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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: memory + neuronal + gives  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)

Surprising Things That Affect Memory
Forbes, NY - 57 minutes ago
Researchers believe the link might be due to soy products' phytoestrogens, which may offer some neural benefits to the middle-aged and young but could harm ...
Neuron Killers: Misfolded, clumping proteins evade conviction, but ...
Science News - Aug 1, 2008
?There?s an ongoing battle for many years, and ultimately the neuron gives up,? speculates Yu from UT Southwestern. But scientists don?t know what causes ...
Sleep clue to age memory decline
The News - International, Pakistan -
In the young rats, the sequence of neural activity recorded while they navigated the mazes was repeated while they slept. This was not the case in most of ...
C. Elegans Worm Holds Potential For Research
Medical News Today, UK -
These, in fact, are very similar to the neuronal system in humans. Notably, they showed that exposing paralyzed worms to ultraviolet light caused the worms ...
Of hair-raising untruths & real breakthroughs
Deccan Herald, India -
It "melts" away depression but, unfortunately, may also impair memory. He has been studying ways to prevent this memory loss. His positive results on rats ...
Discoveries: Memory 'replay'; confused ER patients; prostate therapy
Chicago Tribune, United States - Aug 3, 2008
In the young rats, the sequence of neural activity recorded while they navigated mazes was repeated while they slept. This was not the case in most of the ...
Cocaine Addiction Linked To Voluntary Drug Use And Cellular Memory ...
Science Daily (press release) - Jul 30, 2008
?This study identifies the specific neuronal process involved and helps explain relapse even after rehabilitative therapy or long-term abstinence. ...

University of Arizona News (press release)
Sleep clue to age memory decline
BBC News, UK - Jul 29, 2008
More evidence supporting the notion that these neural patterns might have a link to laying down memory came the following day, when the animals were put ...
Gray Matters: Brain's Sleep-Time Memory Storage Gets Muddled with Age Scientific American
Aging Impairs The 'Replay' Of Memories During Sleep Science Daily (press release)
Memory Replay During Sleep Linked To Age - Or Is It? Medical News Today
all 29 news articles »
Brain Aerobics Could Be Key to Famous Heart Doctor?s Longevity ...
Live-PR.com (Pressemitteilung), Austria - Aug 4, 2008
A diligent course of brain exercises, such as reading and writing everyday, is paramount to staving off age-related memory loss and Alzheimer?s disease. ...
Un contest per provare il nuovo OCZ Nia
AMD Planet, Italy - 9 minutes ago
August, 2008?OCZ Technology Group, Inc., a worldwide leader in innovative ultra-high performance and high reliability memory, components, and systems, ...LSS:OCZ
Source: Google News

Recognition memory: neuronal substrates of the judgement of prior occurrence -
MW Brown, JZ Xiang - Progress in Neurobiology, 1998 - Elsevier
... by training of the animal in recognition memory tasks ... at the test phase because this
gives rise to ... the two stimuli a change (if any) in neuronal response should ...

… of attractor neural network retrieving at low spike rates: I. substrate?spikes, rates and neuronal -
DJ Amit, MV Tsodyks - Network: Computation in Neural Systems, 1991 - informaworld.com
... Page 3. AIIracIcf' neural network retriei&zing at low spike ram: I 261 The rate
contributed by each neuron gives rise to an afferent current in a postsy- ...

[PDF] Temporal structure in neuronal activity during working memory in Macaque parietal cortex -
B Pesaran, JS Pezaris, M Sahani, PP Mitra, RA … - Arxiv preprint q-bio/0309034, 2000 - arxiv.org
... The analysis of activity from a second monkey gives ... are coherent gamma band dynamics
in neuronal activity during working memory that are not present during ...
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Associative memory in a network ofspiking'neurons -
W Gerstner, J van Hemmen - Network: Computation in Neural Systems, 1992 - ingentaconnect.com
... part of the paper (section 2) we present the model neuron and give ... on the internal
and external parameters, the model neuron $11 produce ... an associative memory ...

Genetic approaches to memory storage -
M Mayford, ER Kandel - Trends in Genetics, 1999 - Elsevier
... days; and more extensive training gives rise to ... strength of the sensory-motor neuron
connection by ... release, paralleling the short-term memory for sensitization ...

The Molecular Biology of Memory Storage: A Dialog Between Genes and Synapses -
ER Kandel - Bioscience Reports, 2004 - Springer
... to study the simplest instances of memory storage, and to ... brain is modified by learning
to give rise to ... and that these forms require neuronal organizations and ...

