The dopaminergic system of the brain is involved in complex cognitive functioning and undergoes extensive reorganization during development. Yet, these changes are poorly characterized. We have quantified the density of dopamine 1- and 2-receptor (D1 and D2) positive cells across the forebrain of male and female mice at five developmental stages using validated transgenic mice expressing green fluorescent protein in cells producing D1 or D2 mRNA.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPerfectionism has been identified as a vulnerability and maintenance factor across eating disorders (EDs). Additionally, research has found that intolerance of uncertainty (IU) and repetitive negative thinking (RNT) moderate the relationship between perfectionism and psychopathology. Despite this evidence, few studies have examined if these factors specifically moderate ED severity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFQuantifying how the cellular composition of brain regions vary across development, aging, sex, and disease, is crucial in experimental neuroscience, and the accuracy of different counting methods is continuously debated. Due to the tedious nature of most counting procedures, studies are often restricted to one or a few brain regions. Recently, there have been considerable methodological advances in combining semi-automated feature extraction with brain atlases for cell quantification.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: The regulation of negative emotions entails the modulation of subcortical regions, such as the amygdala, by prefrontal regions. There is preliminary evidence suggesting that individuals at higher weight may present with hypoactivity in prefrontal regulatory systems during emotional regulation, although the directionality of these pathways has not been tested. In this study, we compared fronto-amygdalar effective connectivity during cognitive reappraisal as a function of BMI in 48 adult women with obesity and 54 control participants.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTo prevent a fall when a disturbance to walking is encountered requires sensory information about the disturbance to be sensed, integrated, and then used to generate an appropriate corrective motor response. Prior research has shown that feedback of whole-body motion (e.g.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: We hypothesized that clinical data from a neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) infant developmental follow-up clinic would identify early manifestations of autism spectrum disorder (ASD).
Methods: One hundred forty-four infants were identified; 72 later diagnosed with ASD and 72 controls. Retrospective chart review provided data from the Test of Infant Motor Performance (TIMP) and the Bayley Scales of Infant and Toddler Development, third edition (Bayley-III), between 8 and 26 months of age.
Objective: The objective of this study was to develop generic domains of competence (DoC) with associated competencies and milestones for physical therapist residency education. This work was intended to culminate in establishing validity evidence to support a competency-based assessment instrument that could be used by residency programs to evaluate resident achievement of the competencies, regardless of specialty area.
Methods: Employing the modified Delphi method, a residency education work group developed an evaluation instrument that included 7 DoC and 31 associated competencies with 6 milestones as rating scales for each competency.
Hibernation is a mammalian strategy that uses metabolic plasticity to reduce energy demands and enable long-term fasting. Fasting mitigates winter food scarcity but eliminates dietary nitrogen, jeopardizing body protein balance. Here, we reveal gut microbiome-mediated urea nitrogen recycling in hibernating thirteen-lined ground squirrels ().
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Hibernating animals experience extreme changes in diet that make them useful systems for understanding host-microbial symbioses. However, most of our current knowledge about the hibernator gut microbiota is derived from studies using captive animals. Given that there are substantial differences between captive and wild environments, conclusions drawn from studies with captive hibernators may not reflect the gut microbiota's role in the physiology of wild animals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The ability to perceive disturbances to ongoing locomotion (e.g., slips and trips) may play an important role in walking balance control.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIt has long been known that orofacial movements for feeding can be triggered, coordinated, and often rhythmically organized at the level of the brainstem, without input from higher centers. We uncover two nuclei that can organize the movements for ingesting fluids in mice. These neuronal groups, IRt and Peri5, are marked by expression of the pan-autonomic homeobox gene Phox2b and are located, respectively, in the intermediate reticular formation of the medulla and around the motor nucleus of the trigeminal nerve.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMoving about in the world during daily life requires executing and successfully shifting between a variety of functional tasks, such as rising from a chair or bed, walking, turning, and navigating stairs. Moreover, moving about during daily life requires not only navigating between different functional tasks, but also performing these tasks in the presence of mental distractions. However, little is known about underlying neuromuscular control for executing and shifting between these different tasks.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol
