Allison

125 posts · 47,007 views

Dormivigilia
125 posts

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  • April 26, 2011
  • 07:00 PM
  • 703 views

Epigenetics of Cocaine and Alcohol Addiction

by Allison in Dormivigilia

Addiction researchers have discovered that long-term cocaine or alcohol abuse results in structural changes to histones and mitochondria. The severity of these changes are worse for cocaine addicts. ... Read more »

  • April 7, 2011
  • 09:37 PM
  • 672 views

Neury Thursday: Prior Drinking History Modulates Cell Signaling

by Allison in Dormivigilia

Alcohol researchers have uncovered residual ethanol-induced changes in molecular signaling cascades, which possibly, could provide pharmacologists with an abundance of novel therapeutic targets for alcohol and other drug addictions.... Read more »

Brian E. Bernier, Leslie R. Whitaker, and Hitoshi Morikawa. (2011) Previous Ethanol Experience Enhances Synaptic Plasticity of NMDA Receptors in the Ventral Tegmental Area. Journal of Neuroscience. info:/

  • March 9, 2011
  • 11:25 AM
  • 631 views

The Dark Side of Sleep's Benefits for the Consolidation of Episodic Memories

by Allison in Dormivigilia

Drug addiction researchers have observed that total sleep deprivation in rats can reduce the re-consolidation of remembering where to obtain a cocaine reward in mice
... Read more »

Shi HS, Luo YX, Xue YX, Wu P, Zhu WL, Ding ZB, & Lu L. (2011) Effects of sleep deprivation on retrieval and reconsolidation of morphine reward memory in rats. Pharmacology, biochemistry, and behavior, 98(2), 299-303. PMID: 21255602  

  • March 18, 2011
  • 07:00 PM
  • 629 views

GABA Regulation of Alcohol Intake

by Allison in Dormivigilia

Researchers at USCF have employed RNA interference techniques to determine if the delta subunit of GABA receptors within the brain's reward circuit are partially responsible for increases in ethanol intake. Indeed, they are. ... Read more »

  • March 1, 2011
  • 09:30 PM
  • 624 views

Neury Thursday: Potassium Channel Gating of the Circadian Clock

by Allison in Dormivigilia

A group of chronobiologists have uncovered that knocking down potassium-rectifier channels has deleterious effects on circadian pacemaking and behavior. ... Read more »

Takashi Kudo,1* Dawn H. Loh,1* Dika Kuljis,1 Cara Constance,2 and Christopher S. Colwell1. (2011) Fast Delayed Rectifier Potassium Current: Critical for Input and Output of the Circadian System. Journal of Neuroscience. info:/

  • March 31, 2011
  • 12:00 PM
  • 610 views

Neury Thursday: Long-Term Cocaine Use Impairs Memory

by Allison in Dormivigilia

In quite possibly one of the longest, running drug abuse experiments conducted in animals, Pittsburghian researchers have observed that providing rhesus monkeys the opportunity to self-administer cocaine four times a week over nine months has degenerative, detrimental effects on associative learning. I wonder if the same fate applies to those who are taking ADHD meds, which act through identical biochemical and neurotransmitter pathways as cocaine. ... Read more »

Jessica N. Porter,, 1,2, Adam S. Olsen,, Kate Gurnsey,, Brian P. Dugan,, Hank P. Jedema,, and Charles W. Bradberry, & 1,2,3,4,5. (2011) Chronic Cocaine Self-Administration in Rhesus Monkeys: Impact on Associative Learning, Cognitive Control, and Working Memory. Journal of Neuroscience, 31(13). info:/http://www.jneurosci.org/content/31/13/4926.full.pdf html

  • March 29, 2011
  • 09:45 PM
  • 605 views

Neury Thursday (Tuesday): Sleep Deprivation Activation of Reward Areas

by Allison in Dormivigilia

Neuroscientists at Berkeley and Harvard have observed that acute episodes of sleep deprivation concurrent with the presentation of positive-evoking stimuli are associated with hyperactivation of mesolimbic reward areas. This observation in humans lends further credence to sleep/drug addiction interactions that have been documented on numerous occasions in animal models. It may also further convince physicians to recommend sleep/circadian rhythm therapies for the treatment of drug addiction and related psychiatric symptoms.... Read more »

