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Radiology Case Reports Aug 2024Hypertrophic olivary degeneration (HOD) is a rare form of transsynaptic degeneration. It is caused by a damage at the Guillain-Mollaret triangle (GMT), which is defined...
Hypertrophic olivary degeneration (HOD) is a rare form of transsynaptic degeneration. It is caused by a damage at the Guillain-Mollaret triangle (GMT), which is defined by three anatomical structures: the dentate nucleus, the red nucleus, and the inferior olivary nucleus (ION). Clinically, it may be revealed by palatal myoclonus. On MRI, it appears as a unilateral or bilateral enlargement of the inferior olivary nucleus which shows a high signal intensity on T2-weighted images, with sometimes a cerebellar atrophy. Here we report 2 cases of healthy patients which present hemorrhagic brainstem cavernomas, complicated later by the development of palatal myoclonus and cerebellar ataxia, with MRI features corresponding to an (HOD) secondary to a (GMT) cavernoma. The purpose is to explain the mechanism of (HOD) subsequent to lesion in (GMT), and to describe magnetic resonance imaging features.
PubMed: 38948902
DOI: 10.1016/j.radcr.2024.04.078 -
Scientific Reports Jun 2024Based on the auditory periphery and the small head size, Etruscan shrews (Suncus etruscus) approximate ancestral mammalian conditions. The auditory brainstem in this...
Based on the auditory periphery and the small head size, Etruscan shrews (Suncus etruscus) approximate ancestral mammalian conditions. The auditory brainstem in this insectivore has not been investigated. Using labelling techniques, we assessed the structures of their superior olivary complex (SOC) and the nuclei of the lateral lemniscus (NLL). There, we identified the position of the major nuclei, their input pattern, transmitter content, expression of calcium binding proteins (CaBPs) and two voltage-gated ion channels. The most prominent SOC structures were the medial nucleus of the trapezoid body (MNTB), the lateral nucleus of the trapezoid body (LNTB), the lateral superior olive (LSO) and the superior paraolivary nucleus (SPN). In the NLL, the ventral (VNLL), a specific ventrolateral VNLL (VNLLvl) cell population, the intermediate (INLL) and dorsal (DNLL) nucleus, as well as the inferior colliculus's central aspect were discerned. INLL and VNLL were clearly separated by the differential distribution of various marker proteins. Most labelled proteins showed expression patterns comparable to rodents. However, SPN neurons were glycinergic and not GABAergic and the overall CaBPs expression was low. Next to the characterisation of the Etruscan shrew's auditory brainstem, our work identifies conserved nuclei and indicates variable structures in a species that approximates ancestral conditions.
Topics: Animals; Shrews; Superior Olivary Complex; Auditory Pathways; Neurons; Inferior Colliculi; Calcium-Binding Proteins; Brain Stem; Male; Olivary Nucleus
PubMed: 38926520
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-024-65451-0 -
PloS One 2024Neurons of the lateral superior olive (LSO) in the auditory brainstem play a fundamental role in binaural sound localization. Previous theoretical studies developed...
Neurons of the lateral superior olive (LSO) in the auditory brainstem play a fundamental role in binaural sound localization. Previous theoretical studies developed various types of neuronal models to study the physiological functions of the LSO. These models were usually tuned to a small set of physiological data with specific aims in mind. Therefore, it is unclear whether and how they can be related to each other, how widely applicable they are, and which model is suitable for what purposes. In this study, we address these questions for six different single-compartment integrate-and-fire (IF) type LSO models. The models are divided into two groups depending on their subthreshold responses: passive (linear) models with only the leak conductance and active (nonlinear) models with an additional low-voltage-activated potassium conductance that is prevalent among the auditory system. Each of these two groups is further subdivided into three subtypes according to the spike generation mechanism: one with simple threshold-crossing detection and voltage reset, one with threshold-crossing detection plus a current to mimic spike shapes, and one with a depolarizing exponential current for spiking. In our simulations, all six models were driven by identical synaptic inputs and calibrated with common criteria for binaural tuning. The resulting spike rates of the passive models were higher for intensive inputs and lower for temporally structured inputs than those of the active models, confirming the active function of the potassium current. Within each passive or active group, the simulated responses resembled each other, regardless of the spike generation types. These results, in combination with the analysis of computational costs, indicate that an active IF model is more suitable than a passive model for accurately reproducing temporal coding of LSO. The simulation of realistic spike shapes with an extended spiking mechanism added relatively small computational costs.
