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Dive into the research topics where Sabine Frey is active.

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Featured researches published by Sabine Frey.


Neurobiology of Learning and Memory | 2007

Cholinergic afferents to the locus coeruleus and noradrenergic afferents to the medial septum mediate LTP-reinforcement in the dentate gyrus by stimulation of the amygdala.

Jorge A. Bergado; Sabine Frey; Jeffrey López; William Almaguer-Melian; Julietta U. Frey

Transient long-term potentiation (E-LTP) can be transformed into a long-lasting LTP (L-LTP) in the dentate gyrus (DG) by behavioral stimuli with high motivational content. Previous research from our group has identified several brain structures, such as the basolateral amygdala (BLA), the locus coeruleus (LC), the medial septum (MS) and transmitters as noradrenaline (NA) and acetylcholine (ACh) that are involved in these processes. Here we have investigated the functional interplay among brain structures and systems which result in the conversion of a E-LTP into a L-LTP (reinforcement) by stimulation of the BLA (BLA-R). We used topical application of specific drugs into DG, and other targets, while following the time course of LTP induced by stimulation of the perforant pathway (PP) to study their specific contribution to BLA-R. One injection cannula, a recording electrode in the DG and stimulating electrodes in the PP and the BLA were stereotactically implanted one week before electrophysiological experiments. Topical application of atropine or propranolol into the DG blocked BLA-R in both cases, but the effect of propranolol occurred earlier, suggesting a role of NA within the DG during an intermediate stage of LTP maintenance. The injection of lidocaine into the LC abolished BLA-R indicating that the LC is part of the functional neural reinforcing system. The effect on the LC is mediated by cholinergic afferents because application of atropine into the LC produced the same effect. Injection of lidocaine inactivating the MS also abolished BLA-R. This effect was mediated by noradrenergic afferents (probably from the LC) because the application of propranolol into the MS prevented BLA-R. These findings suggest a functional loop for BLA-R involving cholinergic afferents to the LC, a noradrenergic projection from the LC to the DG and the MS, and finally, the cholinergic projection from the MS to the DG.


Neuroscience | 2003

Modulation of late phases of long-term potentiation in rat dentate gyrus by stimulation of the medial septum.

Sabine Frey; J.A Bergado; Julietta U. Frey

The prolonged maintenance of hippocampal long-term potentiation (LTP) seems to require heterosynaptic events during its induction. We have previously shown that stimulation of the basolateral nucleus of the amygdala (BLA) within a distinct time window can reinforce a transient early-LTP into a long-lasting late-LTP in the dentate gyrus (DG) in freely moving rats. We have shown that this reinforcement was dependent on beta-adrenergic and/or muscarinergic receptor activation and protein synthesis. However, since the BLA does not directly stimulate the DG the question remained by which inputs such heterosynaptic processes are triggered. We have now directly stimulated the medial septal pathway 15 min after induction of early-LTP in the DG and show that this input is capable of reinforcing early into late-LTP in a frequency-dependent manner. This septal reinforcement of DG LTP was dependent on beta-adrenergic receptor activation and protein synthesis. We suggest that the reinforcing effect of the BLA stimulation can, potentially, be mediated via the septal input to the DG, though it differs in its ability to induce or modulate functional plasticity.


NeuroImage | 2007

Frequency-dependent activation pattern in the rat hippocampus, a simultaneous electrophysiological and fMRI study

Frank Angenstein; Elena Kammerer; Heiko G. Niessen; Julietta U. Frey; Henning Scheich; Sabine Frey

Frequency-dependent hippocampal activation during electrical perforant pathway stimulation was analyzed simultaneously by electrophysiological recordings in dentate gyrus and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Pulse trains at low-frequency stimulation (2.5 Hz) did not influence electrophysiological responses within stimulation trains in the dentate gyrus and triggered no detectable BOLD responses. Increased stimulation frequencies (5.0-20 Hz) generated a roughly linear enhancement of the BOLD response. The BOLD signal within the dentate gyrus correlated more closely with stimulus pattern than with generated action potentials of the granular cells. However, the BOLD signal was strongly influenced by additional local signal processing activated by repetitive stimulus trains. fMRI visualized a frequency-specific spatial activation pattern of the hippocampus; spatially restricted activation in the dentate gyrus during 5-Hz stimulation, activation of the entire hippocampus and subiculum at 10 Hz and activation of the contralateral hippocampus during 20-Hz stimulation.


Neuroscience Letters | 2003

Behavioral reinforcement of long-term potentiation in rat dentate gyrus in vivo is protein synthesis-dependent.

Jorge A. Bergado; William Almaguer-Melian; Sergiy Kostenko; Sabine Frey; Julietta U. Frey

A transient, protein synthesis-independent long-term potentiation (early-LTP, <4 h) can be reinforced into a maintained protein synthesis-dependent late-LTP (>4 h) by specific electrical stimulation of limbic structures (J. Neurosci. 21 (2001) 3697). Similarly, LTP-modulation can be obtained by behavioral stimuli with strong motivational content. However, the requirement of protein synthesis during behavioral reinforcement has not been shown so far. Thus, we have studied here this specific question using a behavioral reinforcement protocol, i.e. allowing water-deprived animals to drink 15 min after induction of early-LTP. This procedure transformed early-LTP into late-LTP. Anisomycin, a reversible protein synthesis inhibitor, abolished behavioral LTP-reinforcement. These results demonstrate that behavioral reinforcement depends on protein synthesis.


