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Dive into the research topics where Francisco M. Ocaña is active.

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Featured researches published by Francisco M. Ocaña.


Brain Research Bulletin | 2005

Hallmarks of a common forebrain vertebrate plan: Specialized pallial areas for spatial, temporal and emotional memory in actinopterygian fish

Cristina Broglio; A. Gómez; Emilio Durán; Francisco M. Ocaña; F. Jiménez-Moya; Fernando Rodríguez; Cosme Salas

In mammals and birds different pallial forebrain areas participate in separate memory systems. In particular, the hippocampal pallium is implicated in spatial memory and temporal attribute processing, whereas the amygdalar pallium is involved in emotional memory. Here we analyze the involvement of teleost fish lateral and medial pallia, proposed as homologous to the hippocampus and amygdala, respectively, in a variety of learning and memory tasks, such as spatial memory; reversal learning; delay or trace motor classical conditioning; heart rate, emotional classical conditioning; and two way active avoidance conditioning. Results show that the damage to the lateral pallium produces a profound deficit in spatial learning and memory in teleost fish. In addition, lateral pallium lesions produce a significant deficit in trace classical conditioning, whereas they have no significant effects on delay conditioning, or in heart rate conditioning. In contrast, medial pallium lesions disrupt emotional, heart rate conditioning and avoidance conditioning, but spare spatial memory and temporal stimulus processing. These data demonstrate a striking functional similarity between the medial and lateral pallia of teleost fish and the pallial amygdala and hippocampal pallium of land vertebrates, respectively. The reviewed evidence suggest that these two separate memory systems, the hippocampus-dependent spatial, relational or temporal memory system, and the amygdala based emotional memory system, could have appeared early during evolution, having conserved their functional identity through vertebrate phylogenesis.


Zebrafish | 2006

Neuropsychology of learning and memory in teleost fish.

Cosme Salas; Cristina Broglio; Emilio Durán; A. Gómez; Francisco M. Ocaña; F. Jiménez-Moya; Fernando Rodríguez

Traditionally, brain and behavior evolution was viewed as an anagenetic process that occurred in successive stages of increasing complexity and advancement. Fishes, considered the most primitive vertebrates, were supposed to have a scarcely differentiated telencephalon, and limited learning capabilities. However, recent developmental, neuroanatomical, and functional data indicate that the evolution of brain and behavior may have been more conservative than previously thought. Experimental data suggest that the properties and neural basis of learning and memory are notably similar among teleost fish and land vertebrates. For example, lesion studies show that the teleost cerebellum is essential in classical conditioning of discrete motor responses. The lateral telencephalic pallium of the teleost fish, proposed as homologous to the hippocampus, is selectively involved in spatial learning and memory, and in trace classical conditioning. In contrast, the medial pallium, considered homologous to the amygdala, is involved in emotional conditioning in teleost fish. The data reviewed here show a remarkable parallelism between mammals and teleost fish concerning the role of different brain centers in learning and memory and cognitive processes. These evidences suggest that these separate memory systems could have appeared early during the evolution of vertebrates, having been conserved through phylogenesis.


Brain Research Bulletin | 2005

Cognitive and emotional functions of the teleost fish cerebellum.

Fernando Rodríguez; Emilio Durán; A. Gómez; Francisco M. Ocaña; E. Álvarez; F. Jiménez-Moya; Cristina Broglio; Cosme Salas

Increasing experimental and neuropsychological evidence indicates that the cerebellum of humans and other mammals, traditionally associated with motor control, is implicated in a variety of cognitive and emotional functions. For example, the cerebellum has been identified as an essential structure in different learning processes, ranging from simple forms of associative, sensory-motor learning and emotional conditioning, to more complex, higher-order processes such as spatial cognition. Although neuroanatomical and neurophysiological data indicate that the organization of the cerebellum is notably well conserved in vertebrates, little is actually known about the cerebellar contribution to processes besides the motor domain in non-mammals. In this work, we analyzed the involvement of the teleost fish cerebellum on classical conditioning of motor and emotional responses and on spatial cognition. Cerebellum lesions in goldfish impair the classical conditioning of a simple eye-retraction response analogous to the eyeblink conditioning described in mammals. Single unit extracellular electrophysiological recording and cytochrome oxidase histochemistry also reveal the involvement of the teleost fish cerebellum in classical conditioning. Autonomic emotional responses (e.g., heart rate classical conditioning) are also impaired by cerebellum lesions in goldfish. Furthermore, goldfish with cerebellum lesions present a severe impairment in spatial cognition. In contrast, cerebellum lesions do not produce any observable motor deficit as indicated by the swimming activity or obstacle avoidance and do not interfere with the occurrence of unconditioned motor or emotional responses. These data indicate that the functional involvement of the teleost cerebellum in learning and memory is strikingly similar to mammals and suggest that the cognitive and emotional functions of the cerebellum may have evolved early in vertebrate evolution, having been conserved along the phylogenetic history of the extant vertebrate groups.


