template activity
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2016 ◽  
Vol 113 (4) ◽  
pp. E420-E429 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mariam Aly ◽  
Nicholas B. Turk-Browne

Attention influences what is later remembered, but little is known about how this occurs in the brain. We hypothesized that behavioral goals modulate the attentional state of the hippocampus to prioritize goal-relevant aspects of experience for encoding. Participants viewed rooms with paintings, attending to room layouts or painting styles on different trials during high-resolution functional MRI. We identified template activity patterns in each hippocampal subfield that corresponded to the attentional state induced by each task. Participants then incidentally encoded new rooms with art while attending to the layout or painting style, and memory was subsequently tested. We found that when task-relevant information was better remembered, the hippocampus was more likely to have been in the correct attentional state during encoding. This effect was specific to the hippocampus, and not found in medial temporal lobe cortex, category-selective areas of the visual system, or elsewhere in the brain. These findings provide mechanistic insight into how attention transforms percepts into memories.


Author(s):  
Zofia Tołwińska-Stańczyk ◽  
Dorota Wilmańska ◽  
Kazimierz Studzian ◽  
Marek Gniazdowski

1996 ◽  
Vol 16 (12) ◽  
pp. 7084-7088 ◽  
Author(s):  
I Chesnokov ◽  
W M Chu ◽  
M R Botchan ◽  
C W Schmid

Wild-type p53 represses Alu template activity in vitro and in vivo. However, upstream activating sequence elements from both the 7SL RNA gene and an Alu source gene relieve p53-mediated repression. p53 also represses the template activity of the U6 RNA gene both in vitro and in vivo but has no effect on in vitro transcription of genes encoding 5S RNA, 7SL RNA, adenovirus VAI RNA, and tRNA. The N-terminal activation domain of p53, which binds TATA-binding protein (TBP), is sufficient for repressing Alu transcription in vitro, and mutation of positions 22 and 23 in this region impairs p53-mediated repression of an Alu template both in vitro and in vivo. p53's N-terminal domain binds TFIIIB, presumably through its known interaction with TBP, and mutation of positions 22 and 23 interferes with TFIIIB binding. These results extend p53's transcriptional role to RNA polymerase III-directed templates and identify an additional level of Alu transcriptional regulation.


1995 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 50-54
Author(s):  
V. A. Podsosonny ◽  
Yu. M. Konstantinov ◽  
G. N. Lutsenko

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