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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
71

Empatia em camundongos: avaliação do papel da amídala, insula e córtex cingulado anterior na nocicepção em camundongos expostos ao teste de contorções abdominais

Costa, Vinícius Pelarin do Nascimento 09 May 2014 (has links)
Made available in DSpace on 2016-06-02T19:23:02Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 6369.pdf: 1124310 bytes, checksum: 0ca17967bc2f98ad5efcffdb78af91d5 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2014-05-09 / Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais / Empathy can be defined as the capacity for perceive emotional signals from others. Among these signals, the ability to perceive pain has clear adaptive and evolutionary value. Pain can be defined as a subjective experience that includes sensorial, emotional and cognitive components. Evidence has emphasized the role of amygdala, anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) and insula in modulation of pain and empathy. Research indicates the capacity of rodents to express empathy to a conspecific in pain or suffering. Works from literature and finds from our laboratory demonstrated that living together with a cagemate is able to alter the nociceptive behavior in mice. However, there are no works evidencing if occur alterations in nociception by living together with a cagemate with chronic pain and which encephalic structures would be involved in this modulation. To overcome this, male Swiss-albino mice were housed in groups or in pairs. The role of amygdala, ACC and insula are accessed by non-selective inactivation with cobalt chloride (CoCl2). Mice housed in groups (Experiment 1), aging 6-8 weeks, underwent a stereotaxic surgery. 4 to 5 days after surgery, these animals received saline or CoCl2 microinjection, and, after 10 minutes, they were submitted to the writhing test during 5 minutes (acetic acid 0.6%, i.p., nociceptive stimulus). On the dyads (Experiment 2), animals lived together for 28 days since weaning. On the 14th day, one animal of each pair were submitted to a sciatic nerve constriction (SNC animal) or not (sham animal). On the 24th day, the cagemate underwent a stereotaxic surgery, and, on the 28th day, they were submitted to the writhing test after microinjection of saline or CoCl2, like the procedure described to Experiment 1. To Experiment 1 were utilized Student s t test to independent samples; to Experiment 2 were utilized two-way analysis of variance (ANOVA; living together x treatment). Duncan s multiple range tests were utilized as post hoc. A p value of 0.05 or less was required for significance in both experiments. In Experiment 1, inactivation of the amygdala increased the number of writhing, while inactivation of ACC and insula did not alter this measure, suggesting a distinct modulatory role of these structures on the sensorial compound of pain. Our results demonstrated that for the mice that lived in groups, while inactivation of the ACC and insula did not change writhing, inactivation of amygdala increased it, suggesting a distinct modulatory role of these structures on sensory component of pain in the writhing test. In Experiment 2, living together with a SNC-cagemate increased writhing on the pair, suggesting that this experience activates the circuitry of neural representation of pain on the observer mouse (state of priming ). Thus, when this animal experienced nociception, its response was exacerbated. In this condition, inactivation of insula and amygdala produces opposite results, i.e., decreased and increased in contortions in those animals that lived together with a SNC animal, respectively. ACC inactivation did not alter writhing behavior. In this sense, our results suggest a different modulatory role of these structures on cognitive, affective-emotional and sensorial components of pain, and on empathy for pain. / Sob uma perspectiva evolucionista, a empatia é expressa pela capacidade de captar sinais emocionais nos outros. Neste sentido, a habilidade em perceber a dor também possui valor claramente adaptativo e evolutivo. A dor pode ser definida como uma experiência subjetiva que inclui componentes sensoriais, afetivo-emocionais e cognitivos. Evidencias apontam para o papel da amídala, córtex cingulado anterior (CCA) e insula na modulação da dor e da empatia. Estudos indicam para a capacidade de roedores em apresentarem empatia frente à dor ou ao sofrimento de seus coespecíficos. Trabalhos da literatura e do nosso grupo demonstram que a convivência em pares é capaz de alterar bidirecionalmente a resposta nociceptiva em camundongos. Entretanto, nenhum estudo havia ainda evidenciado se ocorrem alterações nociceptivas devido à convivência com um coespecífico em quadro de dor crônica, e quais estruturas encefálicas estariam envolvidas nessa modulação. Neste sentido, camundongos machos Suiço-albinos foram alojados em grupos ou em duplas para avaliação do papel da amídala, insula e córtex cingulado anterior por meio de inativação com cloreto de cobalto (CoCl2). Os animais alojados em grupo (Experimento 1), ao atingirem idade entre 6-8 semanas, passaram por cirurgia estereotáxica. De 4 à 5 dias após a cirurgia, esses animais receberam microinjeção de salina ou CoCl2 e, após 10 minutos, foram submetidos ao teste de contorções abdominais (ácido acético 0,6%, i.p., estímulo nociceptivo) durante 5 minutos. Nas duplas (Experimento 2), os animais conviveram por um período de 28 dias após o desmame. No 14º dia, um animal de cada par foi submetido à cirurgia de constrição do nervo ciático (animal CNC) ou não (animal sham). No 24º dia, o camundongo que conviveu com o animal CNC ou animal sham passou por uma cirurgia estereotáxica, e, no 28º dia, foi submetido ao teste de contorções abdominais, após microinjeção de salina ou CoCl2, conforme Experimento 1. Para o Experimento 1 foi utilizado o teste t de Student para amostras independentes; no Experimento 2 foi utilizada a análise de variância (ANOVA) de dois fatores (convívio x tratamento). O post hoc utilizado foi o teste de comparações múltiplas de Duncan. Os valores de p menores ou iguais a 0,05 foram considerados como significativos nos dois experimentos. No Experimento 1, a inativação da amídala aumentou o número de contorções, enquanto a inativação do CCA e da insula não alterou esse parâmetro, sugerindo um papel modulatório distinto dessas estruturas no componente sensorial da dor para o teste de contorções. No experimento 2, o convívio com um animal CNC aumentou o número de contorções no parceiro, sugerindo que essa convivência causou ativação dos circuitos de representatividade neural da dor no camundongo observador (state of priming ). Dessa forma, quando esse animal experiencia nocicepção, sua resposta é exacerbada. Nessa condição, a inativação da insula e amídala produziu resultados opostos, ou seja, diminuição e aumento das contorções naqueles animais que conviveram com o animal CNC, respectivamente. A inativação do CCA não alterou o número de contorções. Nesse sentido, nossos resultados sugerem um papel modulatório distinto dessas estruturas nos componentes cognitivo, afetivo-emocional e sensorial da dor, e na empatia para a dor.
72

