710 results match your criteria: "Netherlands Institute for Brain Research[Affiliation]"

The purpose of this study was to compare spontaneous functional recovery after different spinal motor tract lesions in the rat spinal cord using three methods of analysis, the BBB, the rope test, and the CatWalk. We transected the dorsal corticospinal tract (CSTx) or the rubrospinal tract (RSTx) or the complete dorsal half of the spinal cord (Hx) at thoracic level T8. Functional recovery was monitored for 31 weeks.

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Microtubules (MTs) are cytoskeletal polymers that exhibit dynamic instability, the random alternation between growth and shrinkage. MT dynamic instability plays an essential role in cell development, division, and motility. To investigate dynamic instability, simulation models have been widely used.

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1.Melanin-concentrating hormone (MCH) and orexin-containing neurons participate in hypothalamic circuits that control energy homeostasis. While these two systems have projections to widespread target areas within the central nervous system, little is known about intrinsic characteristics and the molecular composition of both the MCH and orexin neurons themselves.

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No postnatal doubling of number of neurons in human Broca's areas (Brodmann areas 44 and 45)? A stereological study.

Neuroscience

March 2006

Netherlands Institute for Brain Research, Graduate School Neurosciences Amsterdam, Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences, Meibergdreef 33, 1105 AZ Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

In this study we explored whether a postnatal doubling of the total number of neurons occurs in the human Brodmann areas 44 and 45 (Broca's area). We describe the most recent error prediction formulae and their application for the modern stereological estimators for volume and number of neurons. We estimated the number of neurons in 3D optical disector probes systematically random sampled throughout the entire Brodmann areas (BA) 44 and 45 in developing and young adult cases.

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The hypothalamus uses hormones and the autonomic nervous system to balance energy fluxes in the body. Here we show that the autonomic nervous system has a distinct organization in different body compartments. The same neurons control intraabdominal organs (intraabdominal fat, liver, and pancreas), whereas sc adipose tissue located outside the abdominal compartment receives input from another set of autonomic neurons.

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Article Synopsis
  • The suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) is the master clock that regulates tissue-specific rhythms, including the daily rhythm of plasma glucose levels, which peaks before activity starts.
  • The SCN communicates with peripheral tissues via chemical signals or neural connections and can maintain glucose rhythms even when feeding is regular, unless there is an SCN lesion.
  • The study shows that the sympathetic nervous system is necessary for maintaining the daily plasma glucose rhythm, while the expression of clock genes in the liver operates independently of sympathetic innervation.
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It is increasingly appreciated that failures in the ubiquitin-proteasome system play a pivotal role in the neuropathogenesis of many neurological disorders. This system, involved in protein quality control, should degrade misfolded proteins, but apparently during neuropathogenesis, it is unable to cope with a number of proteins that, by themselves, can consequently accumulate. Ubiquitin is essential for ATP-dependent protein degradation by the proteasome.

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Biomarkers present in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of Alzheimer Disease patients could be instrumental in guiding diagnosis and monitoring of progression of the disease. We have previously reported on the secretion of a frameshifted form of amyloid-beta precursor protein, APP+1, into the CSF of Alzheimer patients and controls. APP+1 is secreted efficiently in controls, but during the progression of Alzheimer Disease, its secretion is reduced and APP+1 accumulates in tangle-bearing neurons.

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The proteasome in Alzheimer's disease and Parkinson's disease: lessons from ubiquitin B+1.

Trends Mol Med

November 2005

Research group Cellular Quality Control, The Netherlands Institute for Brain Research, Meibergdreef 33, 1105 AZ Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

Ubiquitin-containing cellular inclusions are characteristic of major neurodegenerative diseases and suggest an involvement of the ubiquitin-proteasome system. The frameshifted form of ubiquitin has proved to be a valuable tool for studying the role of the ubiquitin-proteasome system. It is an endogenous reporter for proteasome activity in human pathology but it is also capable of inhibiting proteasomal degradation.

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The arcuate nucleus (ARC) is crucial for the maintenance of energy homeostasis as an integrator of long- and short-term hunger and satiety signals. The expression of receptors for metabolic hormones, such as insulin, leptin, and ghrelin, allows ARC to sense information from the periphery and signal it to the central nervous system. The ventromedial ARC (vmARC) mainly comprises orexigenic neuropeptide agouti-related peptide and neuropeptide Y neurons, which are sensitive to circulating signals.

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Consequences of large interindividual variability for human brain atlases: converging macroscopical imaging and microscopical neuroanatomy.

Anat Embryol (Berl)

December 2005

Netherlands Institute for Brain Research, Graduate School Neurosciences Amsterdam, Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences, Meibergdreef 33, Amsterdam, AZ, 1105 The Netherlands.

In human brain imaging studies, it is common practice to use the Talairach stereotaxic reference system for signifying the convergence of brain function and structure. In nearly all neuroimaging reports, the studied cortical areas are specified further with a Brodmann Area (BA) number. This specification is based upon macroscopic extrapolation from Brodmann's projection maps into the Talairach atlas rather than upon a real microscopic cytoarchitectonic study.

