Genome-wide association studies typically evaluate the autosomes and sometimes the X Chromosome, but seldom consider the Y or mitochondrial (MT) Chromosomes. We genotyped the Y and MT Chromosomes in heterogeneous stock (HS) rats (Rattus norvegicus), an outbred population created from 8 inbred strains. We identified 8 distinct Y and 4 distinct MT Chromosomes among the 8 founders.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAging is associated with nonresolving inflammation and tissue dysfunction. Resolvin D2 (RvD2) is a proresolving ligand that acts through the G-protein-coupled receptor called GPR18. Unbiased RNA sequencing revealed increased Gpr18 expression in macrophages from old mice, and in livers from elderly humans, which was associated with increased steatosis and fibrosis in middle-aged (MA) and old mice.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCocaine blocks dopamine reuptake, thereby producing rewarding effects that are widely studied. However, cocaine also blocks serotonin uptake, which we show drives, in rats, individually variable aversive effects that depend on serotonin 2C receptors (5-HT2CRs) in the rostromedial tegmental nucleus (RMTg), a major GABAergic afferent to midbrain dopamine neurons. 5-HT2CRs produce depolarizing effects in RMTg neurons that are particularly strong in some rats, leading to aversive effects that reduce acquisition of and relapse to cocaine seeking.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFZhu-Tokita-Takenouchi-Kim (ZTTK) syndrome is a newly described autosomal dominant multisystem developmental disorder resulting from a mutation of the SON gene located on chromosome region 21q22.11. It is characterized by heterogeneous features such as intellectual disability, facial dysmorphisms, poor feeding, vision abnormalities, musculoskeletal anomalies, congenital heart and genitourinary system defects, as well as several unique neurological findings including seizures, tone abnormalities, autism spectrum disorder and variable brain abnormalities noted on neuroimaging.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlthough cocaine is powerfully rewarding, not all individuals are equally prone to abusing this drug. We postulate that these differences arise in part because some individuals exhibit stronger aversive responses to cocaine that protect them from cocaine seeking. Indeed, using conditioned place preference (CPP) and a runway operant cocaine self-administration task, we demonstrate that avoidance responses to cocaine vary greatly between individual high cocaine-avoider and low cocaine-avoider rats.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe aversive properties associated with drugs of abuse influence both the development of addiction and relapse. Cocaine produces strong aversive effects after rewarding effects wear off, accompanied by increased firing in the lateral habenula (LHb) that contributes to downstream activation of the rostromedial tegmental nucleus (RMTg). However, the sources of this LHb activation are unknown, as the LHb receives many excitatory inputs whose contributions to cocaine aversion remain uncharacterized.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Randomized controlled trials evaluating mechanical thrombectomy (MT) for acute ischemic stroke predominantly studied anterior circulation patients. Both procedural and clinical predictors of outcome in posterior circulation patients have not been evaluated in large cohort studies.
Objective: To investigate technical and clinical predictors of functional independence after posterior circulation MT while comparing different frontline thrombectomy techniques.
Persistence of reward seeking despite punishment or other negative consequences is a defining feature of mania and addiction, and numerous brain regions have been implicated in such punishment learning, but in disparate ways that are difficult to reconcile. We now show that the ability of an aversive punisher to inhibit reward seeking depends on coordinated activity of three distinct afferents to the rostromedial tegmental nucleus (RMTg) arising from cortex, brainstem, and habenula that drive triply dissociable RMTg responses to aversive cues, outcomes, and prediction errors, respectively. These three pathways drive correspondingly dissociable aspects of punishment learning.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe rostromedial tegmental nucleus (RMTg), a GABAergic afferent to midbrain dopamine (DA) neurons, has been hypothesized to be broadly activated by aversive stimuli. However, this encoding pattern has only been demonstrated for a limited number of stimuli, and the RMTg influence on ventral tegmental (VTA) responses to aversive stimuli is untested. Here, we found that RMTg neurons are broadly excited by aversive stimuli of different sensory modalities and inhibited by reward-related stimuli.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) analysis of the bone marrow of a 24-year-old man diagnosed with acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL) revealed a variant pattern with one fusion signal instead of the typical two fusions expected with the probe set used. The combined FISH and conventional chromosome analyses suggested that two subsequent translocations had occurred in this patient involving the same chromosomes 15 and 17. As the prognostic outcome in APL is strictly associated with the presence of a PML/RARA fusion, it is useful and necessary to perform both cytogenetic and FISH analyses of a variant t(15;17) to determine the status of the PML/RARA fusion.
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