Neuroscience | 2004

Regulation of the phosphodiesterase PDE4B3-isotype during long-term potentiation in the area dentata in vivo

T Ahmed; Sabine Frey; Julietta U. Frey

Hippocampal long-term potentiation (LTP) is the most prominent cellular model underlying learning and memory formation. However, which cellular processes are involved in maintaining LTP remains largely unknown. We have previously detailed temporal modulations of cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) and a cAMP-specific phosphodiesterase, PDE4B3, after LTP-induction and its maintenance in hippocampal area CA1 in vitro. To test whether other hippocampal sub-structures are characterised by similar mechanisms, tissue from the area dentata of freely moving rats was analysed at different LTP-time points. The tissue was fractionated into three components, where PDE4B-levels and cAMP-concentrations were measured. In contrast with data obtained in area CA1, we now detail an LTP-specific translational, but not transcriptional regulation of PDE4B3 within the first 8 h after tetanization and present spatio-temporal changes of PDE4B proteins and cAMP that is LTP-specific.


Neurobiology of Learning and Memory | 2008

Spatial learning in the holeboard impairs an early phase of long-term potentiation in the rat hippocampal CA1-region.

Darya Makhracheva-Stepochkina; Sabine Frey; Julietta U. Frey; Volker Korz

Long-term potentiation (LTP) and depression (LTD) are considered as cellular models for learning and memory. We studied the impact of holeboard training on LTP in the rat CA1 hippocampal region. In 7-week-old Wistar rats a recording electrode was chronically implanted into the hippocampal pyramidal cell layer of the CA1 of the right hemisphere and a stimulation electrode into the contralateral CA3 region. Two groups of animals received a spatial holeboard training of 10 or 15 trials over 2 days on a fixed pattern of baited holes. The last trial was performed 15 min after a primed burst stimulation of the contralateral CA3, which resulted in LTP in the ipsilateral CA1. A pseudo-trained group that received a 10 trial training with changing patterns of baited holes after each trial and a group that remained in the recording chambers during the experiments served as controls. Experimental rats significantly improved their spatial performance with increasing numbers of trials, indicated by decreasing times to pick up all food pellets and by decreasing numbers of reference memory errors. A learning-related impairment of CA1-LTP measured in both the population-spike amplitude as well as the fEPSP could be noted. These results show that specific (pattern-training), but not unspecific (pseudo-training) spatial information processing prior to electrical stimulation can severely affect LTP in hippocampal area CA1.


Neuroscience | 2010

Electrical and pharmacological manipulations of the nucleus accumbens core impair synaptic plasticity in the dentate gyrus of the rat

J. Kudolo; H. Tabassum; Sabine Frey; J. López; H. Hassan; Julietta U. Frey; J.A. Bergado

The interest on the physiology of the nucleus accumbens (NAcc) has grown in recent years given its relationship to addictive behaviours, and the possibility to treat them by interacting with NAcc function. We have shown that the prior stimulation of the core region blocks induction of long-term potentiation (LTP) at the dentate gyrus in anaesthetized rats, while the shell facilitated it. In the present study we have confirmed and expanded those results testing the effects of core and shell stimulation in freely moving rats, as well as the effect of blocking D1 receptors in the NAcc. Our results show that shell stimulation had no effect on baseline recordings of the field excitatory postsynaptic potential (fEPSP) or the population spike amplitude (PSA) for 24 h. Core stimulation did not modify baseline-fEPSP, but significantly depressed PSA up to 8 h. LTP maintenance was not modified; neither by core nor shell stimulation after its induction, but LTP induction was impaired (both in the fEPSP and PSA) by core stimulation 15 min before induction. Shell stimulation showed a slight facilitating effect. Previous, topical application of a dopaminergic-receptor antagonist (SCH23390) into the NAcc produced a significantly depressed baseline fEPSP and PSA, as well as LTP measured in both components of the evoked potentials. Our results confirm a dual role of stimulation of NAcc sub-regions on hippocampal baseline synaptic transmission, and LTP induction when activated before induction. In contrast, stimulation of the NAcc had no influence on an already ongoing dentate gyrus LTP. A role for dopaminergic innervation to the NAcc, modifying susceptibility for synaptic plasticity outside the NAcc is also suggested by our results.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2001

Reinforcement of Early Long-Term Potentiation (Early-LTP) in Dentate Gyrus by Stimulation of the Basolateral Amygdala: Heterosynaptic Induction Mechanisms of Late-LTP

Sabine Frey; Jorge Bergado-Rosado; Thomas Seidenbecher; Hans-Christian Pape; J. Uwe Frey


Progress in Brain Research | 2008

Chapter 7 ‘Synaptic tagging’ and ‘cross-tagging’ and related associative reinforcement processes of functional plasticity as the cellular basis for memory formation

Sabine Frey; Julietta U. Frey


Neuroscience | 2010

Differential effects of electrical stimulation patterns, motivational-behavioral stimuli and their order of application on functional plasticity processes within one input in the dentate gyrus of freely moving rats in vivo

W. Almaguer-Melian; J.A. Bergado; J. López-Rojas; Sabine Frey; Julietta U. Frey

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Julietta U. Frey

Leibniz Institute for Neurobiology

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Jorge A. Bergado

Leibniz Institute for Neurobiology

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Darya Makhracheva-Stepochkina

Leibniz Institute for Neurobiology

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Elena Kammerer

Leibniz Institute for Neurobiology

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Frank Angenstein

Leibniz Institute for Neurobiology

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H. Hassan

Leibniz Institute for Neurobiology

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H. Tabassum

Leibniz Institute for Neurobiology

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Hadir Hassan

Leibniz Institute for Neurobiology

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Henning Scheich

Leibniz Institute for Neurobiology

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