Publications by authors named "T M Ionescu"

The PRISM project, funded by the EU's Innovative Medicines Initiative, has identified a transdiagnostic, pathophysiological relationship between the integrity of the default mode network (DMN) and social dysfunction. To explore the causal link between DMN integrity and social behaviour, we employed a preclinical back-translation approach, using focal demyelination of the forceps minor to disrupt DMN connectivity in mice. By applying advanced techniques such as functional ultrasound imaging and automated analysis of social behaviour, we demonstrated that reduced DMN connectivity leads to impaired social interactions and increased anxiety in mice.

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The dopaminergic system is a central component of the brain's neurobiological framework, governing motor control and reward responses and playing an essential role in various brain disorders. Within this complex network, the nigrostriatal pathway represents a critical circuit for dopamine neurotransmission from the substantia nigra to the striatum. However, stand-alone functional magnetic resonance imaging is unable to study the intricate interplay between brain activation and its molecular underpinnings.

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In the present exploratory study we investigate whether cognitive flexibility is a unitary mechanism underlying flexible behaviours across many domains or a domain-specific capacity. The literature on cognitive flexibility is divided into several research lines that do not converge. The most prominent one considers flexibility an executive function that represents the ability to switch among rules or tasks.

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Article Synopsis
  • The Claustrum/dorsal endopiriform cortex complex (CLA) is a complex brain region that heavily influences other cortical areas and expresses the transcription factor Nurr1, whose specific role in CLA was not clearly defined.
  • Research using genetically modified mice demonstrated that Nurr1 is essential for maintaining the unique gene expression pattern of CLA neurons, although these neurons remain physically intact without it.
  • The study also found that Nurr1 deletion in CLA disrupts hallucinogen receptor expression and alters the functional connectivity effects of hallucinogens on brain regions that interact with CLA, suggesting that targeting Nurr1 could enhance our understanding of CLA’s functions.
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The memory-enhancing activity of Matricaria chamomilla hydroalcoholic extract (MCE) is already being investigated by behavioral and biochemical assays in scopolamine-induced amnesia rat models, while the effects of scopolamine (Sco) on cerebral glucose metabolism are examined as well. Nevertheless, the study of the metabolic profile determined by an enriched MCE has not been performed before. The present experiments compared metabolic quantification in characteristic cerebral regions and behavioral characteristics for normal, only diseased, diseased, and MCE- vs.

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