Current Biology | 2015

The Lamprey Pallium Provides a Blueprint of the Mammalian Motor Projections from Cortex

Francisco M. Ocaña; Shreyas M. Suryanarayana; Kazuya Saitoh; Andreas A. Kardamakis; Lorenza Capantini; Brita Robertson; Sten Grillner

BACKGROUND The frontal lobe control of movement in mammals has been thought to be a specific function primarily related to the layered neocortex with its efferent connections. In contrast, we now show that the same basic organization is present even in one of the phylogenetically oldest vertebrates, the lamprey. RESULTS Stimulation of specific sites in the pallium/cortex evokes eye, trunk, locomotor, or oral movements. The pallial projection neurons target brainstem motor centers and basal ganglia subnuclei and have prominent dendrites extending into the outer molecular layer. They exhibit the characteristic features of pyramidal neurons and elicit monosynaptic glutamatergic excitatory postsynaptic potentials in output neurons of the optic tectum, reticulospinal neurons, and, as shown earlier, basal ganglia neurons. CONCLUSIONS Our results demonstrate marked similarities in the efferent functional connectivity and control of motor behavior between the lamprey pallium and mammalian neocortex. Thus, the lamprey motor pallium/cortex represents an evolutionary blueprint of the corresponding mammalian system.


Behavioural Brain Research | 2015

Spatial learning-related changes in metabolic brain activity contribute to the delimitation of the hippocampal pallium in goldfish.

Sara Uceda; Francisco M. Ocaña; I. Martín-Monzón; B. Rodríguez-Expósito; Emilio Durán; Fernando Rodríguez

Comparative neuroanatomical, developmental and functional evidence suggests that the lateral division of the area dorsalis telencephali (Dl) of the teleost fish is homologous to the hippocampus of tetrapods. Nonetheless, some important aspects of the organization of the hippocampal pallium of teleosts are still under discussion and conflicting hypotheses regarding the extension and demarcation of this region have been proposed. Thus, whereas some authors suggest that the entire Dl region, including its dorsal (Dld) and ventral (Dlv) subdivisions, is homologue to the mammalian hippocampus, others claim that only Dlv should be considered as such. To further elucidate this debate, we investigated the role of Dld and Dlv in one of the most unambiguous functions of the hippocampus, spatial learning. We trained goldfish in a spatial constancy task and mapped the activity of Dld, Dlv, and the medial division of the area dorsalis telencephali (Dm) by means of cytochrome oxidase (CO) histochemistry. The results revealed that training goldfish in the spatial constancy task significantly increased the metabolic activity in Dlv, but not in Dld or Dm, suggesting that only Dlv is critically involved in spatial learning and in this regard comparable to the hippocampus. These data provide additional functional support to the hypotheses that consider Dl as a heterogeneous pallial region and propose that Dlv, but not Dld, might be homologous to the hippocampus.


Archive | 2009

Observations on the Brain Development of the Sturgeon Acipenser naccarii

A. Gómez; Emilio Durán; Francisco M. Ocaña; F. Jiménez-Moya; Cristina Broglio; Alberto Domezain; Cosme Salas; Fernando Rodríguez

The remarkable range of evolutionary diversification of ray-finned fishes, reflected in the number of species and environmental adaptations, is also evident in their brain structure. Among the ray-finned fishes, the Chondrostei, an early branch of the actinopterygian line, are usually considered the extant taxa most closely related to the primitive actinopterygians living in the Paleozoic Era, and sharing with them numerous characteristics. Unfortunately, current knowledge of the ontogenesis of the central nervous system and behaviour of the chondrosteans is rudimentary, despite their evolutionary importance. Thus, the study of the morphologic and functional organization of the chondrostean lineage brain is an essential step in identifying the primitive and derived traits. The present work summarizes recent data on the gross morphology and cytoarchitecture of the brain of the sturgeon Acipenser naccarii, during ontogenesis. In addition, the main changes in the development of the five main brain subdivisions have been compared to the onset of different types of behaviour that provide a rough index of sensory and motor maturation.