Investigando os aprendizados subsequentes : mecanismos plásticos e dependência temporal

Crestani, Ana Paula January 2018 (has links)
A formação de memórias de medo contextuais, como as estudadas no presente trabalho, requer a indução da plasticidade sináptica iniciada pela ativação de receptores transmembrana localizados nos neurônios de estruturas encefálicas como o hipocampo. O fluxo iônico mediado pelos receptores N-metil-D-aspartato (NMDARs) é essencial para ativar vias de sinalização intracelular que darão suporte à formação da memória. No entanto, esses receptores parecem não ser necessários em situações onde os animais passaram por uma experiência prévia similar a que está sendo aprendida. Dessa forma, um aprendizado anterior pode modificar os mecanismos de plasticidade que serão utilizados para codificar uma nova informação, caracterizando um fenômeno de metaplasticidade. Esse fenômeno ocorre quando os animais são pré-expostos ao local onde posteriormente serão submetidos a um aprendizado associativo ou quando são re-submetidos a mesma tarefa comportamental com dicas contextuais/espaciais diferentes. No presente trabalho, investigamos (i) os mecanismos de plasticidade sináptica (receptores) e de plasticidade não-sináptica (excitabilidade neuronal) recrutados para a formação do segundo aprendizado e (ii) se a independência dos NMDARs é mantida quando a memória anterior foi adquirida remotamente. Os animais utilizados nesse trabalho (camundongos ou ratos) foram expostos a dois aprendizados sequenciais realizados na tarefa de condicionamento aversivo ao contexto (CAC). O intervalo entre os condicionamentos foi de dois dias nos experimentos do Capítulo I e de três ou quarenta dias nos experimentos do Capítulo II. Cada aprendizado ocorreu em uma caixa de condicionamento com características próprias de formato, odor e iluminação (contexto A ou contexto B), sendo que o primeiro aprendizado ocorreu no contexto A e o segundo no contexto B. Nos experimentos do Capítulo I foram avaliadas no hipocampo dorsal as modificações na excitabilidade neuronal hipocampal induzidas pelo primeiro condicionamento, bem como os receptores envolvidos com a aquisição da memória subsequente e a sobreposição neuronal entre os dois aprendizados. Com a utilização do camundongo transgênico Teg-Tag foi possível identificar os neurônios recrutados para o primeiro aprendizado. Esse animal tem a expressão da proteína fluorescente verde (GFP, do inglês, green fluorescent protein) controlada pela ativação do gene c-fos, que é fisiologicamente transcrito após a atividade neuronal. Dessa forma, os neurônios ativados pelo aprendizado são marcados com GFP. Através da técnica de patch clamp foi observado que os neurônios GFP+ mantiveram a excitabilidade elevada por até dois dias após o treinamento no CAC. Além disso, a identificação dos neurônios recrutados 8 para o aprendizado subsequente foi realizada através da marcação imunofluorescente da proteína Fos, no seu pico de expressão endógena, noventa minutos após o re-treino. Foi observada uma maior sobreposição neuronal (GFP+, Fos+) quando os animais foram retreinados no mesmo contexto dois dias após o primeiro treino. Uma sobreposição intermediária (GFP+, Fos+) foi vista quando os animais tiveram o segundo condicionamento no contexto B, sendo ela significativamente maior do que a sobreposição nos animais não re-treinados. Adicionalmente, foi demonstrado que a aquisição do aprendizado subsequente é mediada por receptores metabotrópicos glutamatérgicos (mGluRs) ao invés de NMDARs. No Capítulo II foi investigado se uma memória remota, adquirida há quarenta dias, ainda seria capaz de influenciar nos mecanismos de plasticidade recrutados para aquisição do aprendizado subsequente. A dinâmica da consolidação sistêmica foi considerada nesses experimentos já que a evocação da memória remota passa a depender de estruturas encefálicas neocorticais, sem recrutar a atividade hipocampal. Apesar da evocação da memória remota não requerer a atividade hipocampal, foi observado que a aquisição do aprendizado subsequente a uma memória remota necessita a atividade de pelo menos uma sub-região do hipocampo (dorsal ou ventral). Complementarmente, os resultados indicaram que, quando o intervalo entre os aprendizados é aumentado (de três para quarenta dias), a formação do aprendizado subsequente, que era independente de NMDARs, volta a depender da plasticidade sináptica mediada por esses receptores no hipocampo (dorsal e ventral). Juntos, nossos resultados sugerem que o primeiro