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result(s) for
"Vogt, Kaspar"
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Exercise improves the quality of slow-wave sleep by increasing slow-wave stability
by
Kayaba, Momoko
,
Nabekura, Yoshiharu
,
Vogt, Kaspar E.
in
631/378/1385/1814
,
631/378/1385/519
,
Adult
2021
Exercise can improve sleep by reducing sleep latency and increasing slow-wave sleep (SWS). Some studies, however, report adverse effects of exercise on sleep architecture, possibly due to a wide variety of experimental conditions used. We examined the effect of exercise on quality of sleep using standardized exercise parameters and novel analytical methods. In a cross-over intervention study we examined the effect of 60 min of vigorous exercise at 60%
V
˙
O
2
max on the metabolic state, assessed by core body temperature and indirect calorimetry, and on sleep quality during subsequent sleep, assessed by self-reported quality of sleep and polysomnography. In a novel approach, envelope analysis was performed to assess SWS stability. Exercise increased energy expenditure throughout the following sleep phase. The subjective assessment of sleep quality was not improved by exercise. Polysomnography revealed a shorter rapid eye movement latency and reduced time spent in SWS. Detailed analysis of the sleep electro-encephalogram showed significantly increased delta power in SWS (N3) together with increased SWS stability in early sleep phases, based on delta wave envelope analysis. Although vigorous exercise does not lead to a subjective improvement in sleep quality, sleep function is improved on the basis of its effect on objective EEG parameters.
Journal Article
Fingolimod, a sphingosine-1 phosphate receptor modulator, increases BDNF levels and improves symptoms of a mouse model of Rett syndrome
2012
The functional relevance of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) is beginning to be well appreciated not only in mice, but also in humans. Because reduced levels typically correlate with impaired neuronal function, increasing BDNF levels with well-tolerated drugs diffusing into the central nervous system may help in ameliorating functional deficits. With this objective in mind, we used the sphingosine-1 phosphate receptor agonist fingolimod, a drug that crosses the blood–brain barrier. In addition, fingolimod has recently been introduced as the first oral treatment for multiple sclerosis. In cultured neurons, fingolimod increases BDNF levels and counteracts NMDA-induced neuronal death in a BDNF-dependent manner. Ongoing synaptic activity and MAPK signaling is required for fingolimod-induced BDNF increase, a pathway that can also be activated in vivo by systemic fingolimod administration. Mice lacking Mecp2, a gene frequently mutated in Rett syndrome, show decreased levels of BDNF, and fingolimod administration was found to partially rescue these levels as well as the size of the striatum, a volumetric sensor of BDNF signaling in rodents. These changes correlate with increased locomotor activity of the Mecp2 -deficient animals, suggesting that fingolimod may improve the functional output of the nervous system, in addition to its well-documented effects on lymphocyte egress from lymph nodes.
Journal Article
Optochemical control of slow-wave sleep in the nucleus accumbens of male mice by a photoactivatable allosteric modulator of adenosine A2A receptors
2024
Optochemistry, an emerging pharmacologic approach in which light is used to selectively activate or deactivate molecules, has the potential to alleviate symptoms, cure diseases, and improve quality of life while preventing uncontrolled drug effects. The development of in-vivo applications for optochemistry to render brain cells photoresponsive without relying on genetic engineering has been progressing slowly. The nucleus accumbens (NAc) is a region for the regulation of slow-wave sleep (SWS) through the integration of motivational stimuli. Adenosine emerges as a promising candidate molecule for activating indirect pathway neurons of the NAc expressing adenosine A
2A
receptors (A
2A
Rs) to induce SWS. Here, we developed a brain-permeable positive allosteric modulator of A
2A
Rs (A
2A
R PAM) that can be rapidly photoactivated with visible light (λ > 400 nm) and used it optoallosterically to induce SWS in the NAc of freely behaving male mice by increasing the activity of extracellular adenosine derived from astrocytic and neuronal activity.
The nucleus accumbens integrates sleep and motivation in mice. Here, the authors show sleep induction by increasing the activity of extracellular adenosine from astrocytes and neurons at A
2A
receptors with a photoactivatable allosteric modulator.
