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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: neuronal + fly + rewire  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)

Fine-tuning sense of smell helps fruit flies find their mates
Newspost Online, India - Aug 1, 2008
... neurons tuned to pheromones using molecular biological techniques they found that the fly neural system failed to adjust to chemical overloads. ...
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Dr. Katharine Sepp and her fellow researchers took fresh neuronal cells extracted from embryos of the fruit fly genus Drosophila and screened them using RNA ...
Basics: Sonic Hedgehog
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One difference: This is a diagram of a fly cell, and the fly homolog of GLI is a gene called Cubitus interruptus, or CI, which is modified in two different ...
Feeling sleepy during the day? You can blame it on your genes
Livemint, India - Jul 17, 2008
?If sleep can be studied in the fruit fly, it will be greatly valuable for understanding sleep in humans as many neuronal circuits and mechanisms are ...
Cutting-Edge Care
RedOrbit, TX - Aug 4, 2008
The treatment machine and the treatment planning system are integrated and incorporated into one, helping us make changes on the fly. ...
Scientists Reduce Alzheimer's-like Plaques In Fly Brain
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By Robert Wall and Douglas Barrie Britain's Taranis unmanned combat air vehicle demonstrator will fly in 2010, with the French-led Neuron to follow in 2011. ...
Scientists uncover types of genes necessary for brain development
Fresh News, India - Jul 8, 2008
Lead researcher Dr. Katharine Sepp and her colleagues first screened fresh neuronal cells extracted from embryos of the fruit fly genus Drosophila using RNA ...
Probing Question: Fishhooks of addiction
Penn State Live, PA - Jul 16, 2008
Normal, healthy brain communication occurs when a neuron sends an electrical signal from the cell body through its branching dendrites to the neuron?s ...
Full Text
Science Magazine (subscription) - Jul 17, 2008
"They were basically dead on their little fruit fly feet." That was in the late 1990s. The experiments by Hendricks and her colleagues led to the first ...
Source: Google News

STEM CELLS: PTEN--Coupling Tumor Suppression to Stem Cells? -
JM Penninger, J Woodgett - Science, 2001 - sciencemag.org
... loss of PTEN in tumors might rewire differentiated cells ... mice develop macrocephaly
and perturbed neuronal patterning, so ... The humble fruit fly has proved to be ...

Olfactory Shifts Parallel Superspecialism for Toxic Fruit in Drosophila melanogaster Sibling, D. … -
T Dekker, I Ibba, KP Siju, MC Stensmyr, BS Hansson - Current Biology, 2006 - Elsevier
... expression [2] from the ?lost? ab2B neuron to ab1A ... to the fitness of the fly and
permissible ... project to their ?cognate? glomeruli or rewire to arborize ...

Surprises from Drosophila: genetic mechanisms of synaptic development and plasticity -
DE Featherstone, K Broadie - Brain Research Bulletin, 2000 - Elsevier
... wire us up?, and subsequently ?rewire us? in ... and techniques for manipulating the
fly genome, which ... cellular processes such as neuronal differentiation [13 ...

New Chemical Lows in Brain Surveillance -
I Amato - Chemical & engineering news, 2006 - pubs3.acs.org
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homogenized fruit fly heads for ... from the end of a single neuron, the brain is ...
-

Genome-wide P-element screen for Drosophila synaptogenesis mutants -
FL Liebl, KM Werner, Q Sheng, JE Karr, BD McCabe, … - J Neurobiol, 2006 - doi.wiley.com
... themselves up,?? and then ??rewire?? during development ... of transposon insertions
for fly NMJ mutants. ... recognize all Drosophila neuronal mem- branes ...

Invertebrate models for studying NO-mediated signaling -
NL Scholz, JW Truman - Handbook of chemical neuroanatomy, 2000 - books.google.com
... For example, in the fly visual system the first ... The DG neuron falls silent, and the
GM cells ... Therefore, NO-releasing inputs can functionally rewire an active ...

Cell Communication -
JD Scott, T Pawson - Scientific American, 2000 - sciamdigital.com
... highlighted in the larg- er nerve cell (neuron) in this ... diagram),operates in cells
of the fruit-fly eye ? a ... we may un- cover ways to ?rewire? cells when ...