aprendizado causa um aumento da excitabilidade neuronal e modifica a plasticidade sináptica recrutada para o aprendizado subsequente, sendo este último mediado por mGluRs ao invés de NMDARs. Além disso, a metaplasticidade induzida pelo primeiro condicionamento é transiente; quando o intervalo entre as exposições é aumentado, o segundo aprendizado passa a depender novamente da ativação dos NMDARs. / Contextual fear memory formation, like the ones explored in the current work, requires the induction of the synaptic plasticity mediated by the activation of transmembrane receptors that are present in the brain structures as the hippocampus. The ionic flux through the N-methylaspartate- D-aspartate is crucial for activation of the intracellular signaling pathways that will support memory formation. However, these receptors are not necessary when animals had a prior similar learning. In this way, a previous learning can modify the plasticity mechanism that will be recruited to encode a new information, featuring a metaplasticity phenomenon. This phenomenon occurs when animals are pre-exposed to an environment where they will learn an associative learning later or when animals are re-exposed to the same behavioral task with distinct contextual/spatial cues. In the present study, we investigated (i) the synaptic plasticity mechanisms (receptors) and the non-synaptic plasticity mechanisms (neuronal excitability) required for the acquisition of the second learning and (ii) whether a subsequent learning that occurs in a remote time-point is still NMDAR-independent. The animals used in this study (mice or rats) were exposed to two sequential learnings that were performed in the contextual fear conditioning (CFC). The interval between conditionings were two days in the experiments of Chapter I and three or forty days in the experiments of the Chapter II. Each learning was performed in a box with differences on shape, odor and illumination (context A or context B). The first learning occurred in the context A followed by learning on context B. In the experiments of Chapter I it was evaluated the changes in the hippocampal neuronal excitability induced by the first conditioning, the receptors involved with the acquisition of the subsequent memory and the neuronal overlapping between the two sequential learnings. The Teg-Tag transgenic mouse allowed to identify the neurons activated for the first learning experience. This animal has the GFP expression under control of c-fos promoter that is activated by neuronal activity. It was shown by patch clamp that GFP+ neurons are still more excitable two days after learning. Also, the identification of neurons recruited for the subsequent learning was made through immunofluorescent staining of the Fos protein in its peak of endogenous expression, ninety minutes after learning. A greater overlapping (GFP+, Fos+) was observed when animals were retrained in the same context two days after first training. An intermediate overlapping was observed when animals were conditioned in the context B and this expression was significantly higher when compared to animals that were not 10 retrained in either context. Additionally, it was shown that acquisition of the subsequent learning is mediated by metabotropic glutamate receptors (mGluRs) instead of NMDARs In the Chapter II it was investigated whether a remote memory, acquired forty days earlier, is still able to influence in the synaptic plasticity mechanisms recruited for the acquisition of the subsequent learning. Systems consolidation dynamics was considered in these experiments because memory retrieval of a remote memory depends on neocortical brain regions, it not requires hippocampal activity. It was confirmed that hippocampus is not necessary for remote memory retrieval, however at least one longitudinal division of the hippocampus (dorsal or ventral) is essential for learning following a prior remote memory. Moreover, the results indicate that acquisition of the second learning is once again mediated by NMDARs in the hippocampus when the interval between learnings is extended from three to forty days. Altogether, our results suggest that the first learning lead to an increase in the neuronal excitability and modify the synaptic plasticity mechanism recruited for following learning, mGluR are required instead of NMDAR. Furthermore, the metaplasticity induced by first conditioning is transient; the second learning once again requires NMDARs activation when the interval between learnings is longer.
73

