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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.
1

Subsystems of the basal ganglia and motor infrastructure

Kamali Sarvestani, Iman January 2013 (has links)
The motor nervous system is one of the main systems of the body and is our principle means ofbehavior. Some of the most debilitating and wide spread disorders are motor systempathologies. In particular the basal ganglia are complex networks of the brain that control someaspects of movement in all vertebrates. Although these networks have been extensively studied,lack of proper methods to study them on a system level has hindered the process ofunderstanding what they do and how they do it. In order to facilitate this process I have usedcomputational models as an approach that can faithfully take into account many aspects of ahigh dimensional multi faceted system.In order to minimize the complexity of the system, I first took agnathan fish and amphibians asmodeling animals. These animals have rather simple neuronal networks and have been wellstudied so that developing their biologically plausible models is more feasible. I developedmodels of sensory motor transformation centers that are capable of generating basic behaviorsof approach, avoidance and escape. The networks in these models used a similar layeredstructure having a sensory map in one layer and a motor map on other layers. The visualinformation was received as place coded information, but was converted into population codedand ultimately into rate coded signals usable for muscle contractions.In parallel to developing models of visuomotor centers, I developed a novel model of the basalganglia. The model suggests that a subsystem of the basal ganglia is in charge of resolvingconflicts between motor programs suggested by different motor centers in the nervous system.This subsystem that is composed of the subthalamic nucleus and pallidum is called thearbitration system. Another subsystem of the basal ganglia called the extension system which iscomposed of the striatum and pallidum can bias decisions made by an animal towards theactions leading to lower cost and higher outcome by learning to associate proper actions todifferent states. Such states are generally complex states and the novel hypothesis I developedsuggests that the extension system is capable of learning such complex states and linking themto appropriate actions. In this framework, striatal neurons play the role of conjunction (BooleanAND) neurons while pallidal neurons can be envisioned as disjunction (Boolean OR) neurons.In the next set of experiments I tried to take the idea of basal ganglia subsystems to a new levelby dividing the rodent arbitration system into two functional subunits. A rostral group of ratpallidal neurons form dense local inhibition among themselves and even send inhibitoryprojections to the caudal segment. The caudal segment does not project back to its rostralcounterpart, but both segments send inhibitory projections to the output nuclei of the rat basalganglia i.e. the entopeduncular nucleus and substantia nigra. The rostral subsystems is capableof precisely detecting one (or several) components of a rudimentary action and suppress othercomponents. The components that are reinforced are those which lead to rewarding stateswhereas those that are suppressed are those which do not. The hypothesis explains neuronalmechanisms involved in this process and suggests that this subsystem is a means of generatingsimple but precise movements (such as using a single digit) from innate crude actions that theanimal can perform even at birth (such as general movement of the whole limb). In this way, therostral subsystem may play important role in exploration based learning.In an attempt to more precisely describe the relation between the arbitration and extensionsystems, we investigated the effect of dynamic synapses between subthalamic, pallidal andstriatal neurons and output neurons of the basal ganglia. The results imply that output neuronsare sensitive to striatal bursts and pallidal irregular firing. They also suggest that few striatalneurons are enough to fully suppress output neurons. Finally the results show that the globuspallidus exerts its effect on output neurons by direct inhibition rather than indirect influence viathe subthalamic nucleus. / <p>QC 20131209</p>
2

Deleterious effects of synuclein in injury-induced neurodegeneration and in a synaptic model of Parkinson’s Disease

Busch, David James 03 October 2012 (has links)
Synucleins represent a conserved family of small proteins that include α-, β-, and γ- isoforms, which are highly expressed in neurons of the vertebrate nervous system. The normal function of these proteins is not well understood. However, in humans α- synuclein dysfunction is causatively linked to Parkinson’s Disease (PD), where it abnormally accumulates in neuronal cell bodies as protein aggregates that are associated with neuronal death. Although the associations between synuclein accumulation and cellular death are established in PD, the extent to which this occurs in other contexts, such as neuronal injury, is unknown. Furthermore, the effects of synuclein aggregation on the function of synapses, where synuclein is normally localized, are not well understood. To address these questions I took advantage of the experimentally accessible nervous system of the sea lamprey (Petromyzon marinus). I used molecular cloning and phylogenetic analyses to characterize three lamprey synuclein orthologues, one of which is highly expressed within a class of neurons called the giant reticulospinal (RS) neurons. Spinal cord injury induces the accumulation of synuclein protein only within a population of poor surviving RS neurons, and this accumulation is correlated with cellular death. Thus, similar to PD, the abundance of synuclein protein is associated with neuronal toxicity. In a related project, I demonstrated that elevating synuclein levels at synapses, such as occurs in PD, is deleterious to synaptic function through an inhibition of synaptic vesicle (SV) recycling. By injecting excess synuclein protein directly into the axons of giant RS neurons, and analyzing the ultrastructural morphology of synapses, I have shown that clathrin-mediated synaptic vesicle endocytosis was greatly inhibited. The conserved N-terminal domain was sufficient to inhibit vesicle recycling, and injecting synuclein mutants with disrupted N-terminal α-helices caused reduced defects in SV recycling. Therefore the α-helical structure of the N-terminus is necessary to inhibit SV recycling at early stages of clathrin-mediated endocytosis. Binding interactions with clathrin-mediated endocytosis components, such as the phosphoinositide lipid PI(4)P support this hypothesis. These studies provide a better understanding of the mechanisms by which synuclein dysfunction leads to neuronal death after injury and synaptic dysfunction in PD and other synuclein-associated diseases. / text
3