[PDF] Synergies and coincidence requirements between NO, cGMP, and Ca 2 in the induction of cerebellar … -
V Lev-Ram, T Jiang, J Wood, DS Lawrence, RY Tsien - Neuron, 1997 - tsienlab.ucsd.edu
... that PF stimulation can be entirely replaced by uncaging of NO (Lev-Ram et al ... delay
gives 50% of maximal LTD (n 4), and delays of 50 ms or greater ... Neuron 1028 ...
-

Synaptic Mechanisms and Network Dynamics Underlying Spatial Working Memory in a Cortical Network … -
A Compte, N Brunel, PS Goldman-Rakic, XJ Wang - Cerebral Cortex, 2000 - Oxford Univ Press
... a structured network activity profile of persistent activity, which gives rise to
?memory fields? in individual neurons. Neuronal firing properties in both ...

[PDF] Long-term depression in cerebellar Purkinje neurons results from coincidence of nitric oxide and … -
V Lev-Ram, LR Makings, PF Keitz, JPY Kao, RY Tsien - Neuron, 1995 - actxdownload.neuron.org
... efficacy than the depolarization-induced elevation of [CaZ+li (Lev-Ram et al ... all
9 experiments with a 100 ms gap, stimulus A failed to give LTD, but ... Neuron 410 ...
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[PDF] Multiple bumps in a neuronal model of working memory -
CR Laing, WC Troy, B Gutkin, GB Ermentrout - SIAM J. Appl. Math, 2002 - gatsby.ucl.ac.uk
... Working memory, which involves the holding and processing of ... and the nonnegative
function f(u) gives the firing rate, or activity, of a neuron with input u ...
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Source: Google Scholar
 

Neuronal Activity Gives Clues to Working Memory


Findings Could Also Lead to Better Treatments for Schizophrenia, Weill Cornell Team Says

NEW YORK (June 6, 2007) — A newly discovered interplay of cells in one of the brain's memory centers sheds light on how you recall your grocery list, where you laid your keys, and a host of important but fleeting daily tasks.

Scientists at Weill Cornell Medical College say their experiments with common goldfish are uncovering the secrets of a form of short-term recall known as "working memory."

"We've now identified a mechanism that can organize the activity of groups of cells involved in this important form of recall," says lead researcher Dr. Emre Aksay, assistant professor of computational neuroscience in the HRH Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal Bin Abdulaziz Al-Saud Institute for Computational Biomedicine at Weill Cornell Medical College in New York City.

"Furthermore, because deficits in working memory are often a precursor of schizophrenia, drugs that target this mechanism might someday help fight that debilitating disease," he says.

The findings have been published in Nature Neuroscience.

Humans rely on their working memory every day to keep track of faces and names, tasks at school or in the workplace, and other important bits of information. "This process is distinct, neurologically speaking, from the storage and retrieval of longer-term memories," explains Dr. Aksay, who is also assistant professor of physiology and biophysics at Weill Cornell.

Experts in labs around the world have developed theories as to how this process works. "Its basis lies in the ability of specific neurons to maintain a level of activity in the absence of input — a persistent firing rate — that's finely coordinated across related groups of cells," Dr. Aksay says.

But how do these brain cells communicate which each other to coordinate this activity?

To find out, Dr. Aksay, along with colleagues Dr. David Tank of Princeton University, and Dr. Mark Goldman of Wellesley College, turned to the common goldfish.

"It's really quite difficult to test the function of individual brain cells in primates and higher animals during behavior, but the goldfish's memory centers are much more accessible to research," Dr. Aksay explains. "We looked specifically at the fishes' oculomotor system — the neural circuitry that directs the fish to shift its eyes left or right based on stimuli in the local environment." Because stimuli can be ever-changing and fleeting, the fish relies on its short-term memory to help guide these eye movements.

Two groups of cells are involved in this oculomotor memory, one in each half of the brain. Each group contains two types of neurons — inhibitory cells and excitatory cells, and it is the inhibitory neurons that allow the two groups to interact. "In our experiments, we used pharmacologic means to interrupt either excitatory or inhibitory pathways, and then we watched what happened to persistent firing," Dr. Aksay says.

When the excitatory pathways were dampened, the persistence was impaired — suggesting that excitation is essential to the sustained firing that working memory requires.

"The real surprise came when we turned off many of the inhibitory pathways," Dr. Aksay says. In that case, persistent firing remained, but was often present at inappropriate times.