Identification du connectome de l'aire 24 du cortex cingulaire antérieur dans le contexte du développement de phénotypes de type anxio-dépressif chez la souris : implication de la voie amygdalo-cingulaire / Identification of the anterior cingulate cortex area 24 in the context of anxiodepressive-like phenotypes development in the mouse : implication of the amygdalo-cingulate pathway

Fillinger, Clémentine 09 June 2017 (has links)
Le cortex cingulaire antérieur (CCA) est une région préfrontale située au centre d’un réseau permettant l’échange d’informations cognitives, motrices, limbiques et viscérales, la plaçant ainsi comme un sujet incontournable dans l’étude de pathologies complexes telles que les troubles anxio-dépressifs. Afin de pouvoir aborder ces pathologies chez la souris, nous avons établi par traçage neuronal le connectome complet des différentes aires composant le CCA. Nous avons ainsi montré qu’une grande majorité des structures de ce connectome communique de manière réciproque avec cette région et que, selon les aires cingulaires, des spécificités de densité d'innervation et de topographie peuvent exister. Ceci suggère des fonctions partagées mais également des rôles plus spécifiques à chaque aire. A partir de ce connectome, nous avons ensuite montré, par une approche optogénétique associée à des tests comportementaux, que l'activation répétée de la projection de l’amygdale au CCA est susceptible d'induire des comportements de type anxio-dépressif chez des souris naïves. Ce travail met donc en évidence le rôle d'une partie du connectome du CCA dans l'établissement des troubles de l'humeur. / The anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) is a prefrontal region located at the center of a network allowing the sharing of cognitive, motor, limbic and visceral information, placing it as an interesting target for the study of complex pathologies like mood disorders. To investigate these diseases in mice, we provided the complete connectome of each ACC areas by a tract-tracing approach. We demonstrated that the majority of structures constituting this connectome are reciprocally connected with the ACC and that some density and topographical connection specificities were observed among cingulate areas. These results potentially suggest some shared functions between cingulate areas, also completed by specific roles inherent to each area. Using this connectome, we demonstrated that the repeated activation of the amygdala projection to the ACC was able to induce anxiodepressive-like behaviors in naïve mice, by using optogenetics combined with behavioral tests. This study highlights for the first time the implication of a portion of the ACC connectome in the establishment of mood disorders.
74

