaptive behavior, and dysfunctional dopamine is implicated in multiple psychiatric conditions characterized by inflexible or inconsistent choices. However, the precise relationship between dopamine and flexible decision making remains unclear. One reason is that, while many studies have focused on the activity of dopamine neurons, efficient dopamine signaling also relies on clearance mechanisms, notably the dopamine transporter (DAT), which predominates in striatum, and catechol-O-methyltransferase (COMT), which predominates in cortex. The exact locus, extent, and timescale of the effects of DAT and COMT are uncertain. Moreover, there is limited data on how acute disruption of either mechanism affects flexible decision making strategies mediated by cortico-striatal networks. To address these issues, we combined pharmacological modulation of DAT and COMT with electrochemistry and behavior in mice. DAT blockade, but not COMT inhibition, regulated sub-second dopamine release in the nucleus accumbens core, but surprisingly neither clearance mechanism affected evoked release in prelimbic cortex. This was not due to a lack of sensitivity, as both amphetamine and atomoxetine changed the kinetics of sub-second release. In a multi-step decision making task where mice had to respond to reversals in either reward probabilities or the choice sequence to reach the goal, DAT blockade selectively impaired, and COMT inhibition improved, performance after reward reversals, but neither manipulation affected the adaptation of choices after action-state transition reversals. Together, our data suggest that DAT and COMT shape specific aspects of behavioral flexibility by regulating different aspects of the kinetics of striatal and cortical dopamine, respectively.


Asunto(s)
Catecol O-Metiltransferasa , Dopamina , Animales , Catecol O-Metiltransferasa/genética , Catecol O-Metiltransferasa/metabolismo , Cuerpo Estriado/metabolismo , Proteínas de Transporte de Dopamina a través de la Membrana Plasmática/metabolismo , Cinética , Ratones , Núcleo Accumbens/metabolismo
8.
Pediatr Surg Int ; 38(5): 679-694, 2022 May.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35294595

RESUMEN

PURPOSE: Remote ischemic conditioning (RIC) is a maneuver involving brief cycles of ischemia reperfusion in an individual's limb. In the early stage of experimental NEC, RIC decreased intestinal injury and prolonged survival by counteracting the derangements in intestinal microcirculation. A single-center phase I study demonstrated that the performance of RIC was safe in neonates with NEC. The aim of this phase II RCT was to evaluate the safety and feasibility of RIC, to identify challenges in recruitment, retainment, and to inform a phase III RCT to evaluate efficacy. METHODS: RIC will be performed by trained research personnel and will consist of four cycles of limb ischemia (4-min via cuff inflation) followed by reperfusion (4-min via cuff deflation), repeated on two consecutive days post randomization. The primary endpoint of this RCT is feasibility and acceptability of recruiting and randomizing neonates within 24 h from NEC diagnosis as well as masking and completing the RIC intervention. RESULTS: We created a novel international consortium for this trial and created a consensus on the diagnostic criteria for NEC and protocol for the trial. The phase II multicenter-masked feasibility RCT will be conducted at 12 centers in Canada, USA, Sweden, The Netherlands, UK, and Spain. The inclusion criteria are: gestational age < 33 weeks, weight ≥ 750 g, NEC receiving medical treatment, and diagnosis established within previous 24 h. Neonates will be randomized to RIC (intervention) or no-RIC (control) and will continue to receive standard management of NEC. We expect to recruit and randomize 40% of eligible patients in the collaborating centers (78 patients; 39/arm) in 30 months. Bayesian methods will be used to combine uninformative prior distributions with the corresponding observed proportions from this trial to determine posterior distributions for parameters of feasibility. CONCLUSIONS: The newly established NEC consortium has generated novel data on NEC diagnosis and defined the feasibility parameters for the introduction of a novel treatment in NEC. This phase II RCT will inform a future phase III RCT to evaluate the efficacy and safety of RIC in early-stage NEC.


