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1.
Brain Neurosci Adv ; 5: 23982128211036332, 2021.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34423137

RESUMO

There is currently no brain atlas available to specifically determine stereotaxic coordinates for neurosurgery in Lister hooded rats despite the popularity of this strain for behavioural neuroscience studies in the United Kingdom and elsewhere. We have created a dataset, which we refer to as 'Ratlas-LH' (for Lister hooded). Ratlas-LH combines in vivo magnetic resonance images of the brain of young adult male Lister hooded rats with ex vivo micro-computed tomography images of the ex vivo skull, as well as a set of delineations of brain regions, adapted from the Waxholm Space Atlas of the Sprague Dawley Rat Brain. Ratlas-LH was produced with an isotropic resolution of 0.15 mm. It has been labelled in such a way as to provide a stereotaxic coordinate system for the determination of distances relative to the skull landmark of bregma. We have demonstrated that the atlas can be used to determine stereotaxic coordinates to accurately target brain regions in the Lister hooded rat brain. Ratlas-LH is freely available to facilitate neurosurgical procedures in the Lister hooded rat.

2.
Brain Stimul ; 13(2): 363-371, 2020.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31812449

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Optogenetic stimulation has grown into a popular brain stimulation method in basic neuroscience while electrical stimulation predominates in clinical applications. In order to explain the effects of electrical stimulation on a cellular level and evaluate potential advantages of optogenetic therapies, comparisons between the two stimulation modalities are necessary. This comparison is hindered, however, by the difficulty of effectively matching the two fundamentally different modalities. OBJECTIVE: Comparison of brain-wide activation patterns in response to intensity-matched electrical and optogenetic VTA stimulation. METHODS: We mapped optogenetic and electrical self-stimulation rates in the same mice over stimulation intensity and determined iso-behavioral intensities. Using functional 99mTc-HMPAO SPECT imaging of cerebral blood flow in awake animals, we obtained brain-wide activation patterns for both modalities at these iso-behavioral intensities. We performed these experiments in two mouse lines commonly used for optogenetic VTA stimulation, DAT::Cre and TH::Cre mice. RESULTS: We find iso-behavioral intensity matching of stimulation gives rise to similar brain activation patterns. Differences between mouse lines were more pronounced than differences between modalities. CONCLUSIONS: Previously found large differences of electrical and optogenetic stimulation might be due to unmatched stimulation intensity, particularly relative electrical overstimulation. These findings imply that therapeutic electrical VTA stimulation might be relatively specific if employed with optimized parameters.


Assuntos
Optogenética/métodos , Área Tegmentar Ventral/fisiologia , Animais , Circulação Cerebrovascular , Estimulação Elétrica/métodos , Potenciais Evocados , Camundongos , Optogenética/normas , Tomografia Computadorizada de Emissão de Fóton Único , Área Tegmentar Ventral/diagnóstico por imagem
3.
Neuroimage ; 177: 88-97, 2018 08 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29723641

RESUMO

Mapping the activity of the human mesolimbic dopamine system by BOLD-fMRI is a tempting approach to non-invasively study the action of the brain reward system during different experimental conditions. However, the contribution of dopamine release to the BOLD signal is disputed. To assign the actual contribution of dopaminergic and non-dopaminergic VTA neurons to the formation of BOLD responses in target regions of the mesolimbic system, we used two optogenetic approaches in rats. We either activated VTA dopaminergic neurons selectively, or dopaminergic and mainly glutamatergic projecting neurons together. We further used electrical stimulation to non-selectively activate neurons in the VTA. All three stimulation conditions effectively activated the mesolimbic dopaminergic system and triggered dopamine releases into the NAcc as measured by in vivo fast-scan cyclic voltammetry. Furthermore, both optogenetic stimulation paradigms led to indistinguishable self-stimulation behavior. In contrast to these similarities, however, the BOLD response pattern differed greatly between groups. In general, BOLD responses were weaker and sparser with increasing stimulation specificity for dopaminergic neurons. In addition, repetitive stimulation of the VTA caused a progressive decoupling of dopamine release and BOLD signal strength, and dopamine receptor antagonists were unable to block the BOLD signal elicited by VTA stimulation. To exclude that the sedation during fMRI is the cause of minimal mesolimbic BOLD in response to specific dopaminergic stimulation, we repeated our experiments using CBF SPECT in awake animals. Again, we found activations only for less-specific stimulation. Based on these results we conclude that canonical BOLD responses in the reward system represent mainly the activity of non-dopaminergic neurons. Thus, the minor effects of projecting dopaminergic neurons are concealed by non-dopaminergic activity, a finding which highlights the importance of a careful interpretation of reward-related human fMRI data.


Assuntos
Encéfalo/fisiologia , Dopamina/metabolismo , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética/métodos , Neurônios/fisiologia , Acoplamento Neurovascular/fisiologia , Recompensa , Área Tegmentar Ventral/fisiologia , Animais , Comportamento Animal/fisiologia , Encéfalo/diagnóstico por imagem , Encéfalo/metabolismo , Antagonistas de Dopamina/farmacologia , Neurônios Dopaminérgicos/fisiologia , Estimulação Elétrica , Eletrodos Implantados , Vetores Genéticos , Neurônios/metabolismo , Optogenética , Ratos , Ratos Long-Evans , Ratos Transgênicos , Ratos Wistar , Autoestimulação/fisiologia , Técnicas Estereotáxicas , Tomografia Computadorizada de Emissão de Fóton Único , Área Tegmentar Ventral/diagnóstico por imagem , Área Tegmentar Ventral/metabolismo
4.
Behav Brain Res ; 332: 164-171, 2017 08 14.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28552601