Modulation dopaminergique dans le système olfactif

Beauséjour, Philippe-Antoine 08 1900 (has links)
Les figures de neuroanatomie de ce mémoire peuvent être téléchargées en haute résolution. / Une voie neuronale sous-tendant la locomotion induite par la détection d’odorants a été découverte chez la lamproie (Derjean et al., 2010). Le signal olfactif est relayé du bulbe olfactif médian au tubercule postérieur, puis à la région locomotrice mésencéphalique et enfin aux cellules réticulospinales qui activent les réseaux locomoteurs spinaux. Des études récentes démontrent que le bulbe olfactif médian est sous l’influence d’une inhibition GABAergique tonique qui régule les réponses des cellules réticulospinales à la stimulation du nerf olfactif (Daghfous et al., 2013). Des mécanismes de modulation supplémentaires pourraient exister dans le bulbe olfactif de Petromyzon marinus puisqu’il contient aussi des fibres dopaminergiques. Chez tous les vertébrés étudiés, la dopamine joue un rôle important dans le traitement olfactif. Des techniques anatomiques (traçage et immunofluorescence) et physiologiques (enregistrements intracellulaires) ont été utilisées pour étudier la modulation dopaminergique de la voie olfacto-motrice. L’immunofluorescence ciblant la dopamine a révélé des fibres plus nombreuses dans la partie médiane du BO et à proximité de neurones de projection et de fibres olfactives. De plus, aucun corps cellulaire immunopositif n’a été détecté dans le bulbe olfactif. L’enregistrement des réponses synaptiques des cellules réticulospinales à la stimulation du nerf olfactif a été réalisé dans le cerveau isolé in vitro. L’injection locale de dopamine dans le bulbe olfactif médian diminue de moitié l’amplitude de réponse. Sous l’effet d’un antagoniste des récepteurs GABAA dans le bain ou localement dans le bulbe olfactif médian, les dépolarisations soutenues enregistrées sont supprimées par l’injection de dopamine. Cependant, l’injection individuelle ou combinée dans le bulbe olfactif médian d’antagonistes sélectifs des récepteurs D1 ou D2, soit le SCH 23390 et l’éticlopride, demeure sans effet significatif sur les réponses olfacto-motrices, indiquant l’absence d’activité dopaminergique tonique. Pour localiser les neurones responsables de cette modulation, des injections de traceur axonal ont été combinées avec l’immunofluorescence ciblant la dopamine. Des cellules dopaminergiques projetant au BO médian ont été observées dans les noyaux dopaminergiques du tubercule postérieur et de l’hypothalamus périventriculaire. Dans l’ensemble, nos résultats montrent anatomiquement et physiologiquement la présence d’une innervation dopaminergique dans le bulbe olfactif médian qui a une action inhibitrice sur le traitement olfacto-moteur. / A neural substrate underlying odor-evoked locomotion was revealed in lampreys (Derjean et al., 2010), involving a neural pathway extending from the medial part of the olfactory bulb to the posterior tuberculum. The signal is then relayed to the mesencephalic locomotor region and eventually reaches reticulospinal cells that activate the spinal locomotor networks. Recent research in the lab (Daghfous et al., 2013) shows that the medial olfactory bulb, is under a tonic GABAergic inhibition gating reticulospinal cell responses to olfactory nerve stimulation. Additional modulatory mechanisms might exist in the olfactory bulb of Petromyzon marinus as it also contains dopaminergic fibers. In every vertebrate studied to date, dopamine plays an important role in olfactory processing. Anatomical (axonal tracers and immunofluorescence) and physiological (intracellular recordings) techniques were used to investigate the dopaminergic modulation of the olfacto-motor pathway. Dopamine immunofluorescence showed scarce innervation of the olfactory bulb that was most abundant in the medial part and in close vicinity to projection neurons and olfactory nerve fibers. Additionally, no dopamine-immunoreactive cell bodies were detected in the olfactory bulb. Synaptic responses of reticulospinal cells to olfactory nerve stimulation were recorded in the isolated brain. Local injection of dopamine in the medial olfactory bulb induces an almost two-fold decrease of the synaptic responses. When GABAA receptor antagonist GABAzine was also injected in the medial olfactory bulb, the effect of dopamine was much more evident and could suppress large bursts of action potentials. However, D1 (SCH 23390) and D2 (Eticlopride) receptor antagonists injection in the medial olfactory bulb failed to alter the amplitude of reticulospinal cell responses to olfactory nerve stimulation, indicating that this modulation is not tonic. To locate the neurons responsible for this modulation, tracer injections combined with dopamine immunofluorescence were performed. Dopaminergic cells projecting to the medial olfactory bulb were found in the dopaminergic nuclei of the posterior tuberculum and the periventricular hypothalamus. Altogether, our results show anatomically and physiologically the presence of a dopaminergic innervation within the medial olfactory bulb that mediates inhibitory effects on olfacto-motor signaling.
4