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Down syndrome (DS) patients suffer from mental retardation, but also display enhanced beta-APP production and develop cortical amyloid plaques at an early age. As beta-APP and Notch are both processed by gamma-secretase, we analyzed expression of the Notch signaling pathway in the adult DS brain and in a model system for DS, human trisomy 21 fibroblasts by quantitative PCR. In adult DS cortex we found that Notch1, Dll1 and Hes1 expression is up-regulated.

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The suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) of the hypothalamus is considered to be a critical component of a neural oscillator system implicated in the timing of a wide variety of biological processes. The circadian cycles established by this biological clock occur throughout nature and have a period of approximately 24 h. With advancing age, however, these daily fluctuations deteriorate, leading to disrupted cycles with a reduced amplitude.

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Human glial fibrillary acidic protein-delta (GFAP-delta) is a GFAP protein isoform that is encoded by an alternative splice variant of the GFAP-gene. As a result, GFAP-delta protein differs from the predominant splice form, GFAP-alpha, by its C-terminal protein sequence. In this study, we show that GFAP-delta protein is not expressed by all GFAP-expressing astrocytes but specifically by a subpopulation located in the subpial zone of the cerebral cortex, the subgranular zone of the hippocampus, and, most intensely, by a ribbon of astrocytes following the ependymal layer of the cerebral ventricles.

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Corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH) plays a central role in the regulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA)-axis, i.e., the final common pathway in the stress response.

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Context: Narcoleptic patients with cataplexy have a general loss of hypocretin (orexin) in the lateral hypothalamus, possibly due to an autoimmune-mediated degeneration of the hypocretin neurons. In addition to excessive daytime sleepiness, Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS) patients may show narcolepsy-like symptoms, such as sleep-onset rapid eye movement sleep and cataplexy, independent of obesity-related sleep disturbances, which suggests a disorder of the hypocretin neurons.

Objective: We hypothesized that the narcolepsy-like symptoms in PWS are caused by a decline in the number of hypocretin neurons.

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Secreted semaphorins are essential for neural development and continue to be expressed in subpopulations of adult neurons, where they subserve as yet unknown functions. We employed functional myc- and GFP-tagged Sema3A proteins to obtain insight in the localization of Sema3A in neuronal cells. Sema3A localized to both axons and dendrites of cortical neurons.

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The mammalian biological clock, located in the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN), is crucial for circadian rhythms in physiology and behavior. However, equivocal findings have been reported on its role in the circadian regulation of body temperature. The goal of the present studies was to investigate the interaction between the SCN and environmental light in the regulation of body temperature.

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Previously we have reported an increased nuclear estrogen receptor-alpha (ERalpha) in the medial mamillary nucleus (MMN) in Alzheimer's disease (AD). In the present study, we addressed the presence of specific ERalpha mRNA splice variants in this brain area of five AD cases compared with five controls using the RT-PCR and quantitative RT-PCR approach. Indeed, the occurrence of isoforms with the deletion of exons 7 (del.

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The pineal gland is a central structure in the circadian system which produces melatonin under the control of the central clock, the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN). The SCN and the output of the pineal gland, i.e.

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Male sexual differentiation of the brain and behavior are thought, on the basis of experiments in rodents, to be caused by androgens, following conversion to estrogens. However, observations in human subjects with genetic and other disorders show that direct effects of testosterone on the developing fetal brain are of major importance for the development of male gender identity and male heterosexual orientation. Solid evidence for the importance of postnatal social factors is lacking.

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Cutaneous warming promotes sleep onset.

Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol

June 2005

Netherlands Institute for Brain Research, Graduate School Neurosciences Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

Sleep occurs in close relation to changes in body temperature. Both the monophasic sleep period in humans and the polyphasic sleep periods in rodents tend to be initiated when core body temperature is declining. This decline is mainly due to an increase in skin blood flow and consequently skin warming and heat loss.

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Melanin-concentrating hormone (MCH) exerts a positive regulation on appetite and binds to the G protein-coupled receptors, MCH1R and MCH2R. In rodents, MCH is produced by neurons in the lateral hypothalamus with projections to various hypothalamic and other brain sites. In the present study, MCH1R was shown, by immunocytochemistry, to be present in the human infundibular nucleus/median eminence, paraventricular nucleus, lateral hypothalamic area, and perifornical area, although in the latter two regions, only a few MCH1R-containing cells were found.

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Previously, alterations in neuronal metabolism were found in a number of brain areas of Alzheimer disease (AD) patients. In the present study we aimed at determining for the first time whether metabolic changes would also occur in vascular dementia (VD) patients in the supraoptic (SON), infundibular (INF), tuberomamillary (TMN), medial mamillary nuclei, vertical limb of the diagonal band of Broca (VDB), and nucleus basalis of Meynert. The Golgi complex (GC) size, cell size, and vasopressin mRNA levels (in the SON) were used as measures of neuronal metabolic activity in postmortem material.

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Removal of circulating corticosterone by adrenalectomy (ADX) leads to apoptosis after 3 days in a small population of rat dentate granule neurons, whereas most surrounding cells remain viable. Interestingly, a specific expression profile is triggered in surviving granule cells that may enhance their survival. Hippocampal slices prepared 1, 2 or 3 days after ADX or sham operation were stained ex vivo with Hoechst 33258, which serves to identify apoptotic neurons.

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