Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"Optogenetics" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Smart Optogenetics for Real-Time Automated Control of Cardiac Electrical Activity Deng S; Harlaar N; Zhang J; Dekker SO; Kudryashova NN; Zhou H; Bart CI; Jin T; Derevyanko G; van Driel W; Panfilov AV; Poelma RH; de Vries AAF; Zhang G; De Coster T; Pijnappels DA; 41684280
CHEMBIOCHEM
2 Disentangling prediction error and value in a formal test of dopamine s role in reinforcement learning Usypchuk AA; Maes EJP; Lozzi M; Avramidis DK; Schoenbaum G; Esber GR; Gardner MPH; Iordanova MD; 40738112
CSBN
3 Corticostriatal suppression of appetitive Pavlovian conditioned responding Villaruel FR; Martins M; Chaudhri N; 34880119
PSYCHOLOGY
4 The trade-off between pulse duration and power in optical excitation of midbrain dopamine neurons approximates Bloch's law Pallikaras V; Carter F; Velazquez-Martinez DN; Arvanitogiannis A; Shizgal P; 34864162
PSYCHOLOGY
5 Seeing is believing: tools to study the role of Rho GTPases during cytokinesis Koh SP; Pham NP; Piekny A; 34405757
BIOLOGY
6 All-optical approaches to studying psychiatric disease Lafferty CK; Christinck TD; Britt JP; 34314828
CSBN
7 Off-Target Influences of Arch-Mediated Axon Terminal Inhibition on Network Activity and Behavior. Lafferty CK, Britt JP 32269514
CSBN
8 Nucleus Accumbens Cell Type- and Input-Specific Suppression of Unproductive Reward Seeking. Lafferty CK, Yang AK, Mendoza JA, Britt JP 32187545
CSBN
9 Hippocampal Input to the Nucleus Accumbens Shell Enhances Food Palatability. Yang AK, Mendoza JA, Lafferty CK, Lacroix F, Britt JP 31699294
CSBN
10 Cue-Evoked Dopamine Neuron Activity Helps Maintain but Does Not Encode Expected Value. Mendoza JA, Lafferty CK, Yang AK, Britt JP 31693885
CSBN

 

Title:Off-Target Influences of Arch-Mediated Axon Terminal Inhibition on Network Activity and Behavior.
Authors:Lafferty CKBritt JP
Link:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32269514?dopt=Abstract
DOI:10.3389/fncir.2020.00010
Publication:Frontiers in neural circuits
Keywords:ArchTnucleus accumbensoptogeneticsphotoinhibitionreward-seeking
PMID:32269514 Category:Front Neural Circuits Date Added:2020-04-10
Dept Affiliation: CSBN
1 Department of Psychology, McGill University, Montreal, QC, Canada.
2 Center for Studies in Behavioral Neurobiology, Concordia University, Montreal, QC, Canada.

Description:

Off-Target Influences of Arch-Mediated Axon Terminal Inhibition on Network Activity and Behavior.

Front Neural Circuits. 2020;14:10

Authors: Lafferty CK, Britt JP

Abstract

Archaerhodopsin (ArchT)-mediated photoinhibition of axon terminals is commonly used to test the involvement of specific long-range neural projections in behavior. Although sustained activation of this opsin in axon terminals has the unintended consequence of enhancing spontaneous vesicle release, it is unclear whether this desynchronized signaling is consequential for ArchT's behavioral effects. Here, we compare axon terminal and cell body photoinhibition of nucleus accumbens (NAc) afferents to test the utility of these approaches for uncovering pathway-specific contributions of neural circuits to behavior. First, in brain slice recordings we confirmed that ArchT photoinhibition of glutamatergic axons reduces evoked synaptic currents and increases spontaneous transmitter release. A further consequence was increased interneuron activity, which served to broadly suppress glutamate input via presynaptic GABAB receptors. In vivo, axon terminal photoinhibition increased feeding and reward-seeking behavior irrespective of the afferent pathway targeted. These behavioral effects are comparable to those obtained with broad inhibition of NAc neurons. In contrast, cell body inhibition of excitatory NAc afferents revealed a pathway-specific contribution of thalamic input to feeding behavior and amygdala input to reward-seeking under extinction conditions. These findings underscore the off-target behavioral consequences of ArchT-mediated axon terminal inhibition while highlighting cell body inhibition as a valuable alternative for pathway-specific optogenetic silencing.

PMID: 32269514 [PubMed - in process]





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