Transmission des voies olfactives aux cellules réticulospinales de la lamproie

Atallah, Elias 08 1900 (has links)
Les informations olfactives sont connues pour leur capacité à induire des comportements moteurs spécifiques. En dépit de nombreuses observations comportementales chez les vertébrés, on ne connaît toujours pas les mécanismes et les voies nerveuses qui sous-tendent ces phénomènes de transformation olfacto-locomotrices. Chez la lamproie, des travaux récents ont permis de décrire cette voie, et les mécanismes responsables de la transformation des entrées olfactives en activité locomotrice (Derjean et al., 2010). Cette voie prend origine dans la partie médiane du bulbe olfactif, et envoie des projections vers le tubercule postérieur, une région qui se trouve dans le diencéphale. De là, les neurones projettent directement vers la Région Locomotrice Mésencéphalique, connue pour envoyer des connexions vers les neurones réticulospinaux, et activer la locomotion. L’objectif de cette étude était d’établir si l’ensemble des neurones réticulospinaux répond aux stimulations olfactives. Pour ce faire, nous avons utilisé sur une préparation de cerveau isolé de lamproie des techniques d’électrophysiologie et d’imagerie calcique. La stimulation électrique des nerfs olfactifs, de la région médiane du bulbe olfactif ou du tubercule postérieur a provoqué une activation de toutes les cellules réticulospinales qui se retrouvent dans les quatre noyaux réticulaires (ARRN : Noyau Réticulaire Rhombencéphalique Antérieur; MRN : Noyau Réticulaire Mésencéphalique; MRRN : Noyau Réticulaire Rhombencéphalique Moyen; PRRN : Noyau Réticulaire Rhombencéphalique Postérieur). Seule la partie médiane du bulbe olfactif est impliquée dans le passage de l’information olfactive vers les neurones réticulospinaux. Nous avons aussi découvert que le blocage des récepteurs GABAergiques dans la partie médiane du bulbe olfactif augmentait les réponses olfactives de façon considérable dans les cellules réticulospinales. Nous avons montré ainsi qu’il existe un tonus inhibiteur impliqué dans la dépression modulatrice de la voie olfacto-locomotrice. Ce travail a permis de montrer que la stimulation des afférences sensorielles olfactives active simultanément l’ensemble des populations de neurones réticulospinaux qui commandent la locomotion. De plus, il existerait un tonus inhibiteur GABAergique, au niveau de la partie médiane du bulbe olfactif, responsable d’une dépression modulatrice dans la voie olfacto-locomotrice. / Olfactory inputs are known for their ability to induce specific motor behaviors. Despite numerous behavioral observations in vertebrates, the mechanisms and the neural pathways underlying the olfactory-locomotor transformation are still unknown. In lamprey, recent studies have described this pathway and the mechanism underlying the transformation of olfactory input into a locomotor activity (Derjean et al., 2010). This pathway originates in the medial part of the olfactory bulb, sends projections to the posterior tuberculum, a diencephalic region. From there, the neurons project directly to the mesencephalic locomotor region that is known to send projections to the reticulospinal neurons to activate locomotion. Using lamprey brain preparation, electrophysiology and calcium imaging, the aim of this study was to establish whether all reticulospinal neurons respond to olfactory stimuli. Electrical stimulation of the olfactory nerves, the medial part of the olfactory bulb or the posterior tuberculum activates all reticulospinal cells in the four reticular nuclei (ARRN: Anterior rhombencephalic reticular nucleus; MRN: middle mesencephalic reticular nucleus; MRRN: middle rhombencephalic reticular nucleus; PRRN: posterior rhombencephalic reticular nucleus). The medial part of the olfactory bulb is the only region that is implicated in transmitting the olfactory information to reticulospinal neurons. We also discovered that when blocking the GABAergic receptors in the medial part of the olfactory bulb, the reticulospinal neurons have a stronger response to olfactory stimulation. Thus we showed that a tonic inhibition is involved in the modulating depression of the olfacto-locomotor pathway. Altogether, this work shows that stimulation of the olfactory sensory inputs activates simultaneously the entire population of reticulospinal neurons that control locomotion. In addition, there is a GABAergic tonic inhibition at the level of the medial part of the olfactory bulb that causes a modulating depression in the olfacto-locomotor pathway.
5

