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Washington University School of Medicine

Series

2020

Brain

Articles 1 - 11 of 11

Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences

Functional Genomic Analyses Uncover Apoe-Mediated Regulation Of Brain And Cerebrospinal Fluid Beta-Amyloid Levels In Parkinson Disease, Laura Ibanez, Jorge A Bahena, Chengran Yang, Umber Dube, Fabiana H G Farias, John P Budde, Kristy Bergmann, Carol Brenner-Webster, John C Morris, Richard J Perrin, Nigel J Cairns, John O'Donnell, Rebecca Miller, Albert A Davis, Paul Kotzbauer, Meghan C Campbell, Joel S Perlmutter, Oscar Harari, Carlos Cruchaga, Bruno A Benitez, Et Al. Nov 2020

Functional Genomic Analyses Uncover Apoe-Mediated Regulation Of Brain And Cerebrospinal Fluid Beta-Amyloid Levels In Parkinson Disease, Laura Ibanez, Jorge A Bahena, Chengran Yang, Umber Dube, Fabiana H G Farias, John P Budde, Kristy Bergmann, Carol Brenner-Webster, John C Morris, Richard J Perrin, Nigel J Cairns, John O'Donnell, Rebecca Miller, Albert A Davis, Paul Kotzbauer, Meghan C Campbell, Joel S Perlmutter, Oscar Harari, Carlos Cruchaga, Bruno A Benitez, Et Al.

2020-Current year OA Pubs

Alpha-synuclein is the main protein component of Lewy bodies, the pathological hallmark of Parkinson's disease. However, genetic modifiers of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) alpha-synuclein levels remain unknown. The use of CSF levels of amyloid beta


Non-Negative Data-Driven Mapping Of Structural Connections With Application To The Neonatal Brain, E Thompson, A R Mohammadi-Nejad, E C Robinson, J L R Andersson, S Jbabdi, M F Glasser, M Bastiani, S N Sotiropoulos Nov 2020

Non-Negative Data-Driven Mapping Of Structural Connections With Application To The Neonatal Brain, E Thompson, A R Mohammadi-Nejad, E C Robinson, J L R Andersson, S Jbabdi, M F Glasser, M Bastiani, S N Sotiropoulos

2020-Current year OA Pubs

Mapping connections in the neonatal brain can provide insight into the crucial early stages of neurodevelopment that shape brain organisation and lay the foundations for cognition and behaviour. Diffusion MRI and tractography provide unique opportunities for such explorations, through estimation of white matter bundles and brain connectivity. Atlas-based tractography protocols, i.e. a priori defined sets of masks and logical operations in a template space, have been commonly used in the adult brain to drive such explorations. However, rapid growth and maturation of the brain during early development make it challenging to ensure correspondence and validity of such atlas-based tractography approaches …


Geff: Graph Embedding For Functional Fingerprinting, Kausar Abbas, Enrico Amico, Diana Otero Svaldi, Uttara Tipnis, Duy Anh Duong-Tran, Mintao Liu, Meenusree Rajapandian, Jaroslaw Harezlak, Beau M Ances, Joaquín Goñi Nov 2020

Geff: Graph Embedding For Functional Fingerprinting, Kausar Abbas, Enrico Amico, Diana Otero Svaldi, Uttara Tipnis, Duy Anh Duong-Tran, Mintao Liu, Meenusree Rajapandian, Jaroslaw Harezlak, Beau M Ances, Joaquín Goñi

2020-Current year OA Pubs

It has been well established that Functional Connectomes (FCs), as estimated from functional MRI (fMRI) data, have an individual fingerprint that can be used to identify an individual from a population (subject-identification). Although identification rate is high when using resting-state FCs, other tasks show moderate to low values. Furthermore, identification rate is task-dependent, and is low when distinct cognitive states, as captured by different fMRI tasks, are compared. Here we propose an embedding framework, GEFF (Graph Embedding for Functional Fingerprinting), based on group-level decomposition of FCs into eigenvectors. GEFF creates an eigenspace representation of a group of subjects using one …