The role of moral cognition and emotions in remitted major depressive disorder

Workman, Clifford January 2016 (has links)
Background: The aim of this thesis was to investigate the relationship of moral cognition and emotions to the pathophysiology of major depressive disorder (MDD). Patients with MDD may experience excessive guilt or self-blaming biases despite recovery from the depressed state. Since guilt is a moral emotion thought to motivate altruistic behaviours, it has been hypothesized that elevated self-blame in MDD may result in pathological increases to altruism in some patients. The relationship of self-blame to altruistic choices in individuals with remitted MDD (rMDD), however, has not been established. Guilt has been shown to activate the subgenual cingulate and adjacent septal region (SCSR) which is of known importance to the pathophysiology of MDD. Since MDD is thought to arise from network-level dysfunctions, and moral cognition and emotions are hypothesized to emerge from network-level binding, investigating resting-state SCSR functional connectivity in rMDD patients and healthy control (HC) participants could reveal networks of potential relevance both to MDD and to moral cognition and emotions. Chapter 2: We investigated whether melancholic rMDD patients could be distinguished from non-melancholic and HC groups on the basis of resting-state functional connectivity to an SCSR seed region. Lower SCSR-amygdala connectivity distinguished the melancholic rMDD group from non-melancholic and HC groups. Chapter 3: We investigated whether patients who remained resilient to recurring depressive episodes were distinguishable from recurring episode MDD and HC groups on the basis of resting-state connectivity to an SCSR seed region. Lower interhemispheric SCSR connectivity distinguished the resilient MDD patients from the recurring episode MDD and HC groups. Chapter 4: We measured explicit and implicit preferences for social options with and without altruistic motivations relative to selfish options in the rMDD and HC groups during emotion priming to modulate feelings of guilt. The rMDD patients explicitly preferred prosocial options (i.e., social options and altruism directed towards friends or colleagues) less than HC participants. Regardless of group, guilt priming increased explicit and implicit preferences for altruism towards strangers. Chapter 5: We investigated whether explicit and/or implicit preferences for prosocial options during guilt priming were correlated with resting-state connectivity to an SCSR seed region, and whether this relationship could distinguish the rMDD and HC groups. Across all participants, implicit prosocial choice preference negatively correlated with connectivity between the SCSR and right temporoparietal junction (TPJ). The relationship of SCSR-TPJ connectivity to implicit preferences for social options and for altruism towards friends and colleagues was weaker in the rMDD group compared to the HC group, particularly for implicit altruism. Conclusions: We identified resting-state SCSR networks associated with vulnerability to melancholia and with resilience to recurring depressive episodes. Patients with rMDD explicitly preferred options entailing social withdrawal, a symptom associated with MDD vulnerability. Irrespective of group, guilt motivated altruism towards strangers but not friends and colleagues. Implicit prosociality was negatively associated with connectivity in a social agency network, and the comparatively weak relationships between connectivity and implicit choice preferences in rMDD patients may reflect a vulnerability factor for MDD.
75

Investigando os aprendizados subsequentes : mecanismos plásticos e dependência temporal