"It appears that the inhibitory cells are not key or even required to generate persistent firing," the researcher says. "Instead, they send a message from one group to the other that helps coordinate two sides: the role of inhibition in this system is to make sure that only one group is generating persistent activity at a given time. In this way, the goldfish doesn't get a mixed signal telling it to move its eyes in both directions at once."

This new finding has big implications for our understanding of the neural processes underlying working memory and the instantaneous decision-making that goes on based on that knowledge.

It might also have broader applications for psychiatric illness, Dr. Aksay notes.

"Many schizophrenic individuals, for example, show severe deficits in working memory, and children with working memory problems are at heightened risk of developing schizophrenia as adults," he says. Dysfunction in key inhibitory pathways that link brain cells has long been associated with these problems.

"These findings suggest that it is necessary to address not only deficits in excitatory pathways that lead to a lack of persistent firing but also dysfunction in inhibitory pathways that lead to a lack of coordination among groups of cells," Dr. Aksay explains. "This strategy could provide improved treatment options for people with schizophrenia."

This work was partially funded by Bell Laboratories, the Burroughs Wellcome Fund and the U.S. National Institutes of Health.

Co-researchers include Dr. Itsaso Olasagasti of Wellesley College, Wellesley, Mass.; Dr. Brett Mensh of Harvard Medical School, Boston; and Dr. Robert Baker of New York University Medical Center, New York City.


Weill Cornell Medical College


Weill Cornell Medical College — located in New York City — is committed to excellence in research, teaching, patient care and the advancement of the art and science of medicine. Weill Cornell, which is a principal academic affiliate of NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital, offers an innovative curriculum that integrates the teaching of basic and clinical sciences, problem-based learning, office-based preceptorships, and primary care and doctoring courses. Physicians and scientists of Weill Cornell Medical College are engaged in cutting-edge research in such areas as stem cells, genetics and gene therapy, geriatrics, neuroscience, structural biology, cardiovascular medicine, AIDS, obesity, cancer and psychiatry — and continue to delve ever deeper into the molecular basis of disease in an effort to unlock the mysteries behind the human body and the malfunctions that result in serious medical disorders. Weill Cornell Medical College is the birthplace of many medical advances — from the development of the Pap test for cervical cancer to the synthesis of penicillin, the first successful embryo-biopsy pregnancy and birth in the U.S., and most recently, the world's first clinical trial for gene therapy for Parkinson's disease. Weill Cornell's Physician Organization includes 650 clinical faculty, who provide the highest quality of care to their patients. For more information, visit www.med.cornell.edu.

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New bacterium discovered -- related to cause of trench fever

A close cousin of the bacterium that debilitated thousands of World War I soldiers has been isolated at UCSF from a patient who had been on an international vacation. The woman, who has since recovered, suffered from symptoms similar to malaria or typhoid fever, two infections that can occur in returning travelers.

But genetic detective work revealed that she was infected with a new bacterium that had never before been isolated from a human.

A UCSF infectious disease team, in collaboration with colleagues from other institutions, found that the new microbe is genetically similar to one spread by body lice in the trenches during World War I. That bacterium, called Bartonella quintana, caused a disease known as trench fever, and debilitated tens of thousands of soldiers with severe leg and back pain and recurrent fevers.

The new species, recently named Bartonella rochalimae, is also closely related to the bacterium identified about 10 years ago as the cause of cat scratch disease: Bartonella henselae, which infects more than 25,000 people a year in the U.S.

The discovery is reported in the June 7 issue of “The New England Journal of Medicine.”

The woman had been traveling in the Peruvian Andes. She suffered from potentially life-threatening anemia, an enlarged spleen and a high fever for several weeks, as do victims of malaria and typhoid. The Andes are also home to another Bartonella species, spread by sand flies. The researchers first thought this was causing the patient’s infection.

But genetic comparisons showed that although the new bacterium is related enough to be classified with the other Bartonella bacteria, it is nevertheless distinct from all of them, the UCSF team found. The UCSF lab is one of the few in the world able to isolate and grow human Bartonella species, and culture of the new organism made study of the DNA much easier.

Also collaborating on the research were scientists at the Massachusetts General Hospital of Harvard Medical School and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Before 1990, no Bartonella infections had been identified in the U.S. The new discovery is the sixth species identified that can infect humans, said Jane Koehler, MD, professor of infectious diseases at UCSF and senior author on the new paper.

