Publications by authors named "M J Lohse"

Since the pioneering work by Moeller, Szabo, and Bullock, weakly electric fish have served as a valuable model for investigating spatial and social cognitive abilities in a vertebrate taxon usually less accessible than mammals or other terrestrial vertebrates. These fish, through their electric organ, generate low-intensity electric fields to navigate and interact with conspecifics, even in complete darkness. The brown ghost knifefish is appealing as a study subject due to a rich electric 'vocabulary', made by individually variable and sex-specific electric signals.

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Nanobodies are emerging as critical tools for drug design. Several have been recently created to serve as inhibitors of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus s (SARS-CoV-2) entry in the host cell by targeting surface-exposed spike protein. Here we have established a pipeline that instead targets highly conserved viral proteins made only after viral entry into the host cell when the SARS-CoV-2 RNA-based genome is translated.

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Perceptual decisions rely on learned associations between sensory evidence and appropriate actions, involving the filtering and integration of relevant inputs to prepare and execute timely responses. Despite the distributed nature of task-relevant representations, it remains unclear how transformations between sensory input, evidence integration, motor planning and execution are orchestrated across brain areas and dimensions of neural activity. Here we addressed this question by recording brain-wide neural activity in mice learning to report changes in ambiguous visual input.

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G protein-coupled receptors' conformational landscape can be affected by their local, microscopic interactions within the cell plasma membrane. We employ here a pleiotropic stimulus, namely osmotic swelling, to alter the cortical environment within intact cells and monitor the response in terms of receptor function and downstream signaling. We observe that in osmotically swollen cells the β2-adrenergic receptor, a prototypical GPCR, favors an active conformation, resulting in cAMP transient responses to adrenergic stimulation that have increased amplitude.

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Article Synopsis
  • A key challenge in neuroscience is understanding how sensory information is processed through various neural connections, particularly in the auditory system.
  • Research shows that the complex encoding of sounds in the auditory cortex is largely influenced by transformations occurring in the midbrain and thalamus before reaching the cortex.
  • The study reveals that while the auditory cortex modifies thalamic responses, it does not impact the initial, linear encoding of sounds, highlighting the importance of subcortical processing in determining how we perceive sounds.
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