The reticulospinal Mauthner cells (M-cells) of the startle circuit have been considered to be dedicated to one basic motor output and the C-type startle response in fish. The neural circuit underlying the C-start, a startle behavior in which the fish forms a "C"-shaped body bend has been described in depth in goldfish and zebrafish [1, 2] and is thought to occur in other species [3, 4]. However, previous research has shown that some species can perform a second type of startle called the S-start [5-7]. This startle response, in which the first movement creates an "S"-shaped body bend achieved with regional muscle activity on left and right sides, cannot be explained by M-cell circuit models. Here we use larval zebrafish to examine the S-start circuit. Since S-starts are elicited through tail stimulation [5-7] and ablating M-cells abolishes short-latency tail-elicited startles [8, 9], we hypothesized that M-cell activity was necessary for S-start generation. Our findings show that the M-cells fire simultaneously to generate the S-start. However, simultaneous M-cell spikes generated through direct current injection were not sufficient to generate S-starts. Through recordings of motoneurons, inhibitory interneurons, and sensory neurons, we uncover a mechanism for generating alternative startle behaviors; local sensory inputs drive inhibitory interneuron activity, which inhibits caudal motoneurons and pre-conditions their excitability prior to the arrival of M-cell spikes in the tail. We suggest that this motoneuron hyperpolarization can bias motor output to left or right sides, determining whether the fish performs a C-start or an S-start behavior.
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BMJ Case Rep
January 2025
Neurology, Joondalup Health Campus, Joondalup, Western Australia, Australia.
Anti-dipeptidyl-peptidase-like protein 6 antibody-mediated disease is a rare autoimmune encephalitis typically presenting with diarrhoea and/or weight loss, central nervous system hyperexcitability and cognitive dysfunction. We present a case of a young woman with 10 days of diplopia and unsteadiness in the context of dysthymia and significant weight loss over 2 months. Initial examination demonstrated mixed dysconjugate nystagmus and ataxic gait.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Integr Neurosci
September 2024
Department of Physiology, Anatomy and Genetics (DPAG), University of Oxford, OX1 3PT Oxford, UK.
Background: In the auditory domain, temporal resolution is the ability to respond to rapid changes in the envelope of a sound over time. Silent gap-in-noise detection tests assess temporal resolution. Whether temporal resolution is impaired in tinnitus and whether those tests are useful for identifying the condition is still debated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnn Neurol
October 2024
Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Objective: After severe corticospinal tract damage poststroke in humans, some recovery of strength and movement proximally is evident. It is possible that alternate motor pathways, such as the reticulospinal tract, may be upregulated to compensate for the loss of corticospinal tract input. We investigated the extent of reticulospinal tract excitability modulation and its inter-dependence on the severity of corticospinal tract damage after stroke in humans.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Oral Health
September 2024
Department of Oral Pathology, Faculty of Dentistry, Alexandria University, Champollion Street, Elazarita, Alexandria, 21563, Egypt.
Background: Herbal medicine combined with nanotechnology offers an alternative to the increasing burden of surgery and/or chemotherapy, the main therapeutics of oral carcinoma. Phytosomes are nano-vesicular systems formed by the interaction between phospholipids and phyto-active components via hydrogen bonding, exhibiting superior efficacy over pure phytocomponents in drug delivery.
Methods: Tetrahydrocurcumin (THC)-phytosomes were prepared by thin film hydration method.
Front Vet Sci
August 2024
SunPork Group, Brisbane, QLD, Australia.
The Maternity Ring was developed as a free farrowing alternative to crates that preserved space whilst providing the sow with unrestricted movement. This experiment aimed to apply the Five Domains model to assess sow welfare in the Maternity Ring in comparison with the farrowing crate. Eighty-eight sows were housed in a farrowing crate (FC) and 83 in a Maternity Ring (MR), and measures collected focussed on nutrition, environment, health, behaviour, and mental state outcomes.
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