Asunto(s)
Enterocolitis Necrotizante , Teorema de Bayes , Ensayos Clínicos Fase I como Asunto , Ensayos Clínicos Fase II como Asunto , Enterocolitis Necrotizante/terapia , Estudios de Factibilidad , Humanos , Lactante , Recién Nacido , Intestinos , Isquemia/terapia , Estudios Multicéntricos como Asunto , Ensayos Clínicos Controlados Aleatorios como Asunto , Resultado del Tratamiento
9.
Cereb Cortex ; 30(9): 4979-4994, 2020 07 30.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32390051

RESUMEN

The two catecholamines, noradrenaline and dopamine, have been shown to play comparable roles in behavior. Both noradrenergic and dopaminergic neurons respond to cues predicting reward availability and novelty. However, even though both are thought to be involved in motivating actions, their roles in motivation have seldom been directly compared. We therefore examined the activity of putative noradrenergic neurons in the locus coeruleus and putative midbrain dopaminergic neurons in monkeys cued to perform effortful actions for rewards. The activity in both regions correlated with engagement with a presented option. By contrast, only noradrenaline neurons were also (i) predictive of engagement in a subsequent trial following a failure to engage and (ii) more strongly activated in nonrepeated trials, when cues indicated a new task condition. This suggests that while both catecholaminergic neurons are involved in promoting action, noradrenergic neurons are sensitive to task state changes, and their influence on behavior extends beyond the immediately rewarded action.


Asunto(s)
Neuronas Adrenérgicas/fisiología , Neuronas Dopaminérgicas/fisiología , Locus Coeruleus/fisiología , Mesencéfalo/fisiología , Motivación/fisiología , Animales , Macaca mulatta , Masculino , Recompensa
10.
BMC Med Educ ; 19(1): 150, 2019 May 16.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31096966

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Sharing information about learners during training is seen as an important component supporting learner progression and relevant to patient safety. Shared information may cover topics from accommodation requirements to unprofessional behavior. The purpose of this study was to determine the views of key stakeholders on a proposed national information sharing process during the transition from undergraduate to postgraduate medical education in Canada, termed the Learner Education Handover (LEH). METHOD: Key stakeholder groups including medical students, resident physicians, residency program directors, medical regulatory authority representatives, undergraduate medical education deans, student affairs leaders, postgraduate medical education deans participated in focus groups conducted via teleconference. Data were transcribed and coded independently by two coders, then analyzed for themes informed by principles of constructivist grounded theory. RESULTS: Sixty participants (33 males and 27 females) from 16 focus groups representing key stakeholder groups participated. Most recognized value in a national LEH that would facilitate a smooth learner transition from medical school to residency. Potential risks and benefits of the LEH were identified. Themes significant to the content, process and format of the LEH also emerged. Guiding principles of the LEH process were determined to include that it be learner-centered while supporting patient safety, resident wellness and professional behavior. The learner and representatives from their undergraduate medical education environment would each contribute to the LEH. CONCLUSIONS: The LEH must advocate for the learner with respect for learner privacy, while promoting professionalism, patient safety and learner wellness.


Asunto(s)
Educación Médica , Evaluación Educacional/estadística & datos numéricos , Difusión de la Información , Competencia Profesional/estadística & datos numéricos , Canadá , Comunicación , Curriculum , Grupos Focales , Humanos , Difusión de la Información/ética , Seguridad del Paciente , Participación de los Interesados
11.
J Neurophysiol ; 120(5): 2282-2295, 2018 11 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30110234

RESUMEN

Infantile strabismus is a common disorder characterized by a chronic misalignment of the eyes, impairment of binocular vision, and oculomotor abnormalities. Nonhuman primates with strabismus, induced in infancy, show a pattern of abnormalities similar to those of strabismic children. This allows strabismic nonhuman primates to serve as an ideal animal model to examine neural mechanisms associated with aberrant oculomotor behavior. Here, we test the hypothesis that impairment of disparity vergence and horizontal saccade disconjugacy in exotropia and esotropia are associated with disrupted tuning of near- and far-response neurons in the supraoculomotor area (SOA). In normal animals, these neurons carry signals related to vergence position and/or velocity. We hypothesized that, in strabismus, these neurons modulate inappropriately in association with saccades between equidistant targets. We recorded from 62 SOA neurons from 4 strabismic animals (2 esotropes and 2 exotropes) during visually guided saccades to a target that stepped to different locations on a tangent screen. Under these same conditions, SOA neurons in normal animals show no detectable modulation. In our strabismic subjects, we found that a subset of SOA neurons carry weak vergence velocity signals during saccades. In addition, a subset of SOA neurons showed clear modulation associated with slow fluctuations of horizontal strabismus angle in the absence of a saccade. We suggest that abnormal SOA activity contributes to fixation instability but plays only a minor role in the horizontal disconjugacy of saccades that do not switch fixation from one eye to the other. NEW & NOTEWORTHY The present study is the first to investigate the activity of neurons in the supraoculomotor area (SOA) during horizontally disconjugate saccades in a nonhuman primate model of infantile strabismus. We report that fluctuations of horizontal strabismus angle, during fixation of static targets on a tangent screen, are associated with contextually inappropriate modulation of SOA activity. However, firing rate modulation during saccades is too weak to make a major contribution to horizontal disconjugacy.