Journal Article
Structure of cortical network activity across natural wake and sleep states in mice
by
Makino, Yuichi
,
Muramoto, Hiroki
,
Vogt, Kaspar E.
in
Biology and Life Sciences
,
Bursting
,
Calcium
2020
Cortical neurons fire intermittently and synchronously during non-rapid eye movement sleep (NREMS), in which active and silent periods are referred to as ON and OFF periods, respectively. Neuronal firing rates during ON periods (NREMS-ON-activity) are similar to those of wakefulness (W-activity), raising the possibility that NREMS-ON neuronal-activity is fragmented W-activity. To test this, we investigated the patterning and organization of cortical spike trains and of spike ensembles in neuronal networks using extracellular recordings in mice. Firing rates of neurons during NREMS-ON and W were similar, but showed enhanced bursting in NREMS with no apparent preference in occurrence, relative to the beginning or end of the on-state. Additionally, there was an overall increase in the randomness of occurrence of sequences comprised of multi-neuron ensembles in NREMS recorded from tetrodes. In association with increased burst firing, somatic calcium transients were increased in NREMS. The increased calcium transients associated with bursting during NREM may activate calcium-dependent, cell-signaling pathways for sleep related cellular processes.
Journal Article
Transient reactivation of small ensembles of adult-born neurons during REM sleep supports memory consolidation in mice
2025
While memory consolidation is widely believed to require memory reactivation synchronized with theta oscillations during REM sleep, direct causal evidence linking specific neuronal ensembles to this process has been lacking. Strong theta oscillations arise in the hippocampal dentate gyrus, where a small population of principal neurons is continuously generated throughout adulthood. Although these adult-born neurons (ABNs) are known to modulate hippocampal circuits for memory, the causality between their specific information content and memory-related behavior was unknown. Here, we show that REM sleep reactivation of memory ensembles comprising as few as ~3 ABNs is necessary for fear memory consolidation. Crucially, we found that the synchronization of ABN activity with a specific theta phase is essential for associative memory consolidation. Our findings thus provide causal evidence that consolidation critically depends on both the reactivation of minimal neuronal populations and precise neuronal coordination within theta-defined temporal windows.
This study shows that fear memory formation is supported by reactivating as few as three new neurons during sleep. The key is precise timing: the neurons must fire in sync with specific brain waves (theta waves) to lock the memory in place.
Journal Article
Hypnotic effect of thalidomide is independent of teratogenic ubiquitin/proteasome pathway
by
Vogt, Kaspar E.
,
Handa, Hiroshi
,
Kitazono, Tomohiro
in
Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing - metabolism
,
Anesthetics
,
Animals
2020
Thalidomide exerts its teratogenic and immunomodulatory effects by binding to cereblon (CRBN) and thereby inhibiting/modifying the CRBN-mediated ubiquitination pathway consisting of the Cullin4-DDB1-ROC1 E3 ligase complex. The mechanism of thalidomide’s classical hypnotic effect remains largely unexplored, however. Here we examined whether CRBN is involved in the hypnotic effect of thalidomide by generating mice harboring a thalidomide-resistant mutant allele of Crbn (Crbn YW/AA knock-in mice). Thalidomide increased non-REM sleep time in Crbn YW/AA knock-in homozygotes and heterozygotes to a similar degree as seen in wild-type littermates. Thalidomide similarly depressed excitatory synaptic transmission in the cortical slices obtained from wild-type and Crbn YW/AA homozygous knock-in mice without affecting GABAergic inhibition. Thalidomide induced Fos expression in vasopressin-containing neurons of the supraoptic nucleus and reduced Fos expression in the tuberomammillary nuclei. Thus, thalidomide’s hypnotic effect seems to share some downstream mechanisms with general anesthetics and GABAA-activating sedatives but does not involve the teratogenic CRBN-mediated ubiquitin/proteasome pathway.
Journal Article
Nonpeptide orexin type-2 receptor agonist ameliorates narcolepsy-cataplexy symptoms in mouse models
by
Sakurai, Takeshi
,
Tominaga, Hiromu
,
Ishikawa, Yukiko
in
Animal models
,
Animals
,
Biological Sciences
2017
Narcolepsy-cataplexy is a debilitating disorder of sleep/wakefulness caused by a loss of orexin-producing neurons in the lateroposterior hypothalamus. Genetic or pharmacologic orexin replacement ameliorates symptoms in mouse models of narcolepsy-cataplexy. We have recently discovered a potent, nonpeptide OX2R-selective agonist, YNT-185. This study validates the pharmacological activity of this compound in OX2R-transfected cells and in OX2R-expressing neurons in brain slice preparations. Intraperitoneal, and intracerebroventricular, administration of YNT-185 suppressed cataplexy-like episodes in orexin knockout and orexin neuron-ablatedmice, but not in orexin receptor-deficient mice. Peripherally administered YNT- 185 also promotes wakefulness without affecting body temperature in wild-type mice. Further, there was no immediate rebound sleep after YNT-185 administration in active phase in wild-type and orexin-deficient mice. No desensitization was observed after repeated administration of YNT-185 with respect to the suppression of cataplexy-like episodes. These results provide a proof-of-concept for a mechanistic therapy of narcolepsy-cataplexy by OX2R agonists.
