Publications by authors named "Allison Fusilier"

Circadian rhythms are biological processes that cycle across 24 h and regulate many facets of neurophysiology, including learning and memory. Circadian variation in spatial memory task performance is well documented; however, the effect of sex across circadian time (CT) remains unclear. Additionally, little is known regarding the impact of time-of-day on hippocampal neuronal physiology.

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Article Synopsis
  • Alzheimer's patients experience disrupted sleep/wake cycles and circadian rhythms, which may affect brain function, particularly in the hippocampus.
  • Research on Tg-SwDI mice, which have genetic mutations related to human Alzheimer's, shows they exhibit no day/night differences in spatial memory performance, differing from control mice that perform better at night.
  • The Tg-SwDI mice also demonstrate impairments in hippocampal neurophysiology, including altered excitability and synaptic activity, indicating that disruptions in circadian clock gene expression may contribute to cognitive decline.
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Parvalbumin-expressing interneurons (PVs) in the dentate gyrus provide activity-dependent regulation of adult neurogenesis as well as maintain inhibitory control of mature neurons. In mature neurons, PVs evoke GABA postsynaptic currents (GPSCs) with fast rise and decay phases that allow precise control of spike timing, yet synaptic currents with fast kinetics do not appear in adult-born neurons until several weeks after cell birth. Here we used mouse hippocampal slices to address how PVs signal to newborn neurons prior to the appearance of fast GPSCs.

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Twenty-four-hour rhythmicity in physiology and behavior are driven by changes in neurophysiological activity that vary across the light-dark and rest-activity cycle. Although this neural code is most prominent in neurons of the primary circadian pacemaker in the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) of the hypothalamus, there are many other regions in the brain where region-specific function and behavioral rhythmicity may be encoded by changes in electrical properties of those neurons. In this review, we explore the existing evidence for molecular clocks and/or neurophysiological rhythms (i.

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