Asunto(s)
Neuronas/fisiología , Complejo Nuclear Oculomotor/fisiopatología , Movimientos Sacádicos , Estrabismo/fisiopatología , Animales , Macaca mulatta , Complejo Nuclear Oculomotor/citología
12.
J Neurophysiol ; 119(2): 585-596, 2018 02 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29142092

RESUMEN

Combined saccade-vergence movements allow humans and other primates to align their eyes with objects of interest in three-dimensions. In the absence of saccades, vergence movements are typically slow, symmetrical movements of the two eyes in opposite directions. However, combined saccade-vergence movements produce vergence velocities that exceed values observed during vergence alone. This phenomenon is often called "vergence enhancement", or "saccade-facilitated vergence," though it is important to consider that rapid vergence changes, known as "vergence transients," are also observed during conjugate saccades. We developed a visual target array that allows monkeys to make saccades in all directions between targets spaced at distances that correspond to ~1° intervals of vergence angle relative to the monkey. We recorded the activity of vergence-sensitive neurons in the supra-oculomotor area (SOA), located dorsal and lateral to the oculomotor nucleus while monkeys made saccades with vergence amplitudes ranging from 0 to 10°. The primary focus of this study was to test the hypothesis that neurons in the SOA fire a high frequency burst of spikes during saccades that could generate the enhanced vergence. We found that individual neurons encode vergence velocity during both saccadic and non-saccadic vergence, yet firing rates were insufficient to produce the observed enhancement of vergence velocity. Our results are consistent with the hypothesis that slow vergence changes are encoded by the SOA while fast vergence movements require an additional contribution from the saccadic system. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Research into combined saccade-vergence movements has so far focused on exploring the saccadic neural circuitry, leading to diverging hypotheses regarding the role of the vergence system in this behavior. In this study, we report the first quantitative analysis of the discharge of individual neurons that encode vergence velocity in the monkey brain stem during combined saccade-vergence movements.


Asunto(s)
Neuronas/fisiología , Complejo Nuclear Oculomotor/fisiología , Movimientos Sacádicos , Animales , Femenino , Macaca mulatta
13.
J Neurophysiol ; 118(6): 3175-3193, 2017 12 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28904108

RESUMEN

In pattern strabismus the horizontal and vertical misalignments vary with eye position along the orthogonal axis. The disorder is typically described in terms of overaction or underaction of oblique muscles. Recent behavioral studies in humans and monkeys, however, have reported that such actions are insufficient to fully explain the patterns of directional and amplitude disconjugacy of saccades. There is mounting evidence that the oculomotor abnormalities associated with strabismus are at least partially attributable to neurophysiological abnormalities. A number of control systems models have been developed to simulate the kinematic characteristics of saccades in normal primates. In the present study we sought to determine whether these models could simulate the abnormalities of saccades in strabismus by making two assumptions: 1) in strabismus the burst generator gains differ for the two eyes and 2) abnormal crosstalk exists between the horizontal and vertical saccadic circuits in the brain stem. We tested three models, distinguished by the location of the horizontal-vertical crosstalk. All three models were able to simulate amplitude and directional saccade disconjugacy, postsaccadic drift, and a pattern strabismus for static fixation, but they made different predictions about the dynamics of saccades. By assuming that crosstalk occurs at multiple nodes, the Distributed Crosstalk Model correctly predicted the dynamics of saccades. These new models make additional predictions that can be tested with future neurophysiological experiments.NEW & NOTEWORTHY Over the past several decades, numerous control systems models have been devised to simulate the known kinematic features of saccades in normal primates. These models have proven valuable to neurophysiology, as a means of generating testable predictions. The present manuscript, as far as we are aware, is the first to present control systems models to simulate the known abnormalities of saccades in strabismus.


