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18 Janelia Publications

Showing 1-10 of 18 results
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    Ji LabGENIE
    07/29/15 | Neuronal representation of ultraviolet visual stimuli in mouse primary visual cortex.
    Tan Z, Sun W, Chen T, Kim D, Ji N
    Scientific Reports. 2015 Jul 29;5:12597. doi: 10.1038/srep12597

    The mouse has become an important model for understanding the neural basis of visual perception. Although it has long been known that mouse lens transmits ultraviolet (UV) light and mouse opsins have absorption in the UV band, little is known about how UV visual information is processed in the mouse brain. Using a custom UV stimulation system and in vivo calcium imaging, we characterized the feature selectivity of layer 2/3 neurons in mouse primary visual cortex (V1). In adult mice, a comparable percentage of the neuronal population responds to UV and visible stimuli, with similar pattern selectivity and receptive field properties. In young mice, the orientation selectivity for UV stimuli increased steadily during development, but not direction selectivity. Our results suggest that, by expanding the spectral window through which the mouse can acquire visual information, UV sensitivity provides an important component for mouse vision.

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    07/22/15 | A specific component of the evoked potential mirrors phasic dopamine neuron activity during conditioning.
    Pan W, Dudman JT
    The Journal of Neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience. 2015 Jul 22;35(29):10451-9. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4096-14.2015

    UNLABELLED: Midbrain dopamine (DA) neurons are thought to be a critical node in the circuitry that mediates reward learning. DA neurons receive diverse inputs from regions distributed throughout the neuraxis from frontal neocortex to the mesencephalon. While a great deal is known about changes in the activity of individual DA neurons during learning, much less is known about the functional changes in the microcircuits in which DA neurons are embedded. Here we used local field potentials recorded from the midbrain of behaving mice to show that the midbrain evoked potential (mEP) faithfully reflects the temporal and spatial structure of the phasic response of midbrain neuron populations during conditioning. By comparing the mEP to simultaneously recorded single units, we identified specific components of the mEP that corresponded to phasic DA and non-DA responses to salient stimuli. The DA component of the mEP emerged with the acquisition of a conditioned stimulus, was extinguished following changes in reinforcement contingency, and could be inhibited by pharmacological manipulations that attenuate the phasic responses of DA neurons. In contrast to single-unit recordings, the mEP permitted relatively dense sampling of the midbrain circuit during conditioning and thus could be used to reveal the spatiotemporal structure of multiple intermingled midbrain circuits. Finally, the mEP response was stable for months and thus provides a new approach to study long-term changes in the organization of ventral midbrain microcircuits during learning.

    SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT: Neurons that synthesize and release the neurotransmitter dopamine play a critical role in voluntary reward-seeking behavior. Much of our insight into the function of dopamine neurons comes from recordings of individual cells in behaving animals; however, it is notoriously difficult to record from dopamine neurons due to their sparsity and depth, as well as the presence of intermingled non-dopaminergic neurons. Here we show that much of the information that can be learned from recordings of individual dopamine and non-dopamine neurons is also revealed by changes in specific components of the local field potential. This technique provides an accessible measurement that could prove critical to our burgeoning understanding of the molecular, functional, and anatomical diversity of neuron populations in the midbrain.

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    Singer Lab
    07/20/15 | Inferring transient particle transport dynamics in live cells.
    Monnier N, Barry Z, Park HY, Su K, Katz Z, English BP, Dey A, Pan K, Cheeseman IM, Singer RH, Bathe M
    Nature Methods. 2015 Jul 20;12(9):838-40. doi: 10.1038/nmeth.3483

    Live-cell imaging and particle tracking provide rich information on mechanisms of intracellular transport. However, trajectory analysis procedures to infer complex transport dynamics involving stochastic switching between active transport and diffusive motion are lacking. We applied Bayesian model selection to hidden Markov modeling to infer transient transport states from trajectories of mRNA-protein complexes in live mouse hippocampal neurons and metaphase kinetochores in dividing human cells. The software is available at http://hmm-bayes.org/.

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    07/20/15 | Neuron hemilineages provide the functional ground plan for the Drosophila ventral nervous system.
    Harris RM, Pfeiffer BD, Rubin GM, Truman JW
    eLife. 2015 Jul 20;4:. doi: 10.7554/eLife.04493

    Drosophila central neurons arise from neuroblasts that generate neurons in a pair-wise fashion, with the two daughters providing the basis for distinct A and B hemilineage groups. Thirty three postembryonically-born hemilineages contribute over 90% of the neurons in each thoracic hemisegment. We devised genetic approaches to define the anatomy of most of these hemilineages and to assessed their functional roles using the heat-sensitive channel dTRPA1. The simplest hemilineages contained local interneurons and their activation caused tonic or phasic leg movements lacking interlimb coordination. The next level was hemilineages of similar projection cells that drove intersegmentally coordinated behaviors such as walking. The highest level involved hemilineages whose activation elicited complex behaviors such as takeoff. These activation phenotypes indicate that the hemilineages vary in their behavioral roles with some contributing to local networks for sensorimotor processing and others having higher order functions of coordinating these local networks into complex behavior.