  • June 23, 2011
  • 04:22 PM
  • 596 views

Neury Thursday: Depressive Like Behavior and Circadian Rhythms

by Allison in Dormivigilia

Austrian neuroscientists have characterized behavioral and physiological phenotypes associated with housing under constant darkness, lending credence to the role of the circadian timing system in the etiology of psychiatric illness... Read more »

Francisco J. Monje,1 Maureen Cabatic,1 Isabella Divisch,1 Eun-Jung Kim,1,3 Kurt R. Herkner,3 Bernd R. Binder,2†, & and Daniela D. Pollak1. (2011) Constant Darkness Induces IL-6-Dependent Depression-Like Behavior through the NF-B Signaling Pathway. Journal of Neuroscience, 31(25), 9075-9083. info:/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1537-11.2011

  • March 8, 2011
  • 08:00 PM
  • 591 views

Increased Episodic Memory Performance with Sleep

by Allison in Dormivigilia

Fellow friends of mine have published about the importance of napping for improved episodic memory performance and have identified brain areas of activation during these processes and associated relationships with specific sleep architecture. Overall, their paradigm challenges previous hypotheses of the underlying sleep processes facilitating the consolidation of memories... Read more »

Mander BA, Santhanam S, Saletin JM, & Walker MP. (2011) Wake deterioration and sleep restoration of human learning. Current biology : CB, 21(5). PMID: 21377092  

  • June 2, 2011
  • 09:11 PM
  • 584 views

Neury Thursday: Slow Wave Sleep Modulation of Olfactory Activity

by Allison in Dormivigilia

Japanese neuroscientists have unmasked inconnections between sleep and olfactory systems in that slow wave sleep is concurrent with spike wave activity in the olfactory cortex and bulb. ... Read more »

Hiroyuki Manabe,1,2* Ikue Kusumoto-Yoshida,1,2* Mizuho Ota,1,2 and Kensaku Mori1,2. (2011) Olfactory Cortex Generates Synchronized Top-Down Inputs to the Olfactory Bulb during Slow-Wave Sleep. Journal of Neuroscience. info:/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.6578-10.2011

  • March 22, 2011
  • 05:00 PM
  • 583 views

Sleep Deprivation and Neuromodulation

by Allison in Dormivigilia

Researchers have identified a more specified, reciprocal relationship between the occurrence of sleep deprivation and the activation of the neuroinflammatory response. ... Read more »

  • June 6, 2011
  • 04:54 PM
  • 572 views

Were Dinosaurs Nocturnal, Diurnal, or Both?

by Allison in Dormivigilia

A recent report in Science compared eye morphologies to compare the vision type (scotopic vs. photopic vs. mesopic) and ecology (herbivore vs. predator vs. flyer) of Mesozoic archosaurs (the most notorious being the Velociraptor), suggesting intimate evolutionary links between physiological/anatomical make-ups and behavior as far back as the Mesozoic era. ... Read more »

  • July 6, 2011
  • 10:00 PM
  • 530 views

Sleep in Science

by Allison in Dormivigilia

Midwestern researchers used a Drosophila model of study to investigate the positive benefits of sleep and the deleterious effects of sleep deprivation on biological enrichment at the behavioral and neurobiological level, providing further evidence of its need (value). ... Read more »

Donlea JM, Thimgan MS, Suzuki Y, Gottschalk L, & Shaw PJ. (2011) Inducing sleep by remote control facilitates memory consolidation in Drosophila. Science (New York, N.Y.), 332(6037), 1571-6. PMID: 21700877  

Bushey D, Tononi G, & Cirelli C. (2011) Sleep and synaptic homeostasis: structural evidence in Drosophila. Science (New York, N.Y.), 332(6037), 1576-81. PMID: 21700878  

  • July 14, 2011
  • 10:11 PM
  • 507 views

Evidence for BMAL1 Regulation of Circadian Rhythms

by Allison in Dormivigilia

An eloquent study on tissue-specific regulation of circadian clock output through the utility of some bad ass molecular tools... Read more »