Topics: Models, Neurological; Superior Olivary Complex; Action Potentials; Neurons; Humans; Computer Simulation; Olivary Nucleus; Animals; Sound Localization
PubMed: 38900820
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0304832 -
Neurologia Jun 2024Ataxias are characterized by aberrant movement patterns closely related to cerebellar dysfunction. Purkinje cell axons are the sole outputs from the cerebellar cortex,...
Ataxias are characterized by aberrant movement patterns closely related to cerebellar dysfunction. Purkinje cell axons are the sole outputs from the cerebellar cortex, and dysfunctional activity of Purkinje cells has been associated with ataxic movements. However, the synaptic characteristics of Purkinje cells in cases of ataxia are not yet well understood. The nicotinamide antagonist 3-acethylpyridine (3-AP) selectively destroys inferior olivary nucleus neurons so it is widely used to induce cerebellar ataxia. Five days after 3-AP treatment (65mg/kg) in adult male Sprague-Dawley rats, motor incoordination was revealed through BBB and Rotarod testing. In addition, in Purkinje cells from lobules V-VII of the cerebellar vermis studied by the Golgi method, the density of dendritic spines decreased, especially the thin and mushroom types. Western blot analysis showed a decrease in AMPA and PSD-95 content with an increase of the α-catenin protein, while GAD-67 and synaptophysin were unchanged. Findings suggest a limited capacity of Purkinje cells to acquire and consolidate afferent excitatory inputs and an aberrant, rigid profile in the movement-related output patterns of Purkinje neurons that likely contributes to the motor-related impairments characteristic of cerebellar ataxias.
Topics: Animals; Purkinje Cells; Male; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; Rats; Cerebellum; Cerebellar Ataxia; Pyridines; Neuronal Plasticity
PubMed: 38830720
DOI: 10.1016/j.nrleng.2021.09.015 -
Hypertrophy of the inferior olivary nucleus in corticobasal degeneration: A neuropathological study.Clinical Neuropathology May 2024Corticobasal degeneration (CBD) is a rare neurodegenerative disorder. The status of the inferior olivary nucleus (ION) in CBD has been inadequately investigated. In this...
AIMS
Corticobasal degeneration (CBD) is a rare neurodegenerative disorder. The status of the inferior olivary nucleus (ION) in CBD has been inadequately investigated. In this study, we conducted a pathological investigation of the ION in CBD.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
We reviewed the data of Japanese patients with pathologically confirmed CBD who underwent consecutive autopsies between 1985 and 2020 at our institute. We retrospectively examined clinical data from medical records and clinicopathological conferences and semi-quantitatively assessed the ION, central tegmental tract, superior cerebellar peduncle, and dentate nucleus.
RESULTS
Of the 32 patients included, 14 (43.8%) had hypertrophy of the ION (HION), of whom 6 showed laterality. In the 14 HION cases, with or without laterality, except in 1 unevaluable case, atrophy/myelin pallor of the central tegmental tract was observed on the same side as the hypertrophy. Ten patients with HION, with or without laterality, had atrophy/myelin pallor of the superior cerebellar peduncle on the contralateral side to the hypertrophy.
CONCLUSION
The ION presents with hypertrophic changes in CBD. The lesion is a primary degeneration in CBD and is related to the degeneration of the Guillain-Mollaret triangle. This finding contributes to the elucidation of the specific pathological characteristics of CBD.
PubMed: 38818729
DOI: 10.5414/NP301616 -
ELife May 2024Neurexins play diverse functions as presynaptic organizers in various glutamatergic and GABAergic synapses. However, it remains unknown whether and how neurexins are...
Neurexins play diverse functions as presynaptic organizers in various glutamatergic and GABAergic synapses. However, it remains unknown whether and how neurexins are involved in shaping functional properties of the glycinergic synapses, which mediate prominent inhibition in the brainstem and spinal cord. To address these issues, we examined the role of neurexins in a model glycinergic synapse between the principal neuron in the medial nucleus of the trapezoid body (MNTB) and the principal neuron in the lateral superior olive (LSO) in the auditory brainstem. Combining RNAscope with stereotactic injection of AAV-Cre in the MNTB of neurexin1/2/3 conditional triple knockout mice, we showed that MNTB neurons highly express all isoforms of neurexins although their expression levels vary remarkably. Selective ablation of all neurexins in MNTB neurons not only reduced the amplitude but also altered the kinetics of the glycinergic synaptic transmission at LSO neurons. The synaptic dysfunctions primarily resulted from an impaired Ca sensitivity of release and a loosened coupling between voltage-gated Ca channels and synaptic vesicles. Together, our current findings demonstrate that neurexins are essential in controlling the strength and temporal precision of the glycinergic synapse, which therefore corroborates the role of neurexins as key presynaptic organizers in all major types of fast chemical synapses.