June 2021
August Krogh's 1929 principle is referenced as the cornerstone of comparative physiology (CP). However, there are diverse views as to what type of research falls under the CP approach. This study had three aims: ) determine how CP is defined through an online survey (OS) of physiologists and a systematic review (SR), ) put forth an updated definition of CP by summarizing OS and SR results, and ) outline the numerous CP research approaches.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFor hibernating mammals, the transition from summer active to winter hibernation seasons come with significant remodeling at cellular, organ and whole organism levels. This review summarizes and synthesizes what is known about hibernation-related remodeling in the gastrointestinal tract of the thirteen-lined ground squirrel, including intestinal and hepatic physiology and the gut microbiota. Hibernation alters intestinal epithelial, immune and cell survival pathways in ways that point to a protective phenotype in the face of prolonged fasting and major fluctuations in nutrient and oxygen delivery during torpor-arousal cycles.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The incentive sensitisation theory of addiction posits that drug-associated stimuli become imbued with incentive motivational properties, driving pathological drug seeking. However, pre-existing variability in the incentive salience to non-drug reward cues ('sign trackers' (STs); 'goal trackers' (GTs)) is also predictive of the desire for and relapse to cocaine and opioids. Here, we asked whether variation in propensity to attribute incentive salience to a food cue is predictive of reinstatement to the highly addictive psychostimulant methamphetamine (METH), and whether treatment with the promising anti-addiction therapy oxytocin differentially reduces METH behaviour between STs and GTs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Recent studies provide compelling evidence that recruiting a common pool of motor modules across behaviors (i.e., motor module generalization) may facilitate motor performance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAim: To evaluate the properties of the Infant Motor Activity Log (IMAL), a caregiver-report for frequency and quality of use of more affected upper extremity in infants with neurological and functional impairments.
Method: This was a prospective cohort study of 66 children (34 females, 32 males) aged 6 to 24 months (mean age [SD] 13.7mo [5.
Upper extremity (UE) impairments in infants with cerebral palsy (CP) result from reduced quality of motor experiences and "noisy" sensory inputs. We hypothesized that a neuroscience-based multi-component intervention would improve somatosensory processing and motor measures of more-affected (UEs) in infants with CP and asymmetric UE neurologic impairments, while remaining safe for less-affected UEs. Our randomized controlled trial compared infants (6-24 months) with CP receiving intervention (N = 37) versus a waitlisted group (N = 36).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArtificial sweeteners have been shown to induce glucose intolerance by altering the gut microbiota; however, little is known about the effect of stevia. Here, we investigate whether stevia supplementation induces glucose intolerance by altering the gut microbiota in mice, hypothesizing that stevia would correct high fat diet-induced glucose intolerance and alter the gut microbiota. Mice were split into four treatment groups: low fat, high fat, high fat + saccharin and high fat + stevia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol
June 2019
It is well established that hibernating mammals rely predominantly on lipid stores to fuel metabolism throughout the hibernation season. However, it is unclear if other endogenous fuels contribute to the rapid, ~400-fold increase in metabolic rate during the early phase of arousal from torpor. To investigate this issue, we used cavity ring-down spectroscopy, a technique that provides a real-time indication of fuel use by measuring the ratio of C to C in the exhaled CO of arousing 13-lined ground squirrels ().
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: The proposed project tests the principle that frequency of rehabilitation is an important regulator of therapeutic response in infants.
Methods: We will randomize 75 infants with cerebral palsy, 6 to 24 months of age and/or Gross Motor Function Classification System levels III to V (higher severity), to determine the short-term and long-term effects of 3 dosing protocols consisting of an identical number of 2-hour sessions of the same motor learning-based therapy applied over a different total number of calendar weeks.
Results And Conclusions: The results will inform clinicians, families, and scientists about dosing and will provide needed recommendations for frequency of rehabilitation to optimize motor function and development of young children with cerebral palsy.
Bone-resorbing osteoclasts (OCs) are derived from myeloid precursors (MPs). Several transcription factors are implicated in OC differentiation and function; however, their hierarchical architecture and interplay are not well known. Analysis for enriched motifs in PU.
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