Catalogue Search | MBRL
Search Results Heading
Explore the vast range of titles available.
MBRLSearchResults
-
DisciplineDiscipline
-
Is Peer ReviewedIs Peer Reviewed
-
Item TypeItem Type
-
SubjectSubject
-
YearFrom:-To:
-
More FiltersMore FiltersSourceLanguage
Done
Filters
Reset
20
result(s) for
"J. Nicholas P. Rawlins"
Sort by:
Hippocampal synaptic plasticity, spatial memory and anxiety
2014
In this Perspective, Seeburg and colleagues re-examine the role of the hippocampus in spatial learning in light of recent findings. They also suggest that the hippocampus has a role in resolving conflict or uncertainty that might also explain its role in anxiety.
Recent studies using transgenic mice lacking NMDA receptors in the hippocampus challenge the long-standing hypothesis that hippocampal long-term potentiation-like mechanisms underlie the encoding and storage of associative long-term spatial memories. However, it may not be the synaptic plasticity-dependent memory hypothesis that is wrong; instead, it may be the role of the hippocampus that needs to be re-examined. We present an account of hippocampal function that explains its role in both memory and anxiety.
Journal Article
Dissecting spatial knowledge from spatial choice by hippocampal NMDA receptor deletion
by
Jensen, Vidar
,
Rawlins, J Nicholas P
,
Sprengel, Rolf
in
631/378/1595
,
631/378/2591
,
631/378/2649
2012
Using a novel spatial discrimination task, Bannerman and colleagues show that mice lacking hippocampal NMDA receptors in dentate gyrus and CA1 can encode and store spatial memories normally but fail to use this spatial knowledge to select appropriate responses from ambiguous choices.
Hippocampal NMDA receptors (NMDARs) and NMDAR-dependent synaptic plasticity are widely considered crucial substrates of long-term spatial memory, although their precise role remains uncertain. Here we show that
Grin1
ΔDGCA1
mice, lacking GluN1 and hence NMDARs in all dentate gyrus and dorsal CA1 principal cells, acquired the spatial reference memory water maze task as well as controls, despite impairments on the spatial reference memory radial maze task. When we ran a spatial discrimination water maze task using two visually identical beacons,
Grin1
ΔDGCA1
mice were impaired at using spatial information to inhibit selecting the decoy beacon, despite knowing the platform's actual spatial location. This failure could suffice to impair radial maze performance despite spatial memory itself being normal. Thus, these hippocampal NMDARs are not essential for encoding or storing long-term, associative spatial memories. Instead, we demonstrate an important function of the hippocampus in using spatial knowledge to select between alternative responses that arise from competing or overlapping memories.
Journal Article
Genome-wide genetic association of complex traits in heterogeneous stock mice
by
Klenerman, Paul
,
Burnett, Stephanie
,
Mott, Richard
in
Agriculture
,
Animal Genetics and Genomics
,
Animals
2006
Difficulties in fine-mapping quantitative trait loci (QTLs) are a major impediment to progress in the molecular dissection of complex traits in mice. Here we show that genome-wide high-resolution mapping of multiple phenotypes can be achieved using a stock of genetically heterogeneous mice. We developed a conservative and robust bootstrap analysis to map 843 QTLs with an average 95% confidence interval of 2.8 Mb. The QTLs contribute to variation in 97 traits, including models of human disease (asthma, type 2 diabetes mellitus, obesity and anxiety) as well as immunological, biochemical and hematological phenotypes. The genetic architecture of almost all phenotypes was complex, with many loci each contributing a small proportion to the total variance. Our data set, freely available at
http://gscan.well.ox.ac.uk
, provides an entry point to the functional characterization of genes involved in many complex traits.