Topics: Animals; Mice, Knockout; Glycine; Mice; Trapezoid Body; Synaptic Transmission; Neural Cell Adhesion Molecules; Superior Olivary Complex; Brain Stem; Synapses; Neurons; Cell Adhesion Molecules, Neuronal; Nerve Tissue Proteins; Neurexins; Calcium-Binding Proteins
PubMed: 38814174
DOI: 10.7554/eLife.94315 -
Hearing Research Aug 2024Although rats and mice are among the preferred animal models for investigating many characteristics of auditory function, they are rarely used to study an essential...
Although rats and mice are among the preferred animal models for investigating many characteristics of auditory function, they are rarely used to study an essential aspect of binaural hearing: the ability of animals to localize the sources of low-frequency sounds by detecting the interaural time difference (ITD), that is the difference in the time at which the sound arrives at each ear. In mammals, ITDs are mostly encoded in the medial superior olive (MSO), one of the main nuclei of the superior olivary complex (SOC). Because of their small heads and high frequency hearing range, rats and mice are often considered unable to use ITDs for sound localization. Moreover, their MSO is frequently viewed as too small or insignificant compared to that of mammals that use ITDs to localize sounds, including cats and gerbils. However, recent research has demonstrated remarkable similarities between most morphological and physiological features of mouse MSO neurons and those of MSO neurons of mammals that use ITDs. In this context, we have analyzed the structure and neural afferent and efferent connections of the rat MSO, which had never been studied by injecting neuroanatomical tracers into the nucleus. The rat MSO spans the SOC longitudinally. It is relatively small caudally, but grows rostrally into a well-developed column of stacked bipolar neurons. By placing small, precise injections of the bidirectional tracer biotinylated dextran amine (BDA) into the MSO, we show that this nucleus is innervated mainly by the most ventral and rostral spherical bushy cells of the anteroventral cochlear nucleus of both sides, and by the most ventrolateral principal neurons of the ipsilateral medial nucleus of the trapezoid body. The same experiments reveal that the MSO densely innervates the most dorsolateral region of the central nucleus of the inferior colliculus, the central region of the dorsal nucleus of the lateral lemniscus, and the most lateral region of the intermediate nucleus of the lateral lemniscus of its own side. Therefore, the MSO is selectively innervated by, and sends projections to, neurons that process low-frequency sounds. The structural and hodological features of the rat MSO are notably similar to those of the MSO of cats and gerbils. While these similarities raise the question of what functions other than ITD coding the MSO performs, they also suggest that the rat MSO is an appropriate model for future MSO-centered research.
Topics: Animals; Superior Olivary Complex; Auditory Pathways; Sound Localization; Axons; Rats; Male; Dextrans; Biotin; Acoustic Stimulation; Efferent Pathways; Olivary Nucleus; Female; Neuroanatomical Tract-Tracing Techniques; Rats, Wistar
PubMed: 38797037
DOI: 10.1016/j.heares.2024.109036 -
Science Translational Medicine May 2024Essential tremor (ET) is the most prevalent movement disorder, characterized primarily by action tremor, an involuntary rhythmic movement with a specific frequency....
Essential tremor (ET) is the most prevalent movement disorder, characterized primarily by action tremor, an involuntary rhythmic movement with a specific frequency. However, the neuronal mechanism underlying the coding of tremor frequency remains unexplored. Here, we used in vivo electrophysiology, optogenetics, and simultaneous motion tracking in the mouse model to investigate whether and how neuronal activity in the olivocerebellum determines the frequency of essential tremor. We report that tremor frequency was encoded by the temporal coherence of population neuronal firing within the olivocerebellums of these mice, leading to frequency-dependent cerebellar oscillations and tremors. This mechanism was precise and generalizable, enabling us to use optogenetic stimulation of the deep cerebellar nuclei to induce frequency-specific tremors in wild-type mice or alter tremor frequencies in tremor mice. In patients with ET, we showed that deep brain stimulation of the thalamus suppressed tremor symptoms but did not eliminate cerebellar oscillations measured by electroencephalgraphy, indicating that tremor-related oscillations in the cerebellum do not require the reciprocal interactions with the thalamus. Frequency-disrupting transcranial alternating current stimulation of the cerebellum could suppress tremor amplitudes, confirming the frequency modulatory role of the cerebellum in patients with ET. These findings offer a neurodynamic basis for the frequency-dependent stimulation of the cerebellum to treat essential tremor.