Journal Article
The calcium sensor Copine-6 regulates spine structural plasticity and learning and memory
2016
Hippocampal long-term potentiation (LTP) represents the cellular response of excitatory synapses to specific patterns of high neuronal activity and is required for learning and memory. Here we identify a mechanism that requires the calcium-binding protein Copine-6 to translate the initial calcium signals into changes in spine structure. We show that Copine-6 is recruited from the cytosol of dendrites to postsynaptic spine membranes by calcium transients that precede LTP.
Cpne6
knockout mice are deficient in hippocampal LTP, learning and memory. Hippocampal neurons from
Cpne6
knockouts lack spine structural plasticity as do wild-type neurons that express a Copine-6 calcium mutant. The function of Copine-6 is based on its binding, activating and recruiting the Rho GTPase Rac1 to cell membranes. Consistent with this function, the LTP deficit of
Cpne6
knockout mice is rescued by the actin stabilizer jasplakinolide. These data show that Copine-6 links activity-triggered calcium signals to spine structural plasticity necessary for learning and memory.
Learning and memory depend on the structural and functional plasticity of synapses. Reinhard
et al
. show that the calcium sensor Copine-6 is required for memory, controls spine structure by regulating Rac signalling, and through its modulation of actin, supports hippocampal LTP.
Journal Article
Shared Synaptic Pathophysiology in Syndromic and Nonsyndromic Rodent Models of Autism
2012
The genetic heterogeneity of autism poses a major challenge for identifying mechanism-based treatments. A number of rare mutations are associated with autism, and it is unclear whether these result in common neuronal alterations. Monogenic syndromes, such as fragile X, include autism as one of their multifaceted symptoms and have revealed specific defects in synaptic plasticity. We discovered an unexpected convergence of synaptic pathophysiology in a nonsyndromic form of autism with those in fragile X syndrome. Neuroligin-3 knockout mice (a model for nonsyndromic autism) exhibited disrupted heterosynaptic competition and perturbed metabotropic glutamate receptor—dependent synaptic plasticity, a hallmark of fragile X. These phenotypes could be rescued by reexpression of neuroligin-3 in juvenile mice, highlighting the possibility of reverting neuronal circuit alterations in autism after the completion of development.
Journal Article
Hippocampal Feedforward Inhibition Focuses Excitatory Synaptic Signals into Distinct Dendritic Compartments
by
Willadt, Silvia
,
Nenniger, Markus
,
Vogt, Kaspar E.
in
Animals
,
Bicuculline
,
Bicuculline - pharmacology
2013
Feedforward inhibition controls the time window for synaptic integration and ensures temporal precision in cortical circuits. There is little information whether feedforward inhibition affects neurons uniformly, or whether it contributes to computational refinement within the dendritic tree. Here we demonstrate that feedforward inhibition crucially shapes the integration of synaptic signals in pyramidal cell dendrites. Using voltage-sensitive dye imaging we studied the transmembrane voltage patterns in CA1 pyramidal neurons after Schaffer collateral stimulation in acute brain slices from mice. We observed a high degree of variability in the excitation-inhibition ratio between different branches of the dendritic tree. Many dendritic segments showed no depolarizing signal at all, especially the basal dendrites that received predominantly inhibitory signals. Application of the GABA(A) receptor antagonist bicuculline resulted in the spread of depolarizing signals throughout the dendritic tree. Tetanic stimulation of Schaffer collateral inputs induced significant alterations in the patterns of excitation/inhibition, indicating that they are modified by synaptic plasticity. In summary, we show that feedforward inhibition restricts the occurrence of depolarizing signals within the dendritic tree of CA1 pyramidal neurons and thus refines signal integration spatially.
Journal Article