Crestani, Ana Paula January 2018 (has links)
A formação de memórias de medo contextuais, como as estudadas no presente trabalho, requer a indução da plasticidade sináptica iniciada pela ativação de receptores transmembrana localizados nos neurônios de estruturas encefálicas como o hipocampo. O fluxo iônico mediado pelos receptores N-metil-D-aspartato (NMDARs) é essencial para ativar vias de sinalização intracelular que darão suporte à formação da memória. No entanto, esses receptores parecem não ser necessários em situações onde os animais passaram por uma experiência prévia similar a que está sendo aprendida. Dessa forma, um aprendizado anterior pode modificar os mecanismos de plasticidade que serão utilizados para codificar uma nova informação, caracterizando um fenômeno de metaplasticidade. Esse fenômeno ocorre quando os animais são pré-expostos ao local onde posteriormente serão submetidos a um aprendizado associativo ou quando são re-submetidos a mesma tarefa comportamental com dicas contextuais/espaciais diferentes. No presente trabalho, investigamos (i) os mecanismos de plasticidade sináptica (receptores) e de plasticidade não-sináptica (excitabilidade neuronal) recrutados para a formação do segundo aprendizado e (ii) se a independência dos NMDARs é mantida quando a memória anterior foi adquirida remotamente. Os animais utilizados nesse trabalho (camundongos ou ratos) foram expostos a dois aprendizados sequenciais realizados na tarefa de condicionamento aversivo ao contexto (CAC). O intervalo entre os condicionamentos foi de dois dias nos experimentos do Capítulo I e de três ou quarenta dias nos experimentos do Capítulo II. Cada aprendizado ocorreu em uma caixa de condicionamento com características próprias de formato, odor e iluminação (contexto A ou contexto B), sendo que o primeiro aprendizado ocorreu no contexto A e o segundo no contexto B. Nos experimentos do Capítulo I foram avaliadas no hipocampo dorsal as modificações na excitabilidade neuronal hipocampal induzidas pelo primeiro condicionamento, bem como os receptores envolvidos com a aquisição da memória subsequente e a sobreposição neuronal entre os dois aprendizados. Com a utilização do camundongo transgênico Teg-Tag foi possível identificar os neurônios recrutados para o primeiro aprendizado. Esse animal tem a expressão da proteína fluorescente verde (GFP, do inglês, green fluorescent protein) controlada pela ativação do gene c-fos, que é fisiologicamente transcrito após a atividade neuronal. Dessa forma, os neurônios ativados pelo aprendizado são marcados com GFP. Através da técnica de patch clamp foi observado que os neurônios GFP+ mantiveram a excitabilidade elevada por até dois dias após o treinamento no CAC. Além disso, a identificação dos neurônios recrutados 8 para o aprendizado subsequente foi realizada através da marcação imunofluorescente da proteína Fos, no seu pico de expressão endógena, noventa minutos após o re-treino. Foi observada uma maior sobreposição neuronal (GFP+, Fos+) quando os animais foram retreinados no mesmo contexto dois dias após o primeiro treino. Uma sobreposição intermediária (GFP+, Fos+) foi vista quando os animais tiveram o segundo condicionamento no contexto B, sendo ela significativamente maior do que a sobreposição nos animais não re-treinados. Adicionalmente, foi demonstrado que a aquisição do aprendizado subsequente é mediada por receptores metabotrópicos glutamatérgicos (mGluRs) ao invés de NMDARs. No Capítulo II foi investigado se uma memória remota, adquirida há quarenta dias, ainda seria capaz de influenciar nos mecanismos de plasticidade recrutados para aquisição do aprendizado subsequente. A dinâmica da consolidação sistêmica foi considerada nesses experimentos já que a evocação da memória remota passa a depender de estruturas encefálicas neocorticais, sem recrutar a atividade hipocampal. Apesar da evocação da memória remota não requerer a atividade hipocampal, foi observado que a aquisição do aprendizado subsequente a uma memória remota necessita a atividade de pelo menos uma sub-região do hipocampo (dorsal ou ventral). Complementarmente, os resultados indicaram que, quando o intervalo entre os aprendizados é aumentado (de três para quarenta dias), a formação do aprendizado subsequente, que era independente de NMDARs, volta a depender da plasticidade sináptica mediada por esses receptores no hipocampo (dorsal e ventral). Juntos, nossos resultados sugerem que o primeiro aprendizado causa um aumento da excitabilidade neuronal e modifica a plasticidade sináptica recrutada para o aprendizado subsequente, sendo este último mediado por mGluRs ao invés de NMDARs. Além disso, a metaplasticidade induzida pelo primeiro condicionamento é transiente; quando o intervalo entre as exposições é aumentado, o segundo aprendizado passa a depender novamente da ativação dos NMDARs. / Contextual fear memory formation, like the ones explored in the current work, requires the induction of the synaptic plasticity mediated by the activation of transmembrane receptors that are present in the brain structures as the hippocampus. The ionic flux through the N-methylaspartate- D-aspartate is crucial for activation of the intracellular signaling pathways that will support memory formation. However, these receptors are not necessary when animals had a prior similar learning. In this way, a previous learning can modify the plasticity mechanism that will be recruited to encode a new information, featuring a metaplasticity phenomenon. This phenomenon occurs when animals are pre-exposed to an environment where they will learn an associative learning later or when animals are re-exposed to the same behavioral task with distinct contextual/spatial cues. In the present study, we investigated (i) the synaptic plasticity mechanisms (receptors) and the non-synaptic plasticity mechanisms (neuronal excitability) required for the acquisition of the second learning and (ii) whether a subsequent learning that occurs in a remote time-point is still NMDAR-independent. The animals used in this study (mice or rats) were exposed to two sequential learnings that were performed in the contextual fear conditioning (CFC). The interval between conditionings were two days in the experiments of Chapter I and three or forty days in the experiments of the Chapter II. Each learning was performed in a box with differences on shape, odor and illumination (context A or context B). The first learning occurred in the context A followed by learning on context B. In the experiments of Chapter I it was evaluated the changes in the hippocampal neuronal excitability induced by the first conditioning, the receptors involved with the acquisition of the subsequent memory and the neuronal overlapping between the two sequential learnings. The Teg-Tag transgenic mouse allowed to identify the neurons activated for the first learning experience. This animal has the GFP expression under control of c-fos promoter that is activated by neuronal activity. It was shown by patch clamp that GFP+ neurons are still more excitable two days after learning. Also, the identification of neurons recruited for the subsequent learning was made through immunofluorescent staining of the Fos protein in its peak of endogenous expression, ninety minutes after learning. A greater overlapping (GFP+, Fos+) was observed when animals were retrained in the same context two days after first training. An intermediate overlapping was observed when animals were conditioned in the context B and this expression was significantly higher when compared to animals that were not 10 retrained in either context. Additionally, it was shown that acquisition of the subsequent learning is mediated by metabotropic glutamate receptors (mGluRs) instead of NMDARs In the Chapter II it was investigated whether a remote memory, acquired forty days earlier, is still able to influence in the synaptic plasticity mechanisms recruited for the acquisition of the subsequent learning. Systems consolidation dynamics was considered in these experiments because memory retrieval of a remote memory depends on neocortical brain regions, it not requires hippocampal activity. It was confirmed that hippocampus is not necessary for remote memory retrieval, however at least one longitudinal division of the hippocampus (dorsal or ventral) is essential for learning following a prior remote memory. Moreover, the results indicate that acquisition of the second learning is once again mediated by NMDARs in the hippocampus when the interval between learnings is extended from three to forty days. Altogether, our results suggest that the first learning lead to an increase in the neuronal excitability and modify the synaptic plasticity mechanism recruited for following learning, mGluR are required instead of NMDAR. Furthermore, the metaplasticity induced by first conditioning is transient; the second learning once again requires NMDARs activation when the interval between learnings is longer.
76