Koehler encountered her first patient infected with Bartonella in 1987 during her first week of training in infectious diseases at the AIDS Clinic at San Francisco General Hospital Medical Center.

“The bacteria were eating away a bone in the arm of an AIDS patient – for months,” Koehler recalls. “They can cause extremely painful lesions and tumors of blood vessels on the skin of immunocompromised patients. But when I saw this patient, this type of infection had never been seen at UCSF, and the bacterium causing the infection was unknown.”

Koehler’s group went on to discover that two different Bartonella species can cause these disfiguring and potentially fatal infections in AIDS patients. Identification of the bacteria required laboratory studies of some of the microbes’ DNA sequences.

She was surprised to find that one of the microbes that causes severe infections in AIDS patients in the U.S was the same species that caused trench fever in WWI soldiers fighting in Europe 80 years before. The work was published in “The New England Journal of Medicine” in 1992.

Several years later, her team discovered that the Bartonella henselae bacterium causes cat scratch disease, an infection that causes swollen lymph nodes and fever after a cat scratches its owner or an unlucky visitor. They were again surprised to find that this microbe is the second Bartonella species to cause infection in AIDS patients.

Like trench fever, cat scratch disease had been described in the early 1900s, but no one knew what bacterium caused cat scratch disease until the infection was seen in the AIDS patients. This identification was published in “The New England Journal of Medicine” in 1997.

Koehler’s research group found that all pet cats of AIDS patients infected by B. henselae also had the infection in their blood. In fact, about 41 percent of all the pet cats they tested in the San Francisco area had this bacterium in their blood. This work, detailed in the “Journal of the American Medical Association” in 1994, sounded the alarm that pet cats were often infected with a microbe that could be transmitted to their owners through a scratch.

These earlier investigations taught the researchers several important lessons: new diseases and new bacteria infecting humans are still being discovered, and it is important to carefully investigate the genetic make-up of all bacteria that appear in any new or unusual infection. This kind of sleuthing allowed the researchers to discover the new organism, Bartonella rochalimae.

Koehler considers the on-going research and discovery crucial to treating patients and preventing disease.

“When a patient has a high and persistent fever, we need to come up with the correct diagnosis and treatment as soon as possible – particularly for those with a weakened immune system, who can die from the infection,” she says. “Also, different Bartonella species respond to different drugs, so it is essential to explore further and pinpoint which one is involved.”

The cat scratch bacteria and the one that brought down soldiers and AIDS patients can be reined in with the same antibiotic, but the Peruvian microbe is usually countered with different antibiotics, Koehler says. Also, caregivers, and medical staff need to know about the different species, so, for example, AIDS patients are cautioned about the dangers of cat scratches and exposure to body lice. Medical staff should know to look for Bartonella infections if someone with a persistent, unexplained high fever has a cat, has been homeless or has been in the Andes Mountains.

“As we continue to discover new pathogens and how humans get infected with them, we improve our ability to diagnose, prevent and treat our patients,” Koehler notes. “This enables us to use our work in the laboratory to benefit patients in the clinics and hospital.”

###

The research was funded by the National Institutes of Health and the Burroughs Wellcome Fund Clinical Scientist Award in Translational Research received by Koehler.

Coauthors on the paper and collaborators in the research along with Koehler are: Marina E. Eremeeva, Shari L. Lydy, William L. Nicholson and Gregory Dasch at the Viral and Rickettsial Zoonoses Branch, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta; Helen L. Gerns, Jeanna S. Goo, and Smitha S. Mathew, all technicians in UCSF’s Division of Infectious Diseases, UCSF School of Medicine; and Edward T. Ryan, Mary Jane Ferraro and Judith M. Holder at Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School.

UCSF is a leading university that advances health worldwide by conducting advanced biomedical research, educating graduate students in the life sciences and health professions, and providing complex patient care.

ADDITIONAL RESOURCES:

1. Koehler JE, Quinn FD, Berger TG, LeBoit PE, Tappero JW. Isolation of Rochalimaea species from cutaneous and osseous lesions of bacillary angiomatosis. N Engl J Med 1992;327:1625-31.

2. Koehler JE, Sanchez MA, Garrido CS, et al. Molecular epidemiology of Bartonella infections in patients with bacillary angiomatosis-peliosis. N Engl J Med 1997;337:1876-83.

3. Koehler JE, Glaser CA, Tappero JW. Rochalimaea henselae infection. A new zoonosis with the domestic cat as reservoir. JAMA 1994;271(7):531-5.

 
 
 
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