McDearmon EL, Patel KN, Ko CH, Walisser JA, Schook AC, Chong JL, Wilsbacher LD, Song EJ, Hong HK, Bradfield CA.... (2006) Dissecting the functions of the mammalian clock protein BMAL1 by tissue-specific rescue in mice. Science (New York, N.Y.), 314(5803), 1304-8. PMID: 17124323  

  • July 20, 2011
  • 10:00 PM
  • 499 views

Off-lining in the Awake Rodent

by Allison in Dormivigilia

Recent research has redefined electrophysiologic sleep/wake states. ... Read more »

Vyazovskiy VV, Olcese U, Hanlon EC, Nir Y, Cirelli C, & Tononi G. (2011) Local sleep in awake rats. Nature, 472(7344), 443-7. PMID: 21525926  

  • March 17, 2011
  • 03:00 PM
  • 493 views

Neury Thursday: Cocaine Withdrawal Impairs LTD

by Allison in Dormivigilia

Neuroscientists have further elucidated the molecular and cellular underlyings of cocaine addiction, which will help us develop more appropriate treatment strategies. ... Read more »

Chiung-Chun Huang,1 Che-Ming Yeh,2 Mei-Ying Wu,1 Alice Y. W. Chang,3 Julie Y. H. Chan,4 Samuel H. H. Chan,3, & and Kuei-Sen Hsu1,2. (2011) Cocaine Withdrawal Impairs Metabotropic Glutamate Receptor-Dependent Long-Term Depression in the Nucleus Accumbens. Journal of Neuroscience. info:/

  • August 3, 2011
  • 11:29 PM
  • 482 views

Newest Pub!! Acute Ethanol Impairment of Circadian Clock Output

by Allison in Dormivigilia

In my second, first-author publication, we report the deleterious effects of alcohol on adaptation (entrainment) to photic and nonphotic environmental stimuli at a behavioral, physiological, and anatomical level. Such disruption could underlie alcohol disruption to endocrine systems and physiological events, and possibly, lead to alcohol dependence. ... Read more »

Brager AJ, Ruby CL, Prosser RA, & Glass JD. (2011) Acute ethanol disrupts photic and serotonergic circadian clock phase-resetting in the mouse. Alcoholism, clinical and experimental research, 35(8), 1467-74. PMID: 21463340  

  • January 28, 2010
  • 11:00 AM
  • 468 views

Financial Risks and Reward Centers

by Allison in Dormivigilia

Stanfordian scientists have attributed age-related financial risks with differential accumbal activity. Honestly, this begs a philosophical conversation of how we can control financial risks of the elderly without jeopardizing their basic human rights.... Read more »

  • January 30, 2010
  • 11:00 AM
  • 466 views

Which [Flying] Animal Can Drink You Under the Table?

by Allison in Dormivigilia

Syrian hamsters are not the only animals that can "drink you under the table." Frugivorous fruit bats have a high tolerance for alcohol in that marked alcohol consumption does not impair flying and/or echolocation. This high alcohol tolerance, of course, is attributed to fermented fruits being a diet staple.... Read more »

Dara N. Orbach, Nina Veselka, Yvonne Dzal, Louis Lazure, M. Brock Fenton. (2010) Drinking and Flying: Does Alcohol Consumption Affect the Flight and Echolocation Performance of Phyllostomid Bats? . PLOS One, 5(2). info:/10.1371/journal.pone.0008993

  • August 25, 2011
  • 12:00 PM
  • 462 views

Neury Thursday: Immediate Reward System Tolerance to Cocaine

by Allison in Dormivigilia

A worldwide group of neuroscientists characterized immediate electrophysiologic tolerance to single-time use (injection) of cocaine. This could implicated serious consequences for those with a family history of hedonism as it would not take much to send someone, particularly with a powerful drug like cocaine, into a downward spiral of drug abuse. ... Read more »

Devinder Arora,1* Matthew Hearing,1* Desirae M. Haluk,1* Kelsey Mirkovic,1 Ana Fajardo-Serrano,3, & Martin W. Wessendorf,2 Masahiko Watanabe,4 Rafael Luja´n,3 and Kevin Wickman1. (2011) Acute Cocaine Exposure Weakens GABAB Receptor- Dependent G-Protein-Gated Inwardly Rectifying K Signaling in Dopamine Neurons of the Ventral Tegmental Area. Journal of Neuroscience. info:/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0494-11.2011

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