Modulation of neuronal excitability in the cognitive control network by electrical stimulation

Lehr, Albert 14 May 2020 (has links)
No description available.
77

Hypnotizability and Corpus Callosum Morphology

Horton, James Edward 15 May 1999 (has links)
In general, highly hypnotizable individuals ("highs") have exhibited greater abilities to focus attention and inhibit pain than low hypnotizable individuals ("lows"). Furthermore, highs appear to have faster neural processing than lows. The present study investigated differences between lows and highs in morphological volume of some brain structures associated with inhibitory and excitatory neural processing, particularly the corpus callosum (CC). Participants were 18 healthy university students, aged 18 to 29, with no history of concussion or medical disorders. They were in a functional Magnetic Resonance Image (fMRI) study examining the neurophysiology of pain and hypnotic analgesia (Crawford, Horton, Harrington, et al., 1998; Downs et al., 1998). As assessed by the group version (Crawford & Allen, 1982) of the Stanford Hypnotic Susceptibility Scale, Form C (SHSS:C; Weitzenhoffer & Hilgard, 1962), there were eight highs (four women and four men; SHSS:C M = 11.0) and 10 lows (five men and five women; SHSS:C M = 2.1). Highs were able to successfully eliminate perception of pain and distress to experimental noxious stimuli. Their anatomical MRIs were measured to assess relationships between brain structure volume (CC, medial cortex, anterior brain regions) and hypnotizability. In comparison to lows, highs had a significantly larger CC volume in the rostrum and isthmus, inferred to reflect larger transcallosal axon diameter or greater axon myelination. For highs, but not lows, there were significant relationships between forebrain volume and the total CC, rostrum, and splenium. Findings provide support for the neuropsychophysiological model of Crawford and her associates (e.g. Crawford, 1994a, 1994b; Crawford & Gruzelier, 1992) proposing a more effective attentional system of inhibitory processes in highs than lows. Furthermore, the data suggest that the more effective systems of attentional and inhibitory processes enhanced neural processing speed, and interhemispheric transfer times seen in highs than lows, may be associated with morphological differences in certain anterior and posterior CC regions. These regions are known to be involved in the allocation of inhibitory and excitatory transfer of information between hemispheres. / Ph. D.
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EXAMINATION OF THE NEURAL CORRELATES UNDERLYING MULTIPLE-EXEMPLAR CATEGORY LEARNING IN BILATERAL RABBIT EYEBLINK CLASSICAL CONDITIONING

Mauldin, Kristin Noel 27 September 2007 (has links)
No description available.
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Dynamics of cognitive control and flexibility in the anterior cingulate and prefrontal cortices

