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  • SfN News Advocacy Research & Journals Animal Research News from SfN
    Weekly Advocacy News Roundup
    Read advocacy news from the week of August 5, 2016.
    Aug 5, 2016
  • Abstract
    Sex differences in the gut microbiome during cocaine self-administration in rats
    Men currently constitute the majority of cocaine users; however, use among women is rapidly increasing and in the 13-18 year age range there is no difference. Furthermore, women begin using cocaine and enter treatment at earlier ages than men and have m...
    Nov 16, 2016
  • Hotel Information
    Thank you for attending #SfN23
  • SfN News Advocacy Animal Research Research & Journals News from SfN
    This Week in Science Policy and Advocacy
    Read science policy and advocacy news from the week of December 29, 2017
    Dec 29, 2017
  • Increasing H2B monoubiquitination improves the transcriptome and memory in the aged hippocampus | eNeuro
    A decline in cognitive abilities is associated with the aging process, affecting nearly 33% of U.S. adults over the age of 70, and is a risk factor for the development of dementia and Alzheimer’s disease. Several studies have reported age-related alterations in the transcriptome in the hippocampus, a major site of memory storage that is among the first regions impacted with age, dementia and Alzheimer’s disease. However, much remains unknown about why these transcriptional changes exist in the aged hippocampus and how this impacts memory late in life. Here, we show that monoubiquitination of histone H2B (H2Bubi), an epigenetic mechanism recently reported to be major regulator of the epigenome and transcriptome during memory formation in the young adult brain, decreases with age in the hippocampus of male rats. In vivo CRISPR-dCas9 mediated upregulation of Rnf20 , the only ubiquitin E3 ligase for H2B, in the hippocampus significantly improved memory retention in aged rats. Remarkably, RNA-seq analysis revea...
    Apr 7, 2025 Shannon Kincaid
  • Abstract
    State predictions in primary olfactory cortex
    Being able to predict future states of your environment based on past experience is a powerful tool for adaptive behavior. Several theories exist that formalize the use of predictions for behavior and neural coding. In Bayesian frameworks, predictions t...
    Nov 10, 2021
  • SfN News Research & Journals News from SfN
    This Week in Science Policy and Advocacy
    Read science policy and advocacy news from the week of December 22, 2017
    Dec 22, 2017
  • Abstract
    Late stage spontaneous waves and their role in downstream visual areas In vivo
    In the developing mammalian visual system, neighboring retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) fire in correlated bursts of action potentials that are observed as propagating waves across the retina. These spontaneous waves of activity, which in mice begin around...
    Nov 13, 2017
  • AD-Like Neuropsychiatric Dysfunction in a Mice Model Induced by a Combination of High-Fat Diet and Intraperitoneal Injection of Streptozotocin | eNeuro
    Increasing data suggest a crucial relationship between glycolipid metabolic disorder and neuropsychiatric injury. The aim of this study is to investigate the behavioral performance changes and neuropathological injuries in mice challenged with high-fat diet (HFD) and streptozotocin (STZ). The glucose metabolism indicators and behavioral performance were detected. The mRNA expression of IL-1β, IL-6, TNF-α, ocln, zo-1, and clnds and protein expression of APP, p-Tau, p-IRS1, p-AKT, p-ERK, and TREM1/2 were measured. The fluorescence intensities of MAP-2, NeuN, APP, p-Tau, GFAP, and IBA-1 were observed. The results showed that combination of HFD and STZ/I.P. could induce glucose metabolic turmoil and Alzheimer's disease (AD)-like neuropsychiatric dysfunction in mice, as indicated by the increased concentrations of fasting blood glucose and impaired learning and memory ability. Moreover, the model mice presented increased levels of APP, p-Tau, p-IRS1, TREM2, IL-1β, IL-6, TNF-α, ocln, zo-1, and clnds; decreased l...
    Dec 1, 2024 Huaizhi Sun
  • My 50 Year Odyssey to Develop Behavioral Methods to Let Me See Quickly How Well Kittens See | eNeuro
    The importance of animal models to an understanding of the development and plasticity of visual functions was evident from the outset of the long experimental collaboration of David Hubel and Torsten Wiesel in the early 1960s. Their initial work on kittens had massive impact in part because of the recognition that kittens share with primates substantial similarities of visual system organization and plasticity (e.g., eye-specific lamination of the thalamus and columnar organization of the visual cortex), as well as comparable visual abilities (including stereoscopic vision). In addition the plasticity demonstrated in response to early periods of selected visual exposure provided a glimpse into the origins of amblyopia. Five decades ago my laboratory developed a method for the fast measurement of visual thresholds in kittens in order to capture the consequences for spatial vision of the rapid physiological changes that occurred in the visual cortex during both typical development and those that follow vario...
    Apr 1, 2025 Donald E. Mitchell
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