Transmission des voies olfactives aux cellules réticulospinales de la lamproie

Atallah, Elias 08 1900 (has links)
Les informations olfactives sont connues pour leur capacité à induire des comportements moteurs spécifiques. En dépit de nombreuses observations comportementales chez les vertébrés, on ne connaît toujours pas les mécanismes et les voies nerveuses qui sous-tendent ces phénomènes de transformation olfacto-locomotrices. Chez la lamproie, des travaux récents ont permis de décrire cette voie, et les mécanismes responsables de la transformation des entrées olfactives en activité locomotrice (Derjean et al., 2010). Cette voie prend origine dans la partie médiane du bulbe olfactif, et envoie des projections vers le tubercule postérieur, une région qui se trouve dans le diencéphale. De là, les neurones projettent directement vers la Région Locomotrice Mésencéphalique, connue pour envoyer des connexions vers les neurones réticulospinaux, et activer la locomotion. L’objectif de cette étude était d’établir si l’ensemble des neurones réticulospinaux répond aux stimulations olfactives. Pour ce faire, nous avons utilisé sur une préparation de cerveau isolé de lamproie des techniques d’électrophysiologie et d’imagerie calcique. La stimulation électrique des nerfs olfactifs, de la région médiane du bulbe olfactif ou du tubercule postérieur a provoqué une activation de toutes les cellules réticulospinales qui se retrouvent dans les quatre noyaux réticulaires (ARRN : Noyau Réticulaire Rhombencéphalique Antérieur; MRN : Noyau Réticulaire Mésencéphalique; MRRN : Noyau Réticulaire Rhombencéphalique Moyen; PRRN : Noyau Réticulaire Rhombencéphalique Postérieur). Seule la partie médiane du bulbe olfactif est impliquée dans le passage de l’information olfactive vers les neurones réticulospinaux. Nous avons aussi découvert que le blocage des récepteurs GABAergiques dans la partie médiane du bulbe olfactif augmentait les réponses olfactives de façon considérable dans les cellules réticulospinales. Nous avons montré ainsi qu’il existe un tonus inhibiteur impliqué dans la dépression modulatrice de la voie olfacto-locomotrice. Ce travail a permis de montrer que la stimulation des afférences sensorielles olfactives active simultanément l’ensemble des populations de neurones réticulospinaux qui commandent la locomotion. De plus, il existerait un tonus inhibiteur GABAergique, au niveau de la partie médiane du bulbe olfactif, responsable d’une dépression modulatrice dans la voie olfacto-locomotrice. / Olfactory inputs are known for their ability to induce specific motor behaviors. Despite numerous behavioral observations in vertebrates, the mechanisms and the neural pathways underlying the olfactory-locomotor transformation are still unknown. In lamprey, recent studies have described this pathway and the mechanism underlying the transformation of olfactory input into a locomotor activity (Derjean et al., 2010). This pathway originates in the medial part of the olfactory bulb, sends projections to the posterior tuberculum, a diencephalic region. From there, the neurons project directly to the mesencephalic locomotor region that is known to send projections to the reticulospinal neurons to activate locomotion. Using lamprey brain preparation, electrophysiology and calcium imaging, the aim of this study was to establish whether all reticulospinal neurons respond to olfactory stimuli. Electrical stimulation of the olfactory nerves, the medial part of the olfactory bulb or the posterior tuberculum activates all reticulospinal cells in the four reticular nuclei (ARRN: Anterior rhombencephalic reticular nucleus; MRN: middle mesencephalic reticular nucleus; MRRN: middle rhombencephalic reticular nucleus; PRRN: posterior rhombencephalic reticular nucleus). The medial part of the olfactory bulb is the only region that is implicated in transmitting the olfactory information to reticulospinal neurons. We also discovered that when blocking the GABAergic receptors in the medial part of the olfactory bulb, the reticulospinal neurons have a stronger response to olfactory stimulation. Thus we showed that a tonic inhibition is involved in the modulating depression of the olfacto-locomotor pathway. Altogether, this work shows that stimulation of the olfactory sensory inputs activates simultaneously the entire population of reticulospinal neurons that control locomotion. In addition, there is a GABAergic tonic inhibition at the level of the medial part of the olfactory bulb that causes a modulating depression in the olfacto-locomotor pathway.

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