Cell Communication: The lnside Story -
JD SCOTT, T PAWSON - Evolution: A Scientific American Reader, 2006 - books.google.com
... In nerve tissue, signals pass from one neuron to another at ... The eye of a fruit fly
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Identification of major classes of cholinergic neurons in the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans. -
JS Duerr, HP Han, SD Fields, JB Rand - THE JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE NEUROLOGY, 2008 - doi.wiley.com
... The third embryonic motor neuron class is the DD neurons; they initially innervate
ventral muscle and subsequently rewire to innervate dorsal muscle (White et ...

[BOOK] The Teen Brain Book: Who & What Are You?
DB Carlson, D Carlson, N Teasdale - 2004 - books.google.com
... the ways your self is hurting you, and rewiring your pat ... is the ability of a teenager
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Source: Google Scholar

Neuronal circuits able to rewire on the fly to sharpen senses

Mechanism of 'dynamic connectivity' described for first time by Carnegie Mellon, Pitt Researchers

PITTSBURGH— Researchers from the Center for the Neural Basis of Cognition (CNBC), a joint project of Carnegie Mellon University and the University of Pittsburgh, have for the first time described a mechanism called “dynamic connectivity,” in which neuronal circuits are rewired “on the fly” allowing stimuli to be more keenly sensed. The process is described in a paper in the January 2008 issue of Nature Neuroscience, and available online at http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nn2030.

This new, biologically inspired algorithm for analyzing the brain at work allows scientists to explain why when we notice a scent, the brain can quickly sort through input and determine exactly what that smell is.

“If you think of the brain like a computer, then the connections between neurons are like the software that the brain is running. Our work shows that this biological software is changed rapidly as a function of the kind of input that the system receives,” said Nathan Urban, associate professor of biological sciences at Carnegie Mellon.

When a stimulus such as an odor is encountered, many neurons start to fire. When many neurons fire at the same time, the signals can be difficult for the brain to interpret. During lateral inhibition, the stimulated neurons send “cease-fire” messages to the neighboring neurons, reducing the noise and making it easier to precisely identify a stimulus. This process also facilitates accurate recognition of stimuli in many sensory areas of the brain.

In this project, Urban and colleagues specifically examine the process of lateral inhibition in an area of the brain called the olfactory bulb, which is responsible for processing scents. Until now, scientists thought that the connections made by the neurons in the olfactory bulb were dictated by anatomy and could only change slowly.

However, in this current study, Urban and colleagues found that the connections are, in fact, not set but rather able to change dynamically in response to specific patterns of stimuli. In their experiments, they found that when excitatory neurons in the olfactory bulb fire in a correlated fashion, this determines how they are functionally connected.

The researchers showed that dynamic connectivity allows lateral inhibition to be enhanced when a large number of neurons initially respond to a stimulus, filtering out noise from other neurons. By filtering out the noise, the stimulus can be more clearly recognized and separated from other similar stimuli.

“This mechanism helps to explain why you can walk into a room and recognize a smell that seems to be floral. As you continue to smell the odor, you begin to recognize that the scent is indeed flowers and even more specifically is the scent of roses,” Urban said. “By understanding how the brain does this, we can then apply this mechanism to other problems faced by the brain.”

Researchers converted this mechanism into an algorithm and used computer modeling to further show that dynamic connectivity makes it easier to identify and discriminate between stimuli by enhancing the contrast, or sharpness, of the stimuli, independent of the spatial patterns of the active neurons. This algorithm allows researchers to show the applicability of the mechanism in other areas of the brain where similar inhibitory connections are widespread. For example, the researchers applied the algorithm to a blurry picture and the picture appeared refined and in sharper contrast (see figure).

###

Coauthors of the study include Armen Arevian, a graduate student in the Center for Neuroscience at the University of Pittsburgh, and Vikrant Kapoor, a biological sciences graduate student at Carnegie Mellon. The study was funded through grants from the National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders, and the National Science Foundation.

About Carnegie Mellon: Carnegie Mellon is a private research university with a distinctive mix of programs in engineering, computer science, robotics, business, public policy, fine arts and the humanities. More than 10,000 undergraduate and graduate students receive an education characterized by its focus on creating and implementing solutions for real problems, interdisciplinary collaboration, and innovation. A small student-to-faculty ratio provides an opportunity for close interaction between students and professors. While technology is pervasive on its 144-acre Pittsburgh campus, Carnegie Mellon is also distinctive among leading research universities for the world-renowned programs in its College of Fine Arts. A global university, Carnegie Mellon has campuses in Silicon Valley, Calif., and Qatar, and programs in Asia, Australia and Europe. For more, see www.cmu.edu.

 
 
 
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