Brain Function Distinguishes Female Carriers And Non-Carriers Of Familial Risk For Autism, Adam T Eggebrecht, Ally Dworetsky, Zoë Hawks, Rebecca Coalson, Babatunde Adeyemo, Savannah Davis, Daniel Gray, Alana Mcmichael, Steven E Petersen, John N Constantino, John R Pruett Oct 2020

Brain Function Distinguishes Female Carriers And Non-Carriers Of Familial Risk For Autism, Adam T Eggebrecht, Ally Dworetsky, Zoë Hawks, Rebecca Coalson, Babatunde Adeyemo, Savannah Davis, Daniel Gray, Alana Mcmichael, Steven E Petersen, John N Constantino, John R Pruett

2020-Current year OA Pubs

BACKGROUND: Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is characterized by high population-level heritability and a three-to-one male-to-female ratio that occurs independent of sex linkage. Prior research in a mixed-sex pediatric sample identified neural signatures of familial risk elicited by passive viewing of point light motion displays, suggesting the possibility that both resilience and risk of autism might be associated with brain responses to biological motion. To confirm a relationship between these signatures and inherited risk of autism, we tested them in families enriched for genetic loading through undiagnosed ("carrier") females.

METHODS: Using functional magnetic resonance imaging, we examined brain responses to passive …


Regional Correlation Of Biochemical Measures Of Amyloid And Tau Phosphorylation In The Brain, Kanta Horie, Nicolas R Barthélemy, Nipun Mallipeddi, Yan Li, Erin E Franklin, Richard J Perrin, Randall J Bateman, Chihiro Sato Aug 2020

Regional Correlation Of Biochemical Measures Of Amyloid And Tau Phosphorylation In The Brain, Kanta Horie, Nicolas R Barthélemy, Nipun Mallipeddi, Yan Li, Erin E Franklin, Richard J Perrin, Randall J Bateman, Chihiro Sato

2020-Current year OA Pubs

Alzheimer's disease (AD) neuropathologic change is characterized by amyloid plaques and neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs) that consist of aggregated amyloid beta (Abeta) and hyperphosphorylated tau proteins (p-tau), respectively. Although the global relationship between Abeta and p-tau has been studied for decades, it is still unclear whether a regional correlation exists between Abeta and p-tau in the human brain. Recent studies in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) have suggested that tau phosphorylation at specific sites such as T217 is modified at an early stage of AD when amyloid plaques become detectable. We applied biochemical and mass spectrometry methods in human brain samples with and …


Enantiomerically Pure Quinoline-Based Κ-Opioid Receptor Agonists: Chemoenzymatic Synthesis And Pharmacological Evaluation, Benedikt Martin, Dirk Schepmann, Freddy A Bernal, Thomas J Schmidt, Tao Che, Karin Loser, Bernhard Wünsch Aug 2020

Enantiomerically Pure Quinoline-Based Κ-Opioid Receptor Agonists: Chemoenzymatic Synthesis And Pharmacological Evaluation, Benedikt Martin, Dirk Schepmann, Freddy A Bernal, Thomas J Schmidt, Tao Che, Karin Loser, Bernhard Wünsch

2020-Current year OA Pubs

Racemic


Towards Hcp-Style Macaque Connectomes: 24-Channel 3t Multi-Array Coil, Mri Sequences And Preprocessing, Joonas A. Autio, Matthew F. Glasser, Chad J. Donahue, Timothy S. Coalson, David C. Van Essen, Et Al. Jul 2020

Towards Hcp-Style Macaque Connectomes: 24-Channel 3t Multi-Array Coil, Mri Sequences And Preprocessing, Joonas A. Autio, Matthew F. Glasser, Chad J. Donahue, Timothy S. Coalson, David C. Van Essen, Et Al.

