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Serapio Baca

smbaca@gmail.com

Journal articles

2008
 
DOI   
PMID 
Serapio M Baca, Antonia Marin-Burgin, Daniel A Wagenaar, William B Kristan (2008)  Widespread inhibition proportional to excitation controls the gain of a leech behavioral circuit.   Neuron 57: 2. 276-289 Jan  
Abstract: Changing gain in a neuronal system has important functional consequences, but the underlying mechanisms have been elusive. Models have suggested a variety of neuronal and systems properties to accomplish gain control. Here, we show that the gain of the neuronal network underlying local bending behavior in leeches depends on widespread inhibition. Using behavioral analysis, intracellular recordings, and voltage-sensitive dye imaging, we compared the effects of blocking just the known lateral inhibition with blocking all GABAergic inhibition. This revealed an additional source of inhibition, which was widespread and increased in proportion to increasing stimulus intensity. In a model of the input/output functions of the three-layered local bending network, we showed that inhibiting all interneurons in proportion to the stimulus strength produces the experimentally observed change in gain. This relatively simple mechanism for controlling behavioral gain could be prevalent in vertebrate as well as invertebrate nervous systems.
Notes:
2005
 
DOI   
PMID 
Serapio M Baca, Eric E Thomson, William B Kristan (2005)  Location and intensity discrimination in the leech local bend response quantified using optic flow and principal components analysis.   J Neurophysiol 93: 6. 3560-3572 Jun  
Abstract: In response to touches to their skin, medicinal leeches shorten their body on the side of the touch. We elicited local bends by delivering precisely controlled pressure stimuli at different locations, intensities, and durations to body-wall preparations. We video-taped the individual responses, quantifying the body-wall displacements over time using a motion-tracking algorithm based on making optic flow estimates between video frames. Using principal components analysis (PCA), we found that one to three principal components fit the behavioral data much better than did previous (cosine) measures. The amplitudes of the principal components (i.e., the principal component scores) nicely discriminated the responses to stimuli both at different locations and of different intensities. Leeches discriminated (i.e., produced distinguishable responses) between touch locations that are approximately a millimeter apart. Their ability to discriminate stimulus intensity depended on stimulus magnitude: discrimination was very acute for weak stimuli and less sensitive for stronger stimuli. In addition, increasing the stimulus duration improved the leech's ability to discriminate between stimulus intensities. Overall, the use of optic flow fields and PCA provide a powerful framework for characterizing the discrimination abilities of the leech local bend response.
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DOI   
PMID 
Antonia Marin-Burgin, F James Eisenhart, Serapio M Baca, William B Kristan, Kathleen A French (2005)  Sequential development of electrical and chemical synaptic connections generates a specific behavioral circuit in the leech.   J Neurosci 25: 10. 2478-2489 Mar  
Abstract: Neuronal circuits form during embryonic life, even before synapses are completely mature. Developmental changes can be quantitative (e.g., connections become stronger and more reliable) or qualitative (e.g., synapses form, are lost, or switch from electrical to chemical or from excitatory to inhibitory). To explore how these synaptic events contribute to behavioral circuits, we have studied the formation of a circuit that produces local bending (LB) behavior in leech embryos. This circuit is composed of three layers of neurons: mechanosensory neurons, interneurons, and motor neurons. The only inhibition in this circuit is in the motor neuron layer; it allows the animal to contract on one side while relaxing the opposite side. LB develops in two stages: initially touching the body wall causes circumferential indentation (CI), an embryonic behavior in which contraction takes place around the whole perimeter of the segment touched; one or 2 d later, the same touch elicits adult-like LB. Application of bicuculline methiodide in embryos capable of LB switched the behavior back into CI, indicating that the development of GABAergic connections turns CI into LB. Using voltage-sensitive dyes and electrophysiological recordings, we found that electrical synapses were present early and produced CI. Inhibition appeared later, shaping the circuit that was already connected by electrical synapses and producing the adult behavior, LB.
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2001
 