Asunto(s)
Modelos Neurológicos , Movimientos Sacádicos , Estrabismo/fisiopatología , Animales , Potenciales Evocados Visuales , Macaca mulatta
14.
J Neurophysiol ; 118(1): 280-299, 2017 07 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28404829

RESUMEN

Infantile strabismus is characterized by numerous visual and oculomotor abnormalities. Recently nonhuman primate models of infantile strabismus have been established, with characteristics that closely match those observed in human patients. This has made it possible to study the neural basis for visual and oculomotor symptoms in infantile strabismus. In this review, we consider the available evidence for neural abnormalities in structures related to oculomotor pathways ranging from visual cortex to oculomotor nuclei. These studies provide compelling evidence that a disturbance of binocular vision during a sensitive period early in life, whatever the cause, results in a cascade of abnormalities through numerous brain areas involved in visual functions and eye movements.


Asunto(s)
Nervio Oculomotor/fisiopatología , Estrabismo/fisiopatología , Vías Visuales/fisiopatología , Animales , Movimientos Oculares , Humanos , Lactante , Nervio Oculomotor/anomalías , Nervio Oculomotor/crecimiento & desarrollo , Complejo Nuclear Oculomotor/anomalías , Complejo Nuclear Oculomotor/crecimiento & desarrollo , Complejo Nuclear Oculomotor/fisiopatología , Estrabismo/etiología , Corteza Visual/anomalías , Corteza Visual/crecimiento & desarrollo , Corteza Visual/fisiopatología , Vías Visuales/anomalías , Vías Visuales/crecimiento & desarrollo
15.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 111(51): 18357-62, 2014 Dec 23.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25489094

RESUMEN

Phasic dopamine transmission is posited to act as a critical teaching signal that updates the stored (or "cached") values assigned to reward-predictive stimuli and actions. It is widely hypothesized that these cached values determine the selection among multiple courses of action, a premise that has provided a foundation for contemporary theories of decision making. In the current work we used fast-scan cyclic voltammetry to probe dopamine-associated cached values from cue-evoked dopamine release in the nucleus accumbens of rats performing cost-benefit decision-making paradigms to evaluate critically the relationship between dopamine-associated cached values and preferences. By manipulating the amount of effort required to obtain rewards of different sizes, we were able to bias rats toward preferring an option yielding a high-value reward in some sessions and toward instead preferring an option yielding a low-value reward in others. Therefore, this approach permitted the investigation of dopamine-associated cached values in a context in which reward magnitude and subjective preference were dissociated. We observed greater cue-evoked mesolimbic dopamine release to options yielding the high-value reward even when rats preferred the option yielding the low-value reward. This result identifies a clear mismatch between the ordinal utility of the available options and the rank ordering of their cached values, thereby providing robust evidence that dopamine-associated cached values cannot be the sole determinant of choices in simple economic decision making.


Asunto(s)
Toma de Decisiones , Dopamina/fisiología , Animales , Dopamina/metabolismo , Núcleo Accumbens/metabolismo , Núcleo Accumbens/fisiología , Ratas , Ratas Sprague-Dawley , Recompensa
16.
J Neurophysiol ; 114(2): 857-68, 2015 Aug.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26063778

RESUMEN

Strabismus is a common disorder, characterized by a chronic misalignment of the eyes and numerous visual and oculomotor abnormalities. For example, saccades are often highly disconjugate. For humans with pattern strabismus, the horizontal and vertical disconjugacies vary with eye position. In monkeys, manipulations that disturb binocular vision during the first several weeks of life result in a chronic strabismus with characteristics that closely match those in human patients. Early onset strabismus is associated with altered binocular sensitivity of neurons in visual cortex. Here we test the hypothesis that brain stem circuits specific to saccadic eye movements are abnormal. We targeted the pontine paramedian reticular formation, a structure that directly projects to the ipsilateral abducens nucleus. In normal animals, neurons in this structure are characterized by a high-frequency burst of spikes associated with ipsiversive saccades. We recorded single-unit activity from 84 neurons from four monkeys (two normal, one exotrope, and one esotrope), while they made saccades to a visual target on a tangent screen. All 24 neurons recorded from the normal animals had preferred directions within 30° of pure horizontal. For the strabismic animals, the distribution of preferred directions was normal on one side of the brain, but highly variable on the other. In fact, 12/60 neurons recorded from the strabismic animals preferred vertical saccades. Many also had unusually weak or strong bursts. These data suggest that the loss of corresponding binocular vision during infancy impairs the development of normal tuning characteristics for saccade-related neurons in brain stem.