2020-Current year OA Pubs

Macaque monkeys are an important animal model where invasive investigations can lead to a better understanding of the cortical organization of primates including humans. However, the tools and methods for noninvasive image acquisition (e.g. MRI RF coils and pulse sequence protocols) and image data preprocessing have lagged behind those developed for humans. To resolve the structural and functional characteristics of the smaller macaque brain, high spatial, temporal, and angular resolutions combined with high signal-to-noise ratio are required to ensure good image quality. To address these challenges, we developed a macaque 24-channel receive coil for 3-T MRI with parallel imaging capabilities. …


Portable, Field-Based Neuroimaging Using High-Density Diffuse Optical Tomography, Andrew K. Fishell, Ana María Arbeláez, Claudia P. Valdés, Tracy N. Burns-Yocum, Arefeh Sherafati, Edward J. Richter, Margarita Torres, Adam T. Eggebrecht, Christopher D. Smyser, Joseph P. Culver Jul 2020

Portable, Field-Based Neuroimaging Using High-Density Diffuse Optical Tomography, Andrew K. Fishell, Ana María Arbeláez, Claudia P. Valdés, Tracy N. Burns-Yocum, Arefeh Sherafati, Edward J. Richter, Margarita Torres, Adam T. Eggebrecht, Christopher D. Smyser, Joseph P. Culver

2020-Current year OA Pubs

Behavioral and cognitive tests in individuals who were malnourished as children have revealed malnutrition-related deficits that persist throughout the lifespan. These findings have motivated recent neuroimaging investigations that use highly portable functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) instruments to meet the demands of brain imaging experiments in low-resource environments and enable longitudinal investigations of brain function in the context of long-term malnutrition. However, recent studies in healthy subjects have demonstrated that high-density diffuse optical tomography (HD-DOT) can significantly improve image quality over that obtained with sparse fNIRS imaging arrays. In studies of both task activations and resting state functional connectivity, HD-DOT is …


Test-Retest Reliability Of Fmri-Measured Brain Activity During Decision Making Under Risk, Ozlem Korucuoglu, Michael P. Harms, Serguei V. Astafiev, James T. Kennedy, Semyon Golosheykin, Deanna M. Barch, Andrey P. Anokhin Jul 2020

Test-Retest Reliability Of Fmri-Measured Brain Activity During Decision Making Under Risk, Ozlem Korucuoglu, Michael P. Harms, Serguei V. Astafiev, James T. Kennedy, Semyon Golosheykin, Deanna M. Barch, Andrey P. Anokhin

2020-Current year OA Pubs

Neural correlates of decision making under risk are being increasingly utilized as biomarkers of risk for substance abuse and other psychiatric disorders, treatment outcomes, and brain development. This research relies on the basic assumption that fMRI measures of decision making represent stable, trait-like individual differences. However, reliability needs to be established for each individual construct. Here we assessed long-term test-retest reliability (TRR) of regional brain activations related to decision making under risk using the Balloon Analogue Risk Taking task (BART) and identified regions with good TRRs and familial influences, an important prerequisite for the use of fMRI measures in genetic …


Epigenomic Programming In Early Fetal Brain Development, Luolan Li, Ting Wang, Et Al Jun 2020

Epigenomic Programming In Early Fetal Brain Development, Luolan Li, Ting Wang, Et Al

2020-Current year OA Pubs

No abstract provided.


The Wrinkling Of Time: Aging, Inflammation, Oxidative Stress, And The Circadian Clock In Neurodegeneration, Brian V Lananna, Erik S Musiek Jun 2020

The Wrinkling Of Time: Aging, Inflammation, Oxidative Stress, And The Circadian Clock In Neurodegeneration, Brian V Lananna, Erik S Musiek

2020-Current year OA Pubs

A substantial body of research now implicates the circadian clock in the regulation of an array of diverse biological processes including glial function, metabolism, peripheral immune responses, and redox homeostasis. Sleep abnormalities and other forms of circadian disruption are common symptoms of aging and neurodegeneration. Circadian clock disruption may also influence the aging processes and the pathogenesis of neurodegenerative diseases. The specific mechanisms governing the interaction between circadian systems, aging, and the immune system are still being uncovered. Here, we review the evidence supporting a bidirectional relationship between aging and the circadian system. Further, we explore the hypothesis that age-related …