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    Pastalkova Lab
    07/18/15 | Oscillatory patterns in hippocampus under light and deep isoflurane anesthesia closely mirror prominent brain states in awake animals.
    Lustig B, Wang Y, Pastalkova E
    Hippocampus. 2015 Jul 18;26(1):102-9. doi: 10.1002/hipo.22494

    The hippocampus exhibits a variety of distinct states of activity under different conditions. For instance the rhythmic patterns of activity orchestrated by the theta oscillation during running and REM sleep are markedly different from the large irregular activity (LIA) observed during awake resting and slow wave sleep. We found that under different levels of isoflurane anesthesia activity in the hippocampus of rats displays two distinct states which have several qualities that mirror the theta and LIA states. These data provide further evidence that the two states are intrinsic modes of the hippocampus; while also characterizing a preparation that could be useful for studying the natural activity states in hippocampus. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.

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    Lavis LabLooger Lab
    07/17/15 | Ketamine Inside Neurons?
    Lester HA, Lavis LD, Dougherty DA
    American Journal of Psychiatry. 2015 Jul 17;172(11):1064-6. doi: 10.1176/appi.ajp.2015.14121537
    07/16/15 | Neural circuit to integrate opposing motions in the visual field.
    Mauss AS, Pankova K, Arenz A, Nern A, Rubin GM, Borst A
    Cell. 2015 Jul 16;162:351-62. doi: 10.1016/j.cell.2015.06.035

    When navigating in their environment, animals use visual motion cues as feedback signals that are elicited by their own motion. Such signals are provided by wide-field neurons sampling motion directions at multiple image points as the animal maneuvers. Each one of these neurons responds selectively to a specific optic flow-field representing the spatial distribution of motion vectors on the retina. Here, we describe the discovery of a group of local, inhibitory interneurons in the fruit fly Drosophila key for filtering these cues. Using anatomy, molecular characterization, activity manipulation, and physiological recordings, we demonstrate that these interneurons convey direction-selective inhibition to wide-field neurons with opposite preferred direction and provide evidence for how their connectivity enables the computation required for integrating opposing motions. Our results indicate that, rather than sharpening directional selectivity per se, these circuit elements reduce noise by eliminating non-specific responses to complex visual information.
    •Discovery of bi-stratified glutamatergic lobula plate-intrinsic (LPi) interneurons•LPi neurons provide visual null direction inhibition to wide-field tangential cells•Blocking LPi activity leads to target neurons responding to inadequate motion cues•Motion opponency thus increases flow-field selectivity
    Newly identified inhibitory neurons are central to an integrative circuit that enables Drosophila to process visual cues with opposite motions generated during flight. The neurons are required to discriminate between distinct complex motion patterns, indicating that neural processing of opposing cues can yield outcomes beyond the simple sum of two inputs.

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    Grigorieff Lab
    07/16/15 | Structure of the L protein of vesicular stomatitis virus from electron cryomicroscopy.
    Liang B, Li Z, Jenni S, Rahmeh AA, Morin BM, Grant T, Grigorieff N, Harrison SC, Whelan SP
    Cell. 2015 Jul 16;162(2):314-27. doi: 10.1016/j.cell.2015.06.018

    The large (L) proteins of non-segmented, negative-strand RNA viruses, a group that includes Ebola and rabies viruses, catalyze RNA-dependent RNA polymerization with viral ribonucleoprotein as template, a non-canonical sequence of capping and methylation reactions, and polyadenylation of viral messages. We have determined by electron cryomicroscopy the structure of the vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) L protein. The density map, at a resolution of 3.8 Å, has led to an atomic model for nearly all of the 2109-residue polypeptide chain, which comprises three enzymatic domains (RNA-dependent RNA polymerase [RdRp], polyribonucleotidyl transferase [PRNTase], and methyltransferase) and two structural domains. The RdRp resembles the corresponding enzymatic regions of dsRNA virus polymerases and influenza virus polymerase. A loop from the PRNTase (capping) domain projects into the catalytic site of the RdRp, where it appears to have the role of a priming loop and to couple product elongation to large-scale conformational changes in L.

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    07/15/15 | BigNeuron: Large-scale 3D neuron reconstruction from optical microscopy images.
    Peng H, Hawrylycz M, Roskams J, Hill S, Spruston N, Meijering E, Ascoli GA
    Neuron. 2015 Jul 15;87:252-6. doi: 10.1016/j.neuron.2015.06.036

    Understanding the structure of single neurons is critical for understanding how they function within neural circuits. BigNeuron is a new community effort that combines modern bioimaging informatics, recent leaps in labeling and microscopy, and the widely recognized need for openness and standardization to provide a community resource for automated reconstruction of dendritic and axonal morphology of single neurons.

    Understanding the structure of single neurons is critical for understanding how they function within neural circuits. BigNeuron is a new community effort that combines modern bioimaging informatics, recent leaps in labeling and microscopy, and the widely recognized need for openness and standardization to provide a community resource for automated reconstruction of dendritic and axonal morphology of single neurons.

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    Gonen Lab
    07/15/15 | Structure of a designed tetrahedral protein assembly variant engineered to have improved soluble expression.
    Bale JB, Park RU, Liu Y, Gonen S, Gonen T, Cascio D, King NP, Yeates TO, Baker D
    Protein Science. 2015 Jul 15;24(10):1695-701. doi: 10.1002/pro.2748

    We recently reported the development of a computational method for the design of co-assembling, multi-component protein nanomaterials. While four such materials were validated at high-resolution by X-ray crystallography, low yield of soluble protein prevented X-ray structure determination of a fifth designed material, T33-09. Here we report the design and crystal structure of T33-31, a variant of T33-09 with improved soluble yield resulting from redesign efforts focused on mutating solvent-exposed side chains to charged amino acids. The structure is found to match the computational design model with atomic-level accuracy, providing further validation of the design approach and demonstrating a simple and potentially general means of improving the yield of designed protein nanomaterials. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.

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