RESUMO

Fear is an important behavioral system helping humans and animals to survive potentially dangerous situations. Fear can be innate or learned. Whereas the neural circuits underlying learned fear are already well investigated, the knowledge about the circuits mediating innate fear is still limited. We here used a novel, unbiased approach to image in vivo the spatial patterns of neural activity in odor-induced innate fear behavior in rats. We intravenously injected awake unrestrained rats with a 99m-technetium labeled blood flow tracer (99mTc-HMPAO) during ongoing exposure to fox urine or water as control, and mapped the brain distribution of the trapped tracer using single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT). Upon fox urine exposure blood flow increased in a number of brain regions previously associated with odor-induced innate fear such as the amygdala, ventromedial hypothalamus and dorsolateral periaqueductal grey, but, unexpectedly, decreased at higher significance levels in the interpeduncular nucleus (IPN). Significant flow changes were found in regions monosynaptically connected to the IPN. Flow decreased in the dorsal tegmentum and entorhinal cortex. Flow increased in the habenula (Hb) and correlated with odor effects on behavioral defensive strategy. Hb lesions reduced avoidance of but increased approach to the fox urine while IPN lesions only reduced avoidance behavior without approach behavior. Our study identifies a new component, the IPN, of the neural circuit mediating odor-induced innate fear behavior in mammals and suggests that the evolutionarily conserved Hb-IPN system, which has recently been implicated in cued fear, also forms an integral part of the innate fear circuitry.


Assuntos
Medo/fisiologia , Habenula/fisiologia , Núcleo Interpeduncular/fisiologia , Percepção Olfatória/fisiologia , Animais , Aprendizagem da Esquiva/fisiologia , Mapeamento Encefálico , Raposas , Habenula/diagnóstico por imagem , Habenula/fisiopatologia , Núcleo Interpeduncular/diagnóstico por imagem , Núcleo Interpeduncular/fisiopatologia , Masculino , Modelos Animais , Odorantes , Comportamento Predatório , Compostos Radiofarmacêuticos , Ratos Sprague-Dawley , Ratos Wistar , Tecnécio Tc 99m Exametazima , Tomografia Computadorizada de Emissão de Fóton Único
5.
Sci Rep ; 7: 42847, 2017 02 27.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28240235

RESUMO

Studies of brain cytoarchitecture in mammals are routinely performed by serial sectioning of the specimen and staining of the sections. The procedure is labor-intensive and the 3D architecture can only be determined after aligning individual 2D sections, leading to a reconstructed volume with non-isotropic resolution. Propagation-based x-ray phase-contrast tomography offers a unique potential for high-resolution 3D imaging of intact biological specimen due to the high penetration depth and potential resolution. We here show that even compact laboratory CT at an optimized liquid-metal jet microfocus source combined with suitable phase-retrieval algorithms and a novel tissue preparation can provide cellular and subcellular resolution in millimeter sized samples of mouse brain. We removed water and lipids from entire mouse brains and measured the remaining dry tissue matrix in air, lowering absorption but increasing phase contrast. We present single-cell resolution images of mouse brain cytoarchitecture and show that axons can be revealed in myelinated fiber bundles. In contrast to optical 3D techniques our approach does neither require staining of cells nor tissue clearing, procedures that are increasingly difficult to apply with increasing sample and brain sizes. The approach thus opens a novel route for high-resolution high-throughput studies of brain architecture in mammals.


Assuntos
Encéfalo/citologia , Imageamento Tridimensional/métodos , Tomografia Computadorizada por Raios X/métodos , Algoritmos , Animais , Camundongos , Microscopia de Contraste de Fase , Análise de Célula Única
6.
Schizophr Res ; 151(1-3): 259-64, 2013 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24120958

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Schizophrenia is associated with cortical thickness reductions in the brain, but it is unclear whether these are present before illness onset, and to what extent they are driven by genetic factors. METHODS: In the Edinburgh High Risk Study, structural MRI scans of 150 young individuals at high familial risk for schizophrenia, 34 patients with first-episode schizophrenia and 36 matched controls were acquired, and clinical information was collected for the following 10 years for the high-risk and control group. During this time, 17 high-risk individuals developed schizophrenia, on average 2.5 years after the scan, and 57 experienced isolated or sub-clinical psychotic symptoms. We applied surface-based analysis of the cerebral cortex to this cohort, and extracted cortical thickness in automatically parcellated regions. RESULTS: Analysis of variance revealed widespread thinning of the cerebral cortex in first-episode patients, most pronounced in superior frontal, medial parietal, and lateral occipital regions (corrected p<10(-4)). In contrast, cortical thickness reductions were only found in high-risk individuals in the left middle temporal gyrus (corrected p<0.05). There were no significant differences between those at high risk who later developed schizophrenia and those who remained well. CONCLUSIONS: These findings confirm cortical thickness reductions in schizophrenia patients. Increased familial risk for schizophrenia is associated with thinning in the left middle temporal lobe, irrespective of subsequent disease onset. The absence of widespread cortical thinning before disease onset implies that the cortical thinning is unlikely to simply reflect genetic liability to schizophrenia but is predominantly driven by disease-associated factors.


Assuntos
Córtex Cerebral/patologia , Saúde da Família , Esquizofrenia/patologia , Adolescente , Adulto , Análise de Variância , Antipsicóticos/uso terapêutico , Estudos de Casos e Controles , Córtex Cerebral/efeitos dos fármacos , Clorpromazina/uso terapêutico , Estudos Transversais , Feminino , Lateralidade Funcional , Humanos , Processamento de Imagem Assistida por Computador , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética , Masculino , Esquizofrenia/tratamento farmacológico , Adulto Jovem
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