Publications by authors named "Stephen Currie"

Background: In vivo patch-clamp recording techniques provide access to the sub- and suprathreshold membrane potential dynamics of individual neurons during behavior. However, maintaining recording stability throughout behavior is a significant challenge, and while methods for head restraint are commonly used to enhance stability, behaviorally related brain movement relative to the skull can severely impact the success rate and duration of whole-cell patch-clamp recordings.

New Method: We developed a low-cost, biocompatible, and 3D-printable cranial implant capable of locally stabilizing brain movement, while permitting equivalent access to the brain when compared to a conventional craniotomy.

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Motor cortex generates descending output necessary for executing a wide range of limb movements. Although movement-related activity has been described throughout motor cortex, the spatiotemporal organization of movement-specific signaling in deep layers remains largely unknown. Here we record layer 5B population dynamics in the caudal forelimb area of motor cortex while mice perform a forelimb push/pull task and find that most neurons show movement-invariant responses, with a minority displaying movement specificity.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates how repeated exposure to a visual stimulus influences its representation in the mouse primary visual cortex, emphasizing the role of rewards in this process.
  • Researchers found that when a stimulus was associated with a reward, neurons showed enhanced responses, becoming more selective and reliable in their reactions.
  • In contrast, without rewards, stimulus representation either stayed the same or decreased, suggesting that reward-associated learning bolsters the representation of important visual features while filtering out irrelevant information.
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The integration of visual stimuli and motor feedback is critical for successful visually guided navigation. These signals have been shown to shape neuronal activity in the primary visual cortex (V1), in an experience-dependent manner. Here, we examined whether visual, reward, and self-motion-related inputs are integrated in order to encode behaviorally relevant locations in V1 neurons.

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We describe a novel preparation of the isolated brain stem and spinal cord from prometamorphic tadpole stages of the South African clawed frog ( Xenopus laevis) that permits whole cell patch-clamp recordings from neurons in the ventral spinal cord. Previous research on earlier stages of the same species has provided one of the most detailed understandings of the design and operation of a central pattern generator circuit. Here we have addressed how development sculpts complexity from this more basic circuit.

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Objective: Absence seizures in childhood absence epilepsy are initiated in the thalamocortical (TC) system. We investigated if these seizures result from altered development of the TC system before the appearance of seizures in mice containing a point mutation in γ-aminobutyric acid A (GABA ) receptor γ2 subunits linked to childhood absence epilepsy (R43Q). Findings from conditional mutant mice indicate that expression of normal γ2 subunits during preseizure ages protect from later seizures.

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New synapses are constantly being generated and lost in the living brain with only a subset of these being stabilized to form an enduring component of neuronal circuitry. The properties of synaptic transmission have primarily been established in a variety of in vitro neuronal preparations. It is not clear, however, if newly-formed and persistent synapses contribute to the results of these studies consistently throughout the lifespan of these preparations.

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Purpose: Review the MRI appearance of different bursae located throughout the pelvis, including the pertinent osseous and musculotendinous anatomy.

Materials And Methods: Bursae are potential spaces that reduce friction between opposed moving components which can become inflamed, clinically mimicking internal derangement.

Results: This series illustrates the most common as well as lesser-known pelvic bursae.

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Article Synopsis
  • Cortical responses to sensory stimuli, particularly in the primary visual cortex (V1), are influenced by the animal's state of locomotion, with pyramidal neurons showing increased visual activity during movement.
  • The study used in vivo two-photon calcium imaging to examine different types of interneurons (VIP, SST, and PV) in mouse V1 and found that all showed varying levels of activity during locomotion, contradicting the idea that disinhibition solely controls sensory response gain.
  • Results indicated that the responsiveness of these interneurons to locomotion depends on the context, with somatostatin (SST) neurons exhibiting the most distinct variations, suggesting a more complex modulation of neuronal activity than previously thought.
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Genetic mutations known to cause intellectual disabilities (IDs) are concentrated in specific sets of genes including both those encoding synaptic proteins and those expressed during early development. We have characterized the effect of genetic deletion of Dlg3, an ID-related gene encoding the synaptic NMDA-receptor interacting protein synapse-associated protein 102 (SAP102), on development of the mouse somatosensory cortex. SAP102 is the main representative of the PSD-95 family of postsynaptic MAGUK proteins during early development and is proposed to play a role in stabilizing receptors at immature synapses.

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Nonvisual photoreceptors are widely distributed in the retina and brain, but their roles in animal behavior remain poorly understood. Here we document a previously unidentified form of deep-brain photoreception in Xenopus laevis frog tadpoles. The isolated nervous system retains sensitivity to light even when devoid of input from classical eye and pineal photoreceptors.

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Locomotor control requires functional flexibility to support an animal's full behavioral repertoire. This flexibility is partly endowed by neuromodulators, allowing neural networks to generate a range of motor output configurations. In hatchling Xenopus tadpoles, before the onset of free-swimming behavior, the gaseous modulator nitric oxide (NO) inhibits locomotor output, shortening swim episodes and decreasing swim cycle frequency.

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Cascaded Raman wavelength shifting up to three orders from 1553 nm to 1867 nm is demonstrated in As(2)S(3)-chalcogenide fibers. Due to a long zero dispersion wavelength for the sulfide fiber (>4.5 mum), pumping the fiber at 1553 nm results in generation of cascaded Stokes orders based on stimulated Raman scattering.

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