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eNeuro

ISSN 2373-2822

4 papers in the library · 27 citations · publishing 2024-2025

Papers

Microtubule-Stabilizer Epothilone B Delays Anesthetic-Induced Unconsciousness in Rats.

eNeuro August 1, 2024 Sana Khan, Yixiang Huang, Derin Timuçin et al. 23 citations

Volatile anesthetics like isoflurane may cause unconsciousness by binding to microtubules (MTs) inside neurons and dampening their quantum optical effects. In male rats injected with the MT-stabilizing drug epothilone B (epoB), loss of righting reflex under 4% isoflurane took an average of 69 seconds longer than in rats given a placebo. The difference was statistically significant with a large effect size (Cohen's d = 1.9) and could not be explained by tolerance from repeated anesthetic exposure. This supports the idea that consciousness arises from quantum physical states in neural microtubules, as proposed in the orchestrated objective reduction (Orch OR) theory.

Psychedelics Reverse the Polarity of Long-Term Synaptic Plasticity in Cortical-Projecting Claustrum Neurons

eNeuro October 1, 2025 Tanner L. Anderson, Artin Asadipooya, Pavel I. Ortinski 3 citations

Psychedelic drugs like DOI can reverse the direction of synaptic plasticity in the claustrum, a brain region rich in serotonin 2 receptors and heavily connected to the anterior cingulate cortex. In male rats, pairing presynaptic stimuli with postsynaptic action potentials in claustrum neurons projecting to the ACC caused DOI to flip the plasticity from long-term depression to long-term potentiation, an effect specific to locally activated synapses. DOI also altered several action potential dynamics in these neurons. The findings support the idea that psychedelics induce rapid and lasting neuroplasticity and that claustrocortical circuits are especially sensitive to these drugs, offering a potential mechanism for their therapeutic effects.

Effects of Chronic Social Isolation Stress and Alcohol on the Reinforcing Properties of Ketamine in Male and Female Rats.

eNeuro March 1, 2025 Sarah D Jennings, Devin P Hagarty, Jordan Logue et al. 1 citation

Repeated ketamine infusions for depression may be riskier in people with a history of alcohol use, and effects differ by sex. In rats, females self-administered more ketamine than males. A history of alcohol increased ketamine intake in females, while a history of either isolation or alcohol independently increased ketamine intake in males. All groups showed similar extinction and cue-induced reinstatement. In the nucleus accumbens, isolation increased immature dendritic spines in males, an effect reduced by alcohol; alcohol increased immature spines in females. The findings suggest that prior social isolation and alcohol exposure alter ketamine's reinforcing properties in a sex-dependent manner, highlighting the need to consider sex and alcohol history when using ketamine to treat depression.

The effects of mindfulness meditation on mechanisms of attentional control in young and older adults: a preregistered eye tracking study.

eNeuro July 7, 2025 Andy Jeesu Kim, Keran Chen, Ying Tian et al.

Thirty days of guided mindfulness meditation using a mobile app improved the speed of saccadic eye movements (overt orienting of attention) in adults, but did not reduce distractibility or enhance goal-directed attentional control beyond repeated task practice. The benefits were similar across young, middle-aged, and older adults, and no changes appeared in self-report mindfulness questionnaires. The findings suggest that short-term mindfulness practice can modulate cognition in ways detectable by eye tracking but not by self-report, and that age does not moderate these effects.