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The limited proliferative capacity of neuroprogenitor cells (NPCs) within the periventricular germinal niches (PGNs) located caudal of the subventricular zone (SVZ) of the lateral ventricles together with their high proliferation capacity after isolation strongly implicates cell‐extrinsic humoral factors restricting NPC proliferation in the hypothalamic and midbrain PGNs. We comparatively examined the effects of norepinephrine (NE) as an endogenous candidate regulator of PGN neurogenesis in the SVZ as well as the periventricular hypothalamus and the periaqueductal midbrain. Histological and neurochemical analyses revealed that the pattern of NE innervation of the adult PGNs is inversely associated with their in vivo NPC proliferation capacity with low NE levels coupled to high NPC proliferation in the SVZ but high NE levels coupled to low NPC proliferation in hypothalamic and midbrain PGNs. Intraventricular infusion of NE decreased NPC proliferation and neurogenesis in the SVZ‐olfactory bulb system, while pharmacological NE inhibition increased NPC proliferation and early neurogenesis events in the caudal PGNs. Neurotoxic ablation of NE neurons using the Dsp4‐fluoxetine protocol confirmed its inhibitory effects on NPC proliferation. Contrarily, NE depletion largely impairs NPC proliferation within the hippocampus in the same animals. Our data indicate that norepinephrine has opposite effects on the two fundamental neurogenic niches of the adult brain with norepinephrine being a negative regulator of adult periventricular neurogenesis. This knowledge might ultimately lead to new therapeutic approaches to influence neurogenesis in hypothalamus‐related metabolic diseases or to stimulate endogenous regenerative potential in neurodegenerative processes such as Parkinson's disease.
We review the role of oscillations in the brain and in the auditory system showing that the ability of humans to distinguish changes in pitch can be explained as a precise analysis of temporal information in auditory signals by neural oscillations. The connections between auditory brain stem chopper neurons construct neural oscillators, which discharge spikes at various constant intervals that are integer multiples of 0.4 ms, contributing to the temporal processing of auditory cochlear output. This is subsequently spatially mapped in the inferior colliculus. Electrophysiological measurements of auditory chopper neurons in different species show oscillations with periods which are integer multiples of 0.4 ms. The constant intervals of 0.4 ms can be attributed to the smallest synaptic delay between interconnected simulated chopper neurons. We also note the patterns of similarities between microcircuits in the brain stem and other parts of the brain (e.g., the pallidum, reticular formation, locus coeruleus, oculomotor nuclei, limbic system, amygdala, hippocampus, basal ganglia and substantia nigra), dedicated to the processing of temporal information. Similarities in microcircuits across the brain reflect the importance of one of the key mechanisms in the information processing in the brain, namely the temporal coupling of different neural events via coincidence detection.
Brain serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine, 5-HT) system dysfunction is implicated in exaggerated fear responses triggering various anxiety-, stress-, and trauma-related disorders. However, the underlying mechanisms are not well understood. Here, we investigated the impact of constitutively inactivated 5-HT synthesis on context-dependent fear learning and extinction using tryptophan hydroxylase 2 (Tph2) knockout mice. Fear conditioning and context-dependent fear memory extinction paradigms were combined with c-Fos imaging and electrophysiological recordings in the dorsal hippocampus (dHip). Tph2 mutant mice, completely devoid of 5-HT synthesis in brain, displayed accelerated fear memory formation and increased locomotor responses to foot shock. Furthermore, recall of context-dependent fear memory was increased. The behavioral responses were associated with increased c-Fos expression in the dHip and resistance to foot shock-induced impairment of hippocampal long-term potentiation (LTP). In conclusion, increased context-dependent fear memory resulting from brain 5-HT deficiency involves dysfunction of the hippocampal circuitry controlling contextual representation of fear-related behavioral responses.
Ciliary neurotrophic factor (Cntf) acts as a differentiation and survival factor for different types of neurons and glial cells. It is expressed by peripheral Schwann cells and astrocytes in the central nervous system and mediates its effects via a receptor complex involving CntfRα, LifRß and gp130, leading to downstream activation of Stat3. Recent studies by our group have shown that Cntf modulates neuronal microtubule dynamics via Stat3/stathmin interaction. In a mouse model for motor neuron disease, i.e. pmn, Cntf is able to rescue axonal degeneration through Stat3/stathmin signaling. While these findings suggest a role of Cntf in controlling axonal functions in the neuromuscular system, additional data indicate that Cntf might also play a role in synaptic plasticity in the hippocampus. Electrophysiological recordings in hippocampal organotypic cultures and acute slices revealed a deficit in long-term potentiation (LTP) in Cntf -/- mice. This deficit was rescued by 24 h stimulation with Cntf, combined with an acute application of Cntf during LTP-measurements indicating that Cntf is both necessary and sufficient for hippocampal LTP, and possibly synaptic plasticity. Therefore, Cntf knockout mice were investigated to elucidate this possible role of Cntf in hippocampal LTP and synaptic plasticity.
First, we validated the presence of Cntf in the target tissue: in the hippocampus, Cntf was localized in Gfap-positive astrocytes surrounding small blood vessels in the fissure and in meningeal areas close to the dentate gyrus. Laser micro-dissection and qPCR analysis showed a similar distribution of Cntf-coding mRNA validating the obtained immunofluorescent results. Despite the strong LTP deficit in organotypic cultures, in vivo behavior of Cntf -/- mice regarding hippocampus-dependent learning and anxiety-related paradigms was largely inconspicuous. However, western blot analysis of hippocampal organotypic cultures revealed a significant reduction of pStat3 levels in Cntf -/- cultures under baseline conditions, which in turn were elevated upon Cntf stimulation. In order to resolve and examine synaptic structures we turned to in vitro analysis of cultured hippocampal neurons which indicated that pStat3 is predominantly located in the presynapse. In line with these findings, presynapses of Cntf -/- cultures were reduced in size and when in contact to astrocytes, contained less pStat3 immunoreactivity compared to presynapses in wildtype cultures.
In conclusion, our findings hypothesize that despite of a largely inconspicuous behavioral phenotype of Cntf -/- mice, Cntf appears to have an influence on pStat3 levels at hippocampal synapses. In a next step these two key questions need to be addressed experimentally: 1) is there a compensatory mechanism by members of the Cntf family, possibly downstream of pStat3, which explains the in vivo behavioral results of Cntf -/- mice and can likewise account for the largely inconspicuous phenotype in CNTF-deficient humans? 2) How exactly does Cntf influence LTP through Stat3 signaling? To unravel the underlying mechanism further experiments should therefore investigate whether microtubule dynamics downstream of Stat3 and stathmin signaling are involved in the Cntf-induced modulation of hippocampal synaptic plasticity, similar to as it was shown in motoneurons.