Asunto(s)
Neuronas/fisiología , Tegmento Pontino/fisiopatología , Movimientos Sacádicos/fisiología , Estrabismo/fisiopatología , Potenciales de Acción , Animales , Modelos Animales de Enfermedad , Estimulación Eléctrica , Femenino , Lateralidad Funcional , Lentes , Macaca mulatta , Microelectrodos , Actividad Motora/fisiología , Vías Nerviosas/fisiopatología , Estimulación Luminosa , Análisis de Regresión , Percepción Visual/fisiología
17.
Chemistry ; 21(13): 5199-210, 2015 Mar 23.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25689134

RESUMEN

Interaction of p-tert-butylcalix[8]areneH8 (L(8) H8 ) with [NaVO(OtBu)4 ] (formed in situ from VOCl3 ) afforded the complex [Na(NCMe)5 ][(VO)2 L(8) H]⋅4 MeCN (1⋅4 MeCN). Increasing [NaVO(OtBu)4 ] to 4 equiv led to [Na(NCMe)6 ]2 [(Na(VO)4 L(8) )(Na(NCMe))3 ]2 ⋅10 MeCN (2⋅10 MeCN). With adventitious oxygen, reaction of 4 equiv of [VO(OtBu)3 ] with L(8) H8 afforded the alkali-metal-free complex [(VO)4 L(8) (µ(3) -O)2 ] (3); solvates 3⋅3 MeCN and 3⋅3 CH2 Cl2 were isolated. For the lithium analogue, the order of addition had to be reversed such that lithium tert-butoxide was added to L(8) H8 and then treated with 2 equiv of VOCl3 ; crystallisation afforded [(VO2 )2 Li6 [L(8) ](thf)2 (OtBu)2 (Et2 O)2 ]⋅Et2 O (4⋅Et2 O). Upon extraction into acetonitrile, [Li(NCMe)4 ][(VO)2 L(8) H]⋅8 MeCN (5⋅8 MeCN) was formed. Use of the imido precursors [V(NtBu)(OtBu)3 ] and [V(Np-tolyl)(OtBu)3 ] and L(8) H8 , afforded [tBuNH3 ][{V(p-tolylN)}2 L(8) H]⋅3 1/2 MeCN (6⋅3 1/2 MeCN). The molecular structures of 1 to 6 are reported. Complexes 1, 3, and 4 were screened as precatalysts for the polymerisation of ethylene in the presence of cocatalysts at various temperatures and for the copolymerisation of ethylene with propylene. Activities as high as 136 000 g (mmol(V) h)(-1) were sometimes achieved; higher molecular weight polymers could be obtained versus the benchmark [VO(OEt)Cl2 ]. For copolymerisation, incorporation of propylene was 7.1-10.9 mol % (compare 10 mol % for [VO(OEt)Cl2 ]), although catalytic activities were lower than [VO(OEt)Cl2 ].

18.
J Neurophysiol ; 111(2): 300-12, 2014 Jan.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24174648

RESUMEN

Primates explore a visual scene through a succession of saccades. Much of what is known about the neural circuitry that generates these movements has come from neurophysiological studies using subjects with their heads restrained. Horizontal saccades and the horizontal components of oblique saccades are associated with high-frequency bursts of spikes in medium-lead burst neurons (MLBs) and long-lead burst neurons (LLBNs) in the paramedian pontine reticular formation. For LLBNs, the high-frequency burst is preceded by a low-frequency prelude that begins 12-150 ms before saccade onset. In terms of the lead time between the onset of prelude activity and saccade onset, the anatomical projections, and the movement field characteristics, LLBNs are a heterogeneous group of neurons. Whether this heterogeneity is endemic of multiple functional subclasses is an open question. One possibility is that some may carry signals related to head movement. We recorded from LLBNs while monkeys performed head-unrestrained gaze shifts, during which the kinematics of the eye and head components were dissociable. Many cells had peak firing rates that never exceeded 200 spikes/s for gaze shifts of any vector. The activity of these low-frequency cells often persisted beyond the end of the gaze shift and was usually related to head-movement kinematics. A subset was tested during head-unrestrained pursuit and showed clear modulation in the absence of saccades. These "low-frequency" cells were intermingled with MLBs and traditional LLBNs and may represent a separate functional class carrying signals related to head movement.


