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Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences

Immune Evasion By Rabies Viruses Through The Maintenance Of Blood-Brain Barrier Integrity., Anirban Roy, Douglas C. Hooper Oct 2008

Immune Evasion By Rabies Viruses Through The Maintenance Of Blood-Brain Barrier Integrity., Anirban Roy, Douglas C. Hooper

Department of Cancer Biology Faculty Papers

The attenuated rabies virus (RV) strain Challenge Virus Standard (CVS)-F3 and a highly pathogenic strain associated with the silver-haired bats (SHBRV) can both be cleared from the central nervous system (CNS) tissues by appropriate antiviral immune mechanisms if the effectors are provided access across the blood-brain barrier (BBB). In the case of SHBRV infection, antiviral immunity develops normally in the periphery but fails to open the BBB, generally resulting in a lethal outcome. To determine whether or not an absence in the CNS targeted immune response is associated with the infection with other pathogenic RV strains, we have assessed the …


Investigating The Complexity Of Respiratory Patterns During The Laryngeal Chemoreflex, Andrei Dragomir, Yasemin Akay, Aidan K. Curran, Metin Akay Jun 2008

Investigating The Complexity Of Respiratory Patterns During The Laryngeal Chemoreflex, Andrei Dragomir, Yasemin Akay, Aidan K. Curran, Metin Akay

Dartmouth Scholarship

The laryngeal chemoreflex exists in infants as a primary sensory mechanism for defending the airway from the aspiration of liquids. Previous studies have hypothesized that prolonged apnea associated with this reflex may be life threatening and might be a cause of sudden infant death syndrome. In this study we quantified the output of the respiratory neural network, the diaphragm EMG signal, during the laryngeal chemoreflex and eupnea in early postnatal (3–10 days) piglets. We tested the hypothesis that diaphragm EMG activity corresponding to reflex-related events involved in clearance (restorative) mechanisms such as cough and swallow exhibit lower complexity, suggesting that …


Abeta42 Mutants With Different Aggregation Profiles Induce Distinct Pathologies In Drosophila., Koichi Iijima, Hsueh-Cheng Chiang, Stephen A Hearn, Inessa Hakker, Anthony Gatt, Christopher Shenton, Linda Granger, Amy Leung, Kanae Iijima-Ando, Yi Zhong Feb 2008

Abeta42 Mutants With Different Aggregation Profiles Induce Distinct Pathologies In Drosophila., Koichi Iijima, Hsueh-Cheng Chiang, Stephen A Hearn, Inessa Hakker, Anthony Gatt, Christopher Shenton, Linda Granger, Amy Leung, Kanae Iijima-Ando, Yi Zhong

Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Faculty Papers

Aggregation of the amyloid-beta-42 (Abeta42) peptide in the brain parenchyma is a pathological hallmark of Alzheimer's disease (AD), and the prevention of Abeta aggregation has been proposed as a therapeutic intervention in AD. However, recent reports indicate that Abeta can form several different prefibrillar and fibrillar aggregates and that each aggregate may confer different pathogenic effects, suggesting that manipulation of Abeta42 aggregation may not only quantitatively but also qualitatively modify brain pathology. Here, we compare the pathogenicity of human Abeta42 mutants with differing tendencies to aggregate. We examined the aggregation-prone, EOFAD-related Arctic mutation (Abeta42Arc) and an artificial mutation (Abeta42art) that …


Trk: A Neuromodulator Of Age-Specific Behavioral And Neurochemical Responses To Cocaine In Mice., Michelle Niculescu, Shane A Perrine, Jonathan S Miller, Michelle E Ehrlich, Ellen M Unterwald Jan 2008

Trk: A Neuromodulator Of Age-Specific Behavioral And Neurochemical Responses To Cocaine In Mice., Michelle Niculescu, Shane A Perrine, Jonathan S Miller, Michelle E Ehrlich, Ellen M Unterwald

Farber Institute for Neuroscience Faculty Papers

Responses to psychostimulants vary with age, but the molecular etiologies of these differences are largely unknown. The goal of the present research was to identify age-specific behavioral and molecular adaptations to cocaine and to elucidate the mechanisms involved therein. Postweanling, periadolescent, and adult male CD-1 mice were exposed to cocaine (20 mg/kg) for 7 d. The rewarding effects of cocaine were assessed, as were the response to a Trk antagonist and the regulation of dopamine and cAMP-regulated phosphoprotein, 32 kDa (DARPP-32). Cocaine was rewarding in both periadolescent and adult mice using a conditioned place preference procedure. In contrast, postweanling mice …