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Publication : Alterations in a cross-hemispheric circuit associates with novelty discrimination deficits in mouse models of neurodegeneration.

First Author  Adaikkan C Year  2022
Journal  Neuron Volume  110
Issue  19 Pages  3091-3105.e9
PubMed ID  35987206 Mgi Jnum  J:329976
Mgi Id  MGI:7355965 Doi  10.1016/j.neuron.2022.07.023
Citation  Adaikkan C, et al. (2022) Alterations in a cross-hemispheric circuit associates with novelty discrimination deficits in mouse models of neurodegeneration. Neuron 110(19):3091-3105.e9
abstractText  A major pathological hallmark of neurodegenerative diseases, including Alzheimer's, is a significant reduction in the white matter connecting the two cerebral hemispheres, as well as in the correlated activity between anatomically corresponding bilateral brain areas. However, the underlying circuit mechanisms and the cognitive relevance of cross-hemispheric (CH) communication remain poorly understood. Here, we show that novelty discrimination behavior activates CH neurons and enhances homotopic synchronized neural oscillations in the visual cortex. CH neurons provide excitatory drive required for synchronous neural oscillations between hemispheres, and unilateral inhibition of the CH circuit is sufficient to impair synchronous oscillations and novelty discrimination behavior. In the 5XFAD and Tau P301S mouse models, CH communication is altered, and novelty discrimination is impaired. These data reveal a hitherto uncharacterized CH circuit in the visual cortex, establishing a causal link between this circuit and novelty discrimination behavior and highlighting its impairment in mouse models of neurodegeneration.
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