Asunto(s)
Potenciales de Acción , Movimientos de la Cabeza , Neuronas/fisiología , Puente/fisiología , Formación Reticular/fisiología , Movimientos Sacádicos , Animales , Macaca mulatta , Neuronas/clasificación , Puente/citología , Formación Reticular/citología
19.
Eur J Neurosci ; 40(12): 3757-65, 2014 Dec.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25348059

RESUMEN

The medial frontal cortex (MFC) is critical for cost-benefit decision-making. Generally, cognitive and reward-based behaviour in rodents is not thought to be lateralised within the brain. In this study, however, we demonstrate that rats with unilateral MFC lesions show a profound change in decision-making on an effort-based decision-making task. Furthermore, unilateral MFC lesions have a greater effect when the rat has to choose to put in more effort for a higher reward when it is on the contralateral side of space to the lesion. Importantly, this could not be explained by motor impairments as these animals did not show a turning bias in separate experiments. In contrast, rats with unilateral dopaminergic midbrain lesions did exhibit a motoric turning bias, but were unimpaired on the effort-based decision-making task. This rare example of a cognitive deficit caused by a unilateral cortical lesion in the rat brain indicates that the MFC may have a specialised and lateralised role in evaluating the costs and benefits of actions directed to specific spatial locations.


Asunto(s)
Trastornos del Conocimiento/fisiopatología , Toma de Decisiones/fisiología , Lóbulo Frontal/fisiopatología , Lateralidad Funcional/fisiología , Animales , Dopamina/metabolismo , Lóbulo Frontal/efectos de los fármacos , Lóbulo Frontal/patología , Masculino , Mesencéfalo/efectos de los fármacos , Mesencéfalo/patología , Mesencéfalo/fisiopatología , Actividad Motora/fisiología , Pruebas Neuropsicológicas , Oxidopamina/toxicidad , Fotomicrografía , Ácido Quinolínico/toxicidad , Ratas , Recompensa
20.
Strabismus ; : 1-19, 2024 Jul 22.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39036886

RESUMEN

Introduction: For decades, the saccadic system has been a favorite target of neurophysiologists seeking to elucidate the neural control of eye movements, partly because saccades are characterized by a set of highly stereotyped relationships between amplitude, duration, and peak velocity. There is a large literature describing the dynamics and trajectories of these movements in normal primates, but there are no similarly detailed analyses for subjects with infantile strabismus syndrome. Previous studies have shown the amplitudes and directions of saccades often differ for the two eyes in this disorder, but it is unknown whether a similar disconjugacy exists for duration. The present study was designed to determine whether or not saccade duration differs for the two eyes in strabismus, and whether there are abnormalities involving the trajectories of these movements. Methods: Dynamic analyses of saccade trajectories and durations were performed for two normal monkeys, two with esotropia and two with exotropia. The amount of curvature was compared for the two eyes. For each monkey with strabismus, the amount of curvature was compared to normal controls. Saccades were placed into 12 bins, based on direction; for each bin, the mean saccade duration was compared for the two eyes (duration disconjugacy). The duration disconjugacy for each bin was then compared for monkeys with strabismus, versus normal control animals. Results: Surprisingly, the amount of curvature was not consistently greater in subjects with pattern strabismus. However, saccade curvature differed for the two eyes by a significantly greater amount for all monkeys with strabismus, compared to normal controls. In addition, for a subset of saccades in subjects with strabismus, saccade duration differed for the two eyes by more than 10 ms, even when the animal was fully alert. Discussion: To the best of the author's knowledge, this is the first study to show that, in strabismus, saccade durations can differ for the two eyes by an abnormally large amount. These data also suggest that, in monkeys with pattern strabismus, abnormal horizontal-vertical crosstalk in brainstem can lead to directional disconjugacy without significantly impairing component stretching. These results place important constraints on future attempts to model the neural mechanisms that contribute to directional disconjugacy in pattern strabismus.

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