Journal Article
Genetic and Environmental Effects on Complex Traits in Mice
2006
The interaction between genotype and environment is recognized as an important source of experimental variation when complex traits are measured in the mouse, but the magnitude of that interaction has not often been measured. From a study of 2448 genetically heterogeneous mice, we report the heritability of 88 complex traits that include models of human disease (asthma, type 2 diabetes mellitus, obesity, and anxiety) as well as immunological, biochemical, and hematological phenotypes. We show that environmental and physiological covariates are involved in an unexpectedly large number of significant interactions with genetic background. The 15 covariates we examined have a significant effect on behavioral and physiological tests, although they rarely explain >10% of the variation. We found that interaction effects are more frequent and larger than the main effects: half of the interactions explained >20% of the variance and in nine cases exceeded 50%. Our results indicate that assays of gene function using mouse models should take into account interactions between gene and environment.
Journal Article
Somatic Accumulation of GluA1-AMPA Receptors Leads to Selective Cognitive Impairments in Mice
by
Burnashev, Nail
,
Jensen, Vidar
,
Zamanillo, Daniel
in
AMPA receptors
,
Anatomy & physiology
,
Animal cognition
2018
The GluA1 subunit of the L-α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid receptor (AMPAR) plays a crucial, but highly selective, role in cognitive function. Here we analyzed AMPAR expression, AMPAR distribution and spatial learning in mice (
), expressing the \"trafficking compromised\" GluA1(Q600R) point mutation. Our analysis revealed somatic accumulation and reduction of GluA1(Q600R) and GluA2, but only slightly reduced CA1 synaptic localization in hippocampi of adult
mice. These immunohistological changes were accompanied by a strong reduction of somatic AMPAR currents in CA1, and a reduction of plasticity (short-term and long-term potentiation, STP and LTP, respectively) in the CA1 subfield following tetanic and theta-burst stimulation. Nevertheless, spatial reference memory acquisition in the Morris water-maze and on an appetitive Y-maze task was unaffected in
mice. In contrast, spatial working/short-term memory during both spontaneous and rewarded alternation tasks was dramatically impaired. These findings identify the GluA1(Q600R) mutation as a loss of function mutation that provides independent evidence for the selective role of GluA1 in the expression of short-term memory.
Journal Article
Hemisphere-specific optogenetic stimulation reveals left-right asymmetry of hippocampal plasticity
by
Shipton, Olivia A
,
Paulsen, Ole
,
Rawlins, J Nicholas P
in
631/1647/2253
,
631/378/1595/1554
,
631/378/2591
2011
Using hemisphere-specific optogenetic activation of hippocampal fibers, this study finds that the magnitude of long-term potentiation in CA1 neurons depends on whether afferents originate in left or right CA3.
Postsynaptic spines at CA3-CA1 synapses differ in glutamate receptor composition according to the hemispheric origin of CA3 afferents. To study the functional consequences of this asymmetry, we used optogenetic tools to selectively stimulate axons of CA3 pyramidal cells originating in either left or right mouse hippocampus. We found that left CA3 input produced more long-term potentiation at CA1 synapses than right CA3 input as a result of differential expression of GluN2B subunit–containing NMDA receptors.
Journal Article
A protocol for high-throughput phenotyping, suitable for quantitative trait analysis in mice
by
Arboledas-Hita, Carmen
,
Cookson, William O.
,
Zhang, Youming
in
Animals
,
Anxiety - blood
,
Anxiety - genetics
2006
Whole-genome genetic association studies in outbred mouse populations represent a novel approach to identifying the molecular basis of naturally occurring genetic variants, the major source of quantitative variation between inbred strains of mice. Measuring multiple phenotypes in parallel on each mouse would make the approach cost effective, but protocols for phenotyping on a large enough scale have not been developed. In this article we describe the development and deployment of a protocol to collect measures on three models of human disease (anxiety, type II diabetes, and asthma) as well as measures of mouse blood biochemistry, immunology, and hematology. We report that the protocol delivers highly significant differences among the eight inbred strains (A/J, AKR/J, BALBc/J, CBA/J, C3H/HeJ, C57BL/6 J, DBA/2 J, and LP/J), the progenitors of a genetically heterogeneous stock (HS) of mice. We report the successful collection of multiple phenotypes from 2000 outbred HS animals. The phenotypes measured in the protocol form the basis of a large-scale investigation into the genetic basis of complex traits in mice designed to examine interactions between genes and between genes and environment, as well as the main effects of genetic variants on phenotypes.
