Publications by authors named "D A Bush"

Successful navigation relies on reciprocal transformations between spatial representations in world-centered (allocentric) and self-centered (egocentric) frames of reference. The neural basis of allocentric spatial representations has been extensively investigated with grid, border, and head-direction cells in the medial entorhinal cortex (MEC) forming key components of a 'cognitive map'. Recently, egocentric spatial representations have also been identified in several brain regions, but evidence for the coexistence of neurons encoding spatial variables in each reference frame within MEC is so far lacking.

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Down syndrome (DS), a prevalent cognitive disorder resulting from trisomy of human chromosome 21 (Hsa21), poses a significant global health concern. Affecting approximately 1 in 800 live births worldwide, DS is the leading genetic cause of intellectual disability and a major predisposing factor for early-onset Alzheimer's dementia. The estimated global population of individuals with DS is 6 million, with increasing prevalence due to advances in DS health care.

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Hippocampal place cells in freely moving rodents display both theta phase precession and procession, which is thought to play important roles in cognition, but the neural mechanism for producing theta phase shift remains largely unknown. Here, we show that firing rate adaptation within a continuous attractor neural network causes the neural activity bump to oscillate around the external input, resembling theta sweeps of decoded position during locomotion. These forward and backward sweeps naturally account for theta phase precession and procession of individual neurons, respectively.

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Spectroscopic studies on domains and peptides of large proteins are complicated because of the tendency of short peptides to form oligomers in aquatic buffers, but conjugation of a peptide with a carrier protein may be helpful. In this study we approved that a fragment of SK30 peptide from phospholipase A2 domain of VP1 Parvovirus B19 capsid protein (residues: 144-159; 164; 171-183; sequence: SAVDSAARIHDFRYSQLAKLGINPYTHWTVADEELLKNIK) turns from random coil to alpha helix in the acidic medium only in case if it had been conjugated with BSA (through additional N-terminal Cys residue, turning it into CSK31 peptide, and SMCC linker) according to CD-spectroscopy results. In contrast, unconjugated SK30 peptide does not undergo such shift because it forms stable oligomers connected by intermolecular antiparallel beta sheet, according to IR-spectroscopy, CD-spectroscopy, blue native gel electrophoresis and centrifugal ultrafiltration, as, probably, the whole isolated phospholipase domain of VP1 protein does.

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