Topics: Essential Tremor; Animals; Humans; Neurons; Olivary Nucleus; Cerebellum; Mice; Male; Optogenetics; Female; Deep Brain Stimulation; Middle Aged; Electroencephalography; Aged
PubMed: 38748772
DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.adl1408 -
The Journal of the Acoustical Society... May 2024Medial olivocochlear (MOC) efferents modulate outer hair cell motility through specialized nicotinic acetylcholine receptors to support encoding of signals in noise....
Medial olivocochlear (MOC) efferents modulate outer hair cell motility through specialized nicotinic acetylcholine receptors to support encoding of signals in noise. Transgenic mice lacking the alpha9 subunits of these receptors (α9KOs) have normal hearing in quiet and noise, but lack classic cochlear suppression effects and show abnormal temporal, spectral, and spatial processing. Mice deficient for both the alpha9 and alpha10 receptor subunits (α9α10KOs) may exhibit more severe MOC-related phenotypes. Like α9KOs, α9α10KOs have normal auditory brainstem response (ABR) thresholds and weak MOC reflexes. Here, we further characterized auditory function in α9α10KO mice. Wild-type (WT) and α9α10KO mice had similar ABR thresholds and acoustic startle response amplitudes in quiet and noise, and similar frequency and intensity difference sensitivity. α9α10KO mice had larger ABR Wave I amplitudes than WTs in quiet and noise. Other ABR metrics of hearing-in-noise function yielded conflicting findings regarding α9α10KO susceptibility to masking effects. α9α10KO mice also had larger startle amplitudes in tone backgrounds than WTs. Overall, α9α10KO mice had grossly normal auditory function in quiet and noise, although their larger ABR amplitudes and hyperreactive startles suggest some auditory processing abnormalities. These findings contribute to the growing literature showing mixed effects of MOC dysfunction on hearing.
Topics: Animals; Female; Male; Mice; Acoustic Stimulation; Auditory Pathways; Auditory Perception; Auditory Threshold; Behavior, Animal; Cochlea; Evoked Potentials, Auditory, Brain Stem; Hearing; Mice, Inbred C57BL; Mice, Knockout; Noise; Olivary Nucleus; Perceptual Masking; Phenotype; Receptors, Nicotinic; Reflex, Startle
PubMed: 38738939
DOI: 10.1121/10.0025985 -
Frontiers in Neural Circuits 2024The posterior intralaminar thalamic nucleus (PIL) and peripeduncular nucleus (PP) are two adjoining structures located medioventral to the medial geniculate nucleus. The... (Comparative Study)
Comparative Study
The posterior intralaminar thalamic nucleus (PIL) and peripeduncular nucleus (PP) are two adjoining structures located medioventral to the medial geniculate nucleus. The PIL-PP region plays important roles in auditory fear conditioning and in social, maternal and sexual behaviors. Previous studies often lumped the PIL and PP into single entity, and therefore it is not known if they have common and/or different brain-wide connections. In this study, we investigate brain-wide efferent and afferent projections of the PIL and PP using reliable anterograde and retrograde tracing methods. Both PIL and PP project strongly to lateral, medial and anterior basomedial amygdaloid nuclei, posteroventral striatum (putamen and external globus pallidus), amygdalostriatal transition area, zona incerta, superior and inferior colliculi, and the ectorhinal cortex. However, the PP rather than the PIL send stronger projections to the hypothalamic regions such as preoptic area/nucleus, anterior hypothalamic nucleus, and ventromedial nucleus of hypothalamus. As for the afferent projections, both PIL and PP receive multimodal information from auditory (inferior colliculus, superior olivary nucleus, nucleus of lateral lemniscus, and association auditory cortex), visual (superior colliculus and ectorhinal cortex), somatosensory (gracile and cuneate nuclei), motor (external globus pallidus), and limbic (central amygdaloid nucleus, hypothalamus, and insular cortex) structures. However, the PP rather than PIL receives strong projections from the visual related structures parabigeminal nucleus and ventral lateral geniculate nucleus. Additional results from Cre-dependent viral tracing in mice have also confirmed the main results in rats. Together, the findings in this study would provide new insights into the neural circuits and functional correlation of the PIL and PP.
Topics: Animals; Rats; Mice; Male; Neural Pathways; Intralaminar Thalamic Nuclei; Mice, Inbred C57BL; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; Female
PubMed: 38736977
DOI: 10.3389/fncir.2024.1384621