Neuroscience
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The anterior thalamic nuclei are important for cognition, and memory in particular. However, little is known about how the anterior thalamic nuclei are affected in many neurological disorders partly due to difficulties in selective segmentation in in vivo scans, due to their size and location. Post-mortem studies, therefore, remain a valuable source of information about the status of the anterior thalamic nuclei. ⋯ The surface area of the anteroventral thalamic nucleus was smaller in the Down syndrome group suggesting the increased neuronal density was due to greater neuronal packing but likely fewer overall neurons. There was a marked reduction in the proportion of neurons immunoreactive for the calcium-binding proteins calbindin, calretinin, and parvalbumin in individuals with Down syndrome. These findings highlight the vulnerability of calcium-binding proteins in the anteroventral nucleus in Down syndrome, which could both be driven by, and exacerbate, Alzheimer-related pathology in this region.
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Previous studies have shown that α-synuclein (α-Syn) aggregates derived from the brains of patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) and multiple system atrophy (MSA) exhibit different phosphorylation, cytotoxicity, and seeding activity. However, the mechanism underlying the differences remains poorly understood. Here, recombinant human α-Syn was incubated in the plasma of patients with PD and MSA, and the oligomers formed in the plasma (PD-O-α-Syn and MSA-O-α-Syn) were purified and analyzed for their phosphorylation, cytotoxicity and seeding activity. ⋯ In vivo experiments showed that mice receiving intrastriatal inoculation of MSA-O-α-Syn developed more severe motor dysfunction and dopaminergic degeneration than mice receiving intrastriatal inoculation of PD-O-α-Syn. Compared with the mice inoculated with PD-O-α-Syn, the mice inoculated with MSA-O-α-Syn accumulated more phosphorylated and oligomerized α-Syn in the striatum and brain regions (substantia nigra, hippocampus and prefrontal cortex) away from the inoculated site. The results obtained suggest that α-Syn oligomers formed in PD and MSA plasma are different in phosphorylation, cytotoxicity, and seeding activity.
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Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the most prevalent dementia, pathologically featuring abnormal accumulation of amyloid-β (Aβ) and hyperphosphorylated tau, while sleep, divided into rapid eye movement sleep (REM) and nonrapid eye movement sleep (NREM), plays a key role in consolidating social and spatial memory. Emerging evidence has revealed that sleep disorders such as circadian disturbances and disruption of neuronal rhythm activity are considered as both candidate risks and consequence of AD, suggesting a bidirectional relationship between sleep and AD. ⋯ Although theories about the bidirectional relationship and relevant therapeutic methods in mice have been well developed in recent years, the knowledge in human is still limited. More studies on how to effectively ameliorate AD pathology in patients by sleep enhancement and what specific roles of sleep play in AD are needed.
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Gray matter changes are thought to be closely related to cognitive decline in mild cognitive impairment (MCI) patients. The study aimed to explore cortical and subcortical structural alterations in MCI and their association with cognitive assessment. 24 MCI patients and 22 normal controls (NCs) were included. Voxel-based morphometry (VBM), vertex-based shape analysis and surface-based morphometry (SBM) analysis were applied to explore subcortical nuclei volume, shape and cortical morphology. ⋯ SVM analysis demonstrated superior performance of sulci depth and GI derived from SBM in MCI identification. When combined with cortical and subcortical metrics, SVM achieved a peak accuracy of 89 % in distinguishing MCI from NC. The study reveals significant gray matter structural changes in MCI, suggesting their potential role in underlying functional differences and neural mechanisms behind memory impairment in MCI.
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Comparative Study
Urinary dysfunction after spinal cord injury: Comparing outcomes after thoracic spinal transection and contusion in the rat.
Spinal cord injury (SCI) above the lumbosacral spinal cord induces loss of voluntary control over micturition. Spinal cord transection (SCT) was the gold standard method to reproduce SCI in rodents, but its translational value is arguable and other experimental SCI methods need to be better investigated, including spinal cord contusion (SCC). At present, it is not fully investigated if urinary impairments arising after transection and contusion are comparable. ⋯ In LUT organs, the expression of GAP43, CGRP cholinergic (vesicular acetylcholine transporter (VAChT)) and noradrenergic (tyrosine hydroxylase (TH)) markers was reduced after SCI in the LUT and lumbosacral cord, but only the lumbosacral expression of VAChT was dependent on the injury model. Overall, our findings demonstrate that changes in LUT innervation and function after contusion and transection are similar but result from distinct neuroplastic processes at the lumbosacral spinal cord. This may impact the development of new therapeutic options for urinary impairment arising after spinal cord insult.