Archive | 2017

Spatial Learning and Its Neural Basis in Fish

Cosme Salas; Cristina Broglio; Emilio Durán; Francisco M. Ocaña; I. Martín-Monzón; A. Gómez; Fernando Rodríguez

Fishes show impressive abilities for spatial orientation and navigation that parallel those described in land vertebrates. The spatial behavior of fishes is a complex, flexible, and adaptive process that involves a variety of cognitive phenomena and diverse learning and memory mechanisms. Fish can use multiple sources of spatial information from different sensory modalities and rely on a variety of spatial strategies and multiple, separate spatial learning and memory systems that depend on a variety of neural substrates. Like mammals and birds, teleost fish seem to be able to use egocentric strategies based on the function of the brainstem, cerebellum, or optic tectum. In addition, like mammals and birds, fish seem to be able to use allocentric strategies based on maplike spatial memory representations that depend on telencephalic structures and especially on the hippocampal pallium. The close functional similarity between the spatial cognition mechanisms and their neural basis in teleost fish and land vertebrates suggests that the evolution of these cognitive capabilities may be a conserved trait in vertebrate evolution.


Brain Behavior and Evolution | 2017

Dynamics of Goldfish Subregional Hippocampal Pallium Activity throughout Spatial Memory Formation

Francisco M. Ocaña; Sara Uceda; Jorge L. Arias; Cosme Salas; Fernando Rodríguez

The teleost fish hippocampal pallium, like the hippocampus of tetrapods, is essential for relational map-like spatial memories. In mammals, these relational memories involve the dynamic interactions among different hippocampal subregions and between the hippocampus-neocortex network, which performs specialized operations such as memory encoding and retrieval. However, how the teleost hippocampal homologue operates to achieve comparably sophisticated spatial cognition capabilities is largely unknown. In the present study, the progressive changes in the metabolic activity of the pallial regions that have been proposed as possible homologues of the mammalian hippocampus were monitored in goldfish. Quantitative cytochrome oxidase histochemistry was used to measure the level of activation along the rostrocaudal axis of the ventral (Dlv) and dorsal parts of the dorsolateral division (Dld) and in the dorsoposterior division (Dp) of the goldfish telencephalic pallium throughout the time course of the learning process of a spatial memory task. The results revealed a significant increase in spatial memory-related metabolic activity in the Dlv, but not in the Dld, suggesting that the Dlv, but not the Dld, is comparable to the amniote hippocampus. Regarding the Dlv, the level of activation of the precommissural Dlv significantly increased at training onset but progressively declined to finally return to the basal pretraining level when the animals mastered the spatial task. In contrast, the commissural Dlv activation persisted even when the acquisition phase was completed and the animals performance reached an asymptotic level. These results suggest that, like the dentate gyrus of mammals, the goldfish precommissural Dlv seems to respond nonlinearly to increments of change in sensory input, performing pattern separation under highly dissimilar input patterns. In addition, like the CA3 of mammals, the commissural Dlv likely operates in a continuum between two modes, a pattern separation or storage operation mode at early acquisition when the change in the sensory input is high, probably driven by the precommissural Dlv output, and a pattern completion or recall operation mode when the animals have mastered the task and the change in sensory input is small. Finally, an unexpected result of the present study is the persistent activation of the area Dp throughout the complete spatial task training period, which suggests that the Dp could be an important component of the pallial network involved in spatial memory in goldfish, and supports the hypothesis proposing that the Dp is a specialized part of the hippocampal pallium network.


Behavioural Brain Research | 2010

Lateral but not medial telencephalic pallium ablation impairs the use of goldfish spatial allocentric strategies in a “hole-board” task

Emilio Durán; Francisco M. Ocaña; Cristina Broglio; Fernando Rodríguez; Cosme Salas


Acta Neurobiologiae Experimentalis | 2008

Telencephalon ablation impairs goldfish allocentric spatial learning in a "hole-board" task.

Emilio Durán; Francisco M. Ocaña; A. Gómez; F. Jiménez-Moya; Cristina Broglio; Fernando Rodríguez; Cosme Salas

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A. Gómez

University of Seville

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