710 results match your criteria: "Netherlands Institute for Brain Research.[Affiliation]"

(1) Alzheimer's disease is a multifactorial disease in which age and APOE-epsilon 4 are important risk factors. (2) The neuropathological hallmarks of AD, i.e.

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In this review, recent studies using pharmacological treatment, cell transplantation, and gene therapy to promote regeneration of the injured spinal cord in animal models will be summarized. Pharmacological and cell transplantation treatments generally revealed some degree of effect on the regeneration of the injured ascending and descending tracts, but further improvements to achieve a more significant functional recovery are necessary. The use of gene therapy to promote repair of the injured nervous system is a relatively new concept.

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The impact of study-environment on experimental outcome is mostly not realized and certainly not demonstrated. In the present study, a comparison was made between free salivary cortisol levels in healthy young men in a carefully controlled hospital setting versus a home setting. Cortisol levels during rest were increased in hospital compared to home environment: 2-fold at awakening, 3-fold at the morning peak, and 5-fold late in the evening.

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The wealth of clinical epidemiological data on the association between intra-abdominal fat accumulation and morbidity sharply contrasts with the paucity of knowledge about the determinants of fat distribution, which cannot be explained merely in terms of humoral factors. If it comes to neuronal control, until now, adipose tissue was reported to be innervated by the sympathetic nervous system only, known for its catabolic effect. We hypothesized the presence of a parasympathetic input stimulating anabolic processes in adipose tissue.

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Animal models used to study human aging and neurodegeneration do not display all symptoms of these processes as they are found in humans. Recently, we have shown that many cells in neocortical slices from adult human postmortem brain may survive for extensive periods in vitro. Such cultures may enable us to study age and disease related processes directly in human brain tissue.

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The use of viral vectors as agents for gene delivery provides a direct approach to manipulate gene expression in the mammalian central nervous system (CNS). The present article describes in detail the methodology for the injection of viral vectors, in particular adeno-associated virus (AAV) vectors, into the adult rat brain and spinal cord to obtain reproducible and successful transduction of neural tissue. Surgical and injection procedures are based on the extensive experience of our laboratory to deliver viral vectors to the adult rat CNS and have been optimized over the years.

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The present study reports the first systematic rostrocaudal distribution of estrogen receptor-alpha immunoreactivity (ERalpha-ir) in the human hypothalamus and its adjacent areas in young adults. Postmortem material taken from 10 subjects (five male and five female), between 20 and 39 years of age, was investigated. In addition, three age-matched subjects with abnormal levels of estrogens were studied: a castrated, estrogen-treated 50-year-old male-to-female transsexual (T1), a 31-year-old man with an estrogen-producing tumor (S2), and an ovariectomized 46-year-old woman (S8).

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Using a novel in vitro post mortem tracing method, we demonstrate a decrease of axonal transport in the temporal cortex neurons as compared to axonal transport in the prefrontal cortex neurons in AD patients, but not in non-demented controls. The decrease of axonal transport is related to the degree of neuropathological changes, as the temporal cortex undergoes more severe neuropathological changes in AD. The present study provides, for the first time, direct evidence of the presence of impaired axonal transport in AD brains.

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Basic neurotransplantation research evoked clinical trials of restorative brain surgery. Parkinson's disease was the first and primary test bed for this putative new therapeutic method. Various centers performed the grafting surgery and the behavioral evaluations in different ways, and observed a varying degree of symptomatic relief.

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In various hypothalamic and adjacent brain regions we have previously found a remarkable increase in nuclear estrogen receptor staining in Alzheimer's disease (AD). In order to see whether this was a general phenomenon or rather specific for those areas that are affected by the AD process we investigated ERalpha and ERbeta expression in the arginine-vasopressin (AVP) neurons of the human dorsolateral suparoptic nucleus (dl-SON), that is the major source of plasma AVP. These neurons remain exceptionally intact in AD.

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Topological and metrical measures are reviewed, which describe whole dendritic trees and variables within trees. These measures are applied to differentiate and classify groups of neurons. They are also of importance for simulation or reconstruction of neuronal trees in view of functional computational characteristics.

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Neuronal firing patterns are influenced by both membrane properties and dendritic morphology. Distinguishing two sources of morphological variability-metrics and topology-we investigate the extent to which model neurons that have the same metrical and membrane properties can still produce different firing patterns as a result of differences in dendritic topology. Within a set of dendritic trees that have the same number of terminal segments and the same total dendritic length, we show that firing frequency strongly correlates with topology as expressed by the mean dendritic path length.

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The outgrowth of dendritic branching patterns proceeds by neurite elongation and branching. These actions are supported by growth cones, specialized dynamic structures at the tips of outgrowing neurites, in response to a multitude of intracellular and extracellular signals and mechanisms. Branching rates of growth cones and their temporal patterns thus reflect the extent and changes in these responses.

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Alzheimer's disease (AD) is neuropathologically characterized by neuritic plaques (NPs) and neurofibrillary tangles and functionally by a decreased metabolic rate of neurons. Our previous studies showed that in brain areas which are extensively affected by plaques and tangles, i.e.

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At older ages, the circadian rhythm of body temperature shows a decreased amplitude, an advanced phase, and decreased stability. The present review evaluates to what extent these changes may result from age-related deficiencies at several levels of the thermoregulatory system, including thermoreception, thermogenesis and conservation, heat loss, and central regulation. Whereas some changes are related to the aging process per se, others appear to be secondary to other factors, for which the risk increases with aging, notably a decreased level of fitness and physical activity.

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+1 Proteins and aging.

Int J Biochem Cell Biol

November 2002

Graduate School Neurosciences Amsterdam, Netherlands Institute for Brain Research, Meibergdreef 33, 1105 AZ, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

Molecular misreading is an expression used to describe errors in RNA that lead to the translation of mutated proteins. We have shown that dinucleotide deletions (delta GA, delta GU) are introduced in simple sequence repeats (e.g.

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A Ba(2+)-sensitive K(+) current was studied in neurons of the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) using the whole cell patch-clamp technique in acutely prepared brain slices. This Ba(2+)-sensitive K(+) current was found in approximately 90% of the SCN neurons and was uniformly distributed across the SCN. Current-clamp studies revealed that Ba(2+) (500 microM) reversibly depolarized the membrane potential by 6.

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Neuronal changes in normal human aging and Alzheimer's disease.

Brain Cogn

August 2002

Netherlands Institute for Brain Research, Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

This article discusses age-related changes in brain weight, total number of cortical neurons, cortical dendrites, spine, and synapse density. The conclusion is that the present outlook is less grim than it was 30 years ago. Age-related reduction appears to be specific to brain region and cortical layer rather than a general feature.

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Hypothalmo-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis activity is altered in patients with multiple sclerosis (MS), resulting in elevated basal levels and enhanced response of cortisol in stimulation tests. HPA axis hyperactivation in MS is thought to be the result of complex interactions of genetic, immunologic, and neuroendocrinological mechanisms. In order to investigate whether cytokine levels in the central nervous system are associated with the activation of the HPA axis in MS, we measured cortisol, interleukin (IL)-6, IL-10 and TNF-alpha levels in postmortem cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of 18 patients with severe MS and 50 controls.

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