PMID 
B Jacobs, M Schall, M Prather, E Kapler, L Driscoll, S Baca, J Jacobs, K Ford, M Wainwright, M Treml (2001)  Regional dendritic and spine variation in human cerebral cortex: a quantitative golgi study.   Cereb Cortex 11: 6. 558-571 Jun  
Abstract: The present study explored differences in dendritic/spine extent across several human cortical regions. Specifically, the basilar dendrites/spines of supragranular pyramidal cells were examined in eight Brodmann's areas (BA) arranged according to Benson's (1993, Behav Neurol 6:75-81) functional hierarchy: primary cortex (somatosensory, BA3-1-2; motor, BA4), unimodal cortex (Wernicke's area, BA22; Broca's area, BA44), heteromodal cortex (supple- mentary motor area, BA6beta; angular gyrus, BA39) and supramodal cortex (superior frontopolar zone, BA10; inferior frontopolar zone, BA11). To capture more general aspects of regional variability, primary and unimodal areas were designated as low integrative regions; heteromodal and supramodal areas were designated as high integrative regions. Tissue was obtained from the left hemisphere of 10 neurologically normal individuals (M(age) = 30 +/- 17 years; five males, five females) and stained with a modified rapid Golgi technique. Ten neurons were sampled from each cortical region (n = 800) and evaluated according to total dendritic length, mean segment length, dendritic segment count, dendritic spine number and dendritic spine density. Despite considerable inter-individual variation, there were significant differences across the eight Brodmann's areas and between the high and low integrative regions for all dendritic and spine measures. Dendritic systems in primary and unimodal regions were consistently less complex than in heteromodal and supramodal areas. The range within these rankings was substantial, with total dendritic length in BA10 being 31% greater than that in BA3-1-2, and dendritic spine number being 69% greater. These findings demonstrate that cortical regions involved in the early stages of processing (e.g. primary sensory areas) generally exhibit less complex dendritic/spine systems than those regions involved in the later stages of information processing (e.g. prefrontal cortex). This dendritic progression appears to reflect significant differences in the nature of cortical processing, with spine-dense neurons at hierarchically higher association levels integrating a broader range of synaptic input than those at lower cortical levels.
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2000
 
PMID 
C M Bower, T M Hyde, M Zaka, E H Hamid, S M Baca, M F Egan (2000)  Decreased mu-opioid receptor binding in the globus pallidus of rats treated with chronic haloperidol.   Psychopharmacology (Berl) 150: 3. 260-263 Jun  
Abstract: RATIONALE: Chronic neuroleptic treatment produces a movement disorder in rats characterized by vacuous chewing movements (VCMs). Neuroleptics also produce a variety of changes in opioid neurotransmission in several regions of the basal ganglia. Rats with the VCM syndrome show elevated mRNA for enkephalin in striatopallidal neurons, suggesting a possible role for enkephalin in the pathophysiology of VCMs. OBJECTIVE: This study investigated the role of mu-opioid receptor density in the basal ganglia on the expression of VCMs. METHODS: Rats were treated with haloperidol for 24 weeks and withdrawn for 9 weeks. Mu (m) receptors were labeled with [3H]-DAMGO. RESULTS: Haloperidol treatment produced a significant reduction in mu-receptor binding in the globus pallidus (P<0.05). There was, however, no relationship between mu-opioid receptor density and VCMs in this or any other region of the basal ganglia. CONCLUSION: These results replicate prior findings of a neuroleptic-induced reduction in [3H]-DAMGO binding in the globus pallidus. The lack of association between VCMs and [3H]-DAMGO binding in the globus pallidus or any other region suggests that prior reports of enkephalinergic mRNA changes in the striatum are not accompanied by compensatory changes in postsynaptic neurons.
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1999
 
