Publications by authors named "E de Hoog"

Article Synopsis
  • Misfolded tau proteins, associated with neurodegeneration in Alzheimer's and frontotemporal dementia, spread between cells but the exact release mechanisms are not well understood.
  • Research shows that the neuronal gene Arc is crucial for packing tau into extracellular vesicles (EVs) that can elicit tau pathology-seeding in the brain.
  • In experiments, Arc knockout mice produced fewer tau-containing EVs and demonstrated a significant reduction in intercellular tau transmission, indicating that Arc plays a vital role in both tau release and its spread across neurons.
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Retinoic acid, the active metabolite of vitamin A, is important for vertebrate cognition and hippocampal plasticity, but few studies have examined its role in invertebrate learning and memory, and its actions in the invertebrate central nervous system are currently unknown. Using the mollusc , we examined operant conditioning of the respiratory behavior, controlled by a well-defined central pattern generator (CPG), and used citral to inhibit retinoic acid signaling. Both citral- and vehicle-treated animals showed normal learning, but citral-treated animals failed to exhibit long-term memory at 24 h.

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Retinoic acid, the active metabolite of Vitamin A, is important for the appropriate development of the nervous system (e.g., neurite outgrowth) as well as for cognition (e.

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The metabolite of vitamin A, retinoic acid (RA), is known to affect synaptic plasticity in the nervous system and to play an important role in learning and memory. A ubiquitous mechanism by which neuronal plasticity develops in the nervous system is through modulation of voltage-gated Ca (Ca) and voltage-gated K channels. However, how retinoids might regulate the activity of these channels has not been determined.

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The retinoic acid receptor (RAR) and retinoid X receptor (RXR) mediate the cellular effects of retinoids (derivatives of vitamin A). Both RAR and RXR signaling events are implicated in hippocampal synaptic plasticity. Furthermore, retinoids can interact with calcium signaling during homeostatic plasticity.

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