Boschin, Erica January 2013 (has links)
The body of work hereby presented aims at better defining the specific mechanisms underlying cognitive control and flexibility, and to investigate the neural substrates that might support these dynamics. More specifically, the anterior cingulate (ACC), dorsolateral prefrontal (dlPFC) and frontopolar (FPC) cortices have been proposed to play a fundamental role in monitoring and detecting the presence of environmental contingencies that require the recruitment of cognitive control (such as competition between responses in the presence of conflicting information), implementing cognitive control, and supporting higher-order cognitive processing, respectively. This thesis investigates the effects of damage to these regions, and of interference with their activity, on these processes. It also argues for the importance of dissociating possible separate cognitive control components that might differently contribute to behavioural adjustments (such as caution and attention/task-relevant processing), and provides one of the first attempts to quantify them within the parameters of a mathematical model of choice response-time, the Linear Ballistic Accumulator (LBA). The results confirm the crucial role of the dlPFC in modulating behavioural adjustments, as both damage and interference with this region’s activity significantly affect measures of conflict-induced behavioural adaptation. It is hypothesized that dlPFC might drive behavioural adjustments by encoding recent conflict history and/or supporting the automatization of a newly advantageous behavioural strategy during the early stages after a change in conflict levels. When a task does not involve competition between a habit and instructed behaviour, lesions or interference with ACC’s activity do not appear to affect behaviour in a manner that is consistent with the classic conflict-monitoring framework. It is suggested that its role might be better described as a more general monitoring and confirmatory mechanism that evaluates both actual and potential outcomes of an action, in order to proactively guide adjustments away from contextually disadvantageous responses. Finally, lesions to the FPC do not affect abstract-rule integration, but do impair the early stages of acquisition of a new abstract rule, when a previously rewarded rule stops being rewarded, and specifically when acquisition is dependent on self-initiated exploration. This suggests a role for FPC in the evaluation of multiple concurrent options in order to aid the development of new behavioural strategies.
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L’impulsivité en toxicomanie : un regard sur les mécanismes neuronaux de la rechute à la nicotine

Bourque, Josiane 08 1900 (has links)
Contexte : Jusqu’à 90% des fumeurs qui tentent d’arrêter de fumer vont rechuter dans l’année suivant la date d’arrêt. L’impulsivité, au même titre que le « craving », a démontré être un bon facteur de prédiction de la rechute tabagique. Ainsi, la présente étude visait à évaluer, à l’aide de la neuroimagerie fonctionnelle, l’influence de l’impulsivité sur les mécanismes neuronaux du « craving » de la cigarette. Parmi les régions cérébrales impliquées dans le « craving » de la nicotine, les cortex préfrontal dorsolatéral, orbitofrontal et cingulaire sont d’importantes structures dans les processus de contrôle de soi. Méthodes : 31 fumeurs chroniques ont passé une session de neuroimagerie durant laquelle ils devaient regarder des images appétitives de cigarettes et des images neutres. Ils ont ensuite dû inscrire le « craving » ressenti à la vue des images et répondre à un questionnaire portant sur les traits de personnalité de l’impulsivité (BIS-11). Résultats : Tel qu’attendu, le score d’impulsivité était positivement corrélé au « craving » rapporté par les participants à la vue d’images de cigarettes. Au niveau cérébral, plus les fumeurs présentaient de forts traits d’impulsivité, moins grande était l’activité du cortex cingulaire postérieur (CCP) durant le « craving ». Enfin, l’activité du CCP présentait une connectivité fonctionnelle négative avec l’insula, le cortex préfrontal dorsolatéral et le cortex cingulaire antérieur. Conclusions : Comme le CCP est le siège des processus de mentalisation et de référence à soi, nous suggérons que plus les fumeurs étaient impulsifs, moins ils prenaient conscience de leur état et moins ils en exerçaient un contrôle, donc plus ils ressentaient de forts « cravings ». En poussant plus loin, nos résultats mettent l’accent sur l’aspect identitaire (le soi, les mémoires autobiographiques) et l’aspect d’introspection en toxicomanie : deux avenues à explorer. / Background: 90% of cigarette smokers attempting to quit smoking relapse by one-year following their quit date. Impulsivity, as well as cue-induced cravings, have been shown to be good predictors of relapse for tobacco smoking; however, no study to date has examined their interaction and its neural substrates. The goal of this study was to determine the neural influence of trait impulsivity during functional imaging of cue-induced cigarette cravings. Among the brain regions involved in nicotine craving, the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, the orbitofrontal as well as the cingulate cortex all play a significant role in self-control processes. Methods: Thirty-one chronic smokers passively viewed appetitive smoking-related and neutral images while being scanned. Participants also reported their level of craving and completed the BIS-11, a measure of trait impulsivity. Results: As hypothesized, we observed a significant positive relationship between impulsivity scores and reported craving. Impulsivity scores were negatively correlated with activity in the posterior cingulate cortex (PCC). The insula, dorsal anterior cingulate cortex and dorsolateral prefrontal cortex presented a negative connectivity with the PCC. Conclusions: Given that the PCC is involved in mentalization and self-relevant processing, it is possible that greater trait impulsivity in smokers is associated to a lower tendency to understand and use one’s mental and physical state to guide behavior. This may weaken their capacity for self-control and consequently, promotes more automatic and stronger cue-elicited smoking urges. Furthermore, our results highlight the important but undervalued role of identity (the self and autobiographic memories) and mindfulness in addiction.

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