PMID 
C F Spurney, S M Baca, A M Murray, G E Jaskiw, J E Kleinman, T M Hyde (1999)  Differential effects of haloperidol and clozapine on ionotropic glutamate receptors in rats.   Synapse 34: 4. 266-276 Dec  
Abstract: Despite multiple lines of investigation the effect of neuroleptics on glutamate-mediated neurotransmission remains controversial. To study the effects of typical and atypical neuroleptics on selected parameters of glutamate-mediated neurotransmission, male Sprague-Dawley rats were randomly assigned to a 21-day oral treatment course with vehicle, haloperidol (HDL), or clozapine (CLZ). Coronal slices of rat brain were then incubated with tritiated ligands to measure NMDA, AMPA, and kainate receptor, and glutamate reuptake site density. Regions of interest included the frontal cortex, anterior cingulate cortex, dorsal striatum, ventral striatum, and the nucleus accumbens. CLZ increased the density of AMPA receptors significantly in the frontal and anterior cingulate cortices compared with normal controls. In the dorsal and ventral striatum, and nucleus accumbens as a whole, CLZ-treated rats had a higher AMPA receptor density compared with both the HDL- and vehicle-treated controls. Additionally, within the nucleus accumbens, CLZ-treated rats had a higher density of AMPA receptors compared with the HDL group in the core, and at trend level in the shell. There was a group by region interaction for NMDA receptor density, primarily reflecting the tendency of HDL treated rats to have high receptor densities in the frontal and anterior cingulate cortices. Kainate receptors and glutamate reuptake site densities did not differ significantly across groups. These results suggest a critical role for glutamate in the mediation of atypical antipsychotic drug action in anatomically-specific regions, and further encourage the investigation of glutamate neurotransmitter systems in schizophrenia.
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1998
 
PMID 
S M Baca, B K Lipska, M F Egan, S E Bachus, J N Ferguson, T M Hyde (1998)  Effects of prefrontal cortical lesions on neuropeptide and dopamine receptor gene expression in the striatum-accumbens complex.   Brain Res 797: 1. 55-64 Jun  
Abstract: In the rat, neurochemical, behavioral, and anatomical investigations suggest that medial prefrontal cortical input modulates the activity of the basal ganglia. To understand how prefrontal dysfunction might alter striatal-accumbens function, in situ hybridization histochemistry with S35-labeled oligonucleotide probes was used to assess changes in striatal-accumbens gene expression following bilateral excitotoxic ibotenic acid (IA) lesions of the rat medial prefrontal cortex. Quantitative densitometry was used to measure changes in mRNA levels for preproenkephalin A (ENK), D1 dopamine receptor, protachykinin (SubP), glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD65), and D2 dopamine receptor. No differences were found between sham and lesion groups for ENK, D1, SubP, or GAD65 mRNA levels in the striatum or nucleus accumbens (NAC). D2 receptor mRNA levels were, however, significantly higher in the dorsomedial striatum and in the core area of the NAC of the lesioned rats. Although the functional significance of increased D2 mRNA is unclear, these findings demonstrate that glutamate mPFC projections modulate gene expression in relatively regionally-localized subcortical neuronal populations.
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PMID 
E H Hamid, T M Hyde, S M Baca, M F Egan (1998)  Failure to down regulate NMDA receptors in the striatum and nucleus accumbens associated with neuroleptic-induced dyskinesia.   Brain Res 796: 1-2. 291-295 Jun  
Abstract: The syndrome of vacuous chewing movements (VCMs) in rats is similar in many respects to tardive dyskinesia (TD) in humans. Both syndromes are characterized by delayed onset of persistent orofacial dyskinesias in a sub-group of subjects chronically treated with neuroleptics. Using the rat model, we examined the role of NMDA receptor-mediated corticostriatal neurotransmission in the expression of VCMs. Rats were treated for 36 weeks with haloperidol decanoate or vehicle and then withdrawn for an additional 28 weeks. Chronic persistent VCMs were induced in one subgroup of treated animals (+VCM), but not in another group (-VCM). Rats from +VCM, -VCM groups and vehicle-treated controls were selected for post mortem studies (n = 12 to 14 per group). NMDA receptor levels were assessed using [3H]-MK-801 binding in sections from the mid-striatum and nucleus accumbens. Chronic haloperidol treatment produced a marked reduction of NMDA receptor binding levels throughout the striatum and nucleus accumbens. Post hoc comparisons demonstrated that -VCM rats had lower NMDA receptor binding levels than +VCM and vehicle-treated controls. Ventromedial striatum and nucleus accumbens core were the most affected areas. These findings suggest that down-regulation of striatal NMDA receptor binding levels may protect against the expression of neuroleptic-induced dyskinesia.
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