Neuroscience
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Despite the long history of investigations of adrenergic compounds and their biological effects, specific mechanisms of their action in distinct compartments of the motor unit remain obscure. Recent results have suggested that not only skeletal muscles but also the neuromuscular junctions represent important targets for the action of catecholamines. In this paper, we describe the effects of adrenaline and noradrenaline on the frequency of miniature endplate potentials, the quantal content of the evoked endplate potentials and the kinetics of acetylcholine quantal release in the motor nerve endings of the mouse diaphragm. ⋯ Quantal release became more asynchronous under noradrenaline, as evidenced by a greater dispersion of real synaptic delays; in contrast, adrenaline synchronized the release process. Our data suggest an involvement of α and β adrenoreceptors in the diverse modulation of the frequency of miniature endplate potentials, the quantal content of the evoked endplate potentials and the kinetics of acetylcholine quantal secretion in the mouse neuromuscular junction. Moreover, the adrenoblockers affected both the evoked and spontaneous quantal release of acetylcholine, suggesting the presence of endogenous catecholamines in the vicinity of cholinergic synapses.
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Although the neural basis underlying visuospatial reasoning has been widely explored by neuroimaging techniques, the brain activation patterns during naturalistic visuospatial reasoning such as tangram remains unclear. In this study, the directional functional connectivity of fronto-parietal networks during the tangram task was carefully inspected by using combined functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) and conditional Granger causality analysis (GCA). Meanwhile, the causal networks during the traditional spatial reasoning task were also characterized to exhibit the differences with those during the tangram task. ⋯ Further correlation analyses showed that the behavioral performance in the spatial reasoning rather than the tangram task manifested the relationship with the connectivity between the frontal and parietal cortex. Our findings demonstrate that the tangram task measures a different aspect of the visuospatial reasoning ability which requires more trial-and-error strategies and creative thinking rather than inductive reasoning. In particular, the frontal cortex is mostly involved in tangram puzzle-solving, whereas the interaction between frontal and parietal cortices is regulated by the hands-on experience during the tangram task.
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Developmental dyscalculia (DD) is characterized by lower numerical and finger-related skills. Studies of enumeration among those DD that suggested core deficiency in pattern recognition, working memory or/and attention were mostly carried out in the visual modality. In our study, we examined visual (dots) enumeration of 1-10 stimuli and tactile (vibration) enumeration of 1-10 fingers among DD and matched-control adults. ⋯ In the tactile task, DD participants showed less accurate tactile enumeration only for neighboring arrangements, more profoundly for finger counting (FC) patterns. The longer exposure time in the visual task enabled us to explore pattern recognition effects when working memory and attention loads were low. We discuss possible modal-independent deficits in pattern recognition and working memory on enumeration performance among those with DD and the unique role of fingers in ordinal and cardinal representation of numbers.
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Subjective well-being (SWB) is the eternal pursuit of all mankind. Individual differences in SWB may reflect the way of emotional processing. Neuroimaging studies have partly examined the neural mechanism of the individual differences in SWB using resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (rs-fMRI). ⋯ Results showed that SWB is positively correlated with the activation of right posterior cingulate cortex, left interior temporal gyrus and left angular gyrus for the comparison of negative stimulus and neutral stimulus, revealing that happy individuals may be more proactive to use attention transfer and behavioral inhibition strategies to decrease negative experiences during negative emotional processing. In addition, high SWB is associated with strong functional connectivity between high-level cognitive networks (e.g., frontal-parietal network) and low-level perceptual networks (e.g., sensorimotor network), and weak functional connectivity within default mode network and within low-level perceptual networks, indicating that the self-reflection, emotional regulation and cognitive control during negative facial emotion processing underlies the individual differences in SWB. These findings provide a novel insight to characterize the brain functional basis of the individual differences in SWB.
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Stress, a major precipitant of depression, and antidepressants have major impact on synaptic integrity and plasticity in brain areas, such as hippocampus (HPC) and prefrontal cortex (PFC). We have recently shown that, unlike Wistar rats, rats of the Wistar-Kyoto (WKY) strain fail to respond to chronic antidepressant treatment after exposure to chronic mild stress (CMS) procedure. However, deep brain stimulation (DBS) of PFC was effective in both strains. ⋯ Some other changes in gene expression were identified in dorsal HPC and PFC, particularly in Wistars, that were not normalized by DBS. No effects were identified that were common to both Wistars and WKY. The difference between Wistars and WKY in the balance of overall gene expression in HPC may be relevant to the resistance of WKY rats to antidepressant drug treatment.