Journal Article
Genetic dissection of a behavioral quantitative trait locus shows that Rgs2 modulates anxiety in mice
by
Mott, Richard
,
Rawlins, J Nicholas P
,
Willis-Owen, Saffron A G
in
Agriculture
,
Animal Genetics and Genomics
,
Animals
2004
Here we present a strategy to determine the genetic basis of variance in complex phenotypes that arise from natural, as opposed to induced, genetic variation in mice. We show that a commercially available strain of outbred mice, MF1, can be treated as an ultrafine mosaic of standard inbred strains and accordingly used to dissect a known quantitative trait locus influencing anxiety. We also show that this locus can be subdivided into three regions, one of which contains
Rgs2
, which encodes a regulator of G protein signaling. We then use quantitative complementation to show that
Rgs2
is a quantitative trait gene. This combined genetic and functional approach should be applicable to the analysis of any quantitative trait.
Journal Article
Fractionation of Spatial Memory in GRM2/3 (mGlu2/mGlu3) Double Knockout Mice Reveals a Role for Group II Metabotropic Glutamate Receptors at the Interface Between Arousal and Cognition
by
Lane, Tracy
,
Rawlins, J Nicholas P
,
Harrison, Paul J
in
631/378/1595/1554
,
631/378/2649
,
631/92/436/2387
2011
Group II metabotropic glutamate receptors (mGluR2 and mGluR3, encoded by GRM2 and GRM3) are implicated in hippocampal function and cognition, and in the pathophysiology and treatment of schizophrenia and other psychiatric disorders. However, pharmacological and behavioral studies with group II mGluR agonists and antagonists have produced complex results. Here, we studied hippocampus-dependent memory in GRM2/3 double knockout (GRM2/3
−/−
) mice in an iterative sequence of experiments. We found that they were impaired on appetitively motivated spatial reference and working memory tasks, and on a spatial novelty preference task that relies on animals’ exploratory drive, but were unimpaired on aversively motivated spatial memory paradigms. GRM2/3
−/−
mice also performed normally on an appetitively motivated, non-spatial, visual discrimination task. These results likely reflect an interaction between GRM2/3 genotype and the arousal-inducing properties of the experimental paradigm. The deficit seen on appetitive and exploratory spatial memory tasks may be absent in aversive tasks because the latter induce higher levels of arousal, which rescue spatial learning. Consistent with an altered arousal–cognition relationship in GRM2/3
−/−
mice, injection stress worsened appetitively motivated, spatial working memory in wild-types, but enhanced performance in GRM2/3
−/−
mice. GRM2/3
−/−
mice were also hypoactive in response to amphetamine. This fractionation of hippocampus-dependent memory depending on the appetitive-aversive context is to our knowledge unique, and suggests a role for group II mGluRs at the interface of arousal and cognition. These arousal-dependent effects may explain apparently conflicting data from previous studies, and have translational relevance for the involvement of these receptors in schizophrenia and other disorders.
Journal Article
Dissociating Pain from Its Anticipation in the Human Brain
by
Clare, Stuart
,
Menon, Ravi S.
,
Matthews, Paul M.
in
Adult
,
Anticipation
,
Anxiety - physiopathology
1999
The experience of pain is subjectively different from the fear and anxiety caused by threats of pain. Functional magnetic resonance imaging in healthy humans was applied to dissociate neural activation patterns associated with acute pain and its anticipation. Expectation of pain activated sites within the medial frontal lobe, insular cortex, and cerebellum distinct from, but close to, locations mediating pain experience itself. Anticipation of pain can in its own right cause mood changes and behavioral adaptations that exacerbate the suffering experienced by chronic pain patients. Selective manipulations of activity at these sites may offer therapeutic possibilities for treating chronic pain.
Journal Article