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1 cells becoming photoreceptors - a process of lateral inhibition).
2   These can be larger than those formed with lateral inhibition.
3 netics and spatial dependence to account for lateral inhibition.
4 h signaling, which limits MCC fate choice by lateral inhibition.
5 , thereby directly bearing on the process of lateral inhibition.
6 r within a simple cellular automata model of lateral inhibition.
7 wn microcircuit motifs: pyramidal cells with lateral inhibition.
8 rrect specification of cell fates induced by lateral inhibition.
9 T distribution as an emergent consequence of lateral inhibition.
10 mitotic, and unresponsive to Notch-dependent lateral inhibition.
11 hat some progenitor cells are insensitive to lateral inhibition.
12 pikes in L1 interneurons, followed by strong lateral inhibition.
13  therefore be included in standard models of lateral inhibition.
14 se to Wingless through at least two modes of lateral inhibition.
15 iously published data from other examples of lateral inhibition.
16 ten relies on spatial filters implemented by lateral inhibition.
17 ies that have previously appeared to require lateral inhibition.
18  predicted by the model for plants that lack lateral inhibition.
19  have failed to find consistent evidence for lateral inhibition.
20 tion with delta-like 4 (Dll4)/notch-mediated lateral inhibition.
21 t to depend on the presence of intracortical lateral inhibition.
22 roblast fate via failure of Delta1-dependent lateral inhibition.
23 isted of focused facilitation and widespread lateral inhibition.
24 vern this pattern of differentiation through lateral inhibition.
25 ursor/epidermal cell fate distinction during lateral inhibition.
26     This restriction involves Notch-mediated lateral inhibition.
27  receptive fields through mechanisms such as lateral inhibition.
28 roposed to control the heterocyst pattern by lateral inhibition.
29  from the previously recognized mechanism of lateral inhibition.
30 tion, however, did not affect the outcome of lateral inhibition.
31  M/T cell spikes, and the timing of M/T cell lateral inhibition.
32 s not due to the lack of Notch (N)-dependent lateral inhibition.
33 thway that is usually assumed simply to give lateral inhibition.
34 ional properties different from conventional lateral inhibition.
35 restricting neural-fate specification during lateral inhibition.
36 ppression of recurrent excitation underlying lateral inhibition.
37 ntrast between related chemicals by means of lateral inhibition.
38 jections act via mechanisms such as surround/lateral inhibition.
39 to discrete rows mediated by Notch-dependent lateral inhibition.
40 id not increase the strength of M72-mediated lateral inhibition.
41 eam olfactory networks and those filtered by lateral inhibition.
42 d leader cells are regulated via Notch1-Dll4 lateral inhibition.
43 in their sister cells through Notch-mediated lateral inhibition.
44  activity, and the effects of respiration on lateral inhibition, a major component of sensory process
45 this signalling pathway is that of mediating lateral inhibition, a process where exchange of signals
46                                              Lateral inhibition, a symmetrical cell-cell competition
47 esicular release constraint realized through lateral inhibition across presynaptic membrane, (2) the
48 cells and thereby bias the outcome of mutual lateral inhibition acting between H and N cells.
49 tory responses of granule cells and M/T cell lateral inhibition adapt quickly after the first respira
50 lexible categorization cannot be achieved by lateral inhibition alone but also requires that the inhi
51                                     However, lateral inhibition alone is insufficient to produce mosa
52                                     Weakened lateral inhibition also produces an increased sensitivit
53 gulated, at least in part, by NOTCH-mediated lateral inhibition among crest-derived cells, and by asy
54 nsemble activity more sparse by facilitating lateral inhibition among MTs and/or enforce temporally p
55 /stalk patterning, highlighting filopodia as lateral inhibition amplifiers.
56 hat is required for Notch signaling-mediated lateral inhibition and cell fate determination of extern
57 niently implemented in software, whereas the lateral inhibition and classification stages run on acce
58  these findings reveal that SOM cells govern lateral inhibition and control cortical frequency tuning
59                 Their output is processed by lateral inhibition and drives a winner-take-all circuit
60  critical to their function, as it underpins lateral inhibition and effective translation of stimuli
61 hotoreceptors and horizontal cells underlies lateral inhibition and establishes the antagonistic cent
62 gs provide insight into the circuit basis of lateral inhibition and functional interactions within an
63 for pattern recognition tasks in presence of lateral inhibition and homeostasis.
64 iMSNs impaired cocaine's ability to suppress lateral inhibition and increase locomotion.
65 Ero1L mutant clones show specific defects in lateral inhibition and inductive signaling, two characte
66                                        Thus, lateral inhibition and intestinal crypt lineage plastici
67             The functional relevance of this lateral inhibition and its regulation by dopamine remain
68 ta-Notch dynamics determine the influence of lateral inhibition and lateral induction on the selectio
69 ent work on signaling cascades, particularly lateral inhibition and planar cell polarity, has begun t
70 tterning in the cochlea, acting both through lateral inhibition and the control of cellular prolifera
71  maintains the sensitivity of progenitors to lateral inhibition and thus limits further proneural upr
72 opmental processes - cell-fate induction and lateral inhibition - and ask whether the landscapes for
73 nitor cell population through Notch-mediated lateral inhibition, and Math1 irreversibly commits these
74 plement synapse-specific, activity-dependent lateral inhibition, and thus could provide an efficient
75 ssed exclusively in HCs, are consistent with lateral inhibition as the trigger for alkalinization.
76  to test for the presence of interglomerular lateral inhibition, as well as its underlying mechanisms
77 omerular layer, although evidence supporting lateral inhibition at a functional level is modest.
78                                              Lateral inhibition at the first synapse in the retina is
79 irst, we showed how the effect of well known lateral inhibition at the outer retina, mediated by hori
80 ses from reiterative organogenesis driven by lateral inhibitions at the shoot apex.
81    The bias could be explained by a model of lateral inhibition based on the overrepresentation of fr
82          This raises the question of whether lateral inhibition between glomeruli is specific or nons
83  (SACs) comprise the first network mediating lateral inhibition between glomeruli, the functional uni
84 on and inhibition in the STN-GP network, and lateral inhibition between GP neurons, could actively su
85    We find differences in activity-dependent lateral inhibition between mitral and tufted cells that
86        Granule cells mediate interglomerular lateral inhibition between mitral and tufted cells' late
87 shed light on the functional significance of lateral inhibition between MSNs and offer a novel synapt
88 pairs of striatal neurons revealed that only lateral inhibition between MSNs is negatively modulated,
89                                              Lateral inhibition between near-neighbor neurons has lon
90                  Simultaneously, short-range lateral inhibition between neighboring cells produce com
91 er-surround receptive fields, a prototype of lateral inhibition between neighboring sensory cells in
92                                              Lateral inhibition between neurons occurs in many differ
93 ctional properties of the circuits mediating lateral inhibition between olfactory bulb principal neur
94 ternative to commonly proposed mechanisms of lateral inhibition between OR-specific glomeruli.
95 electrical ("ephaptic") interactions mediate lateral inhibition between ORNs.
96                                              Lateral inhibition between pairs of olfactory bulb (OB)
97  participate in a fast-onset intraglomerular lateral inhibition between principal neurons from the sa
98 rspective is on the underappreciated role of lateral inhibition between striatal projection cells in
99 lomerular (PG) cells mediate intraglomerular lateral inhibition between their apical dendrites.
100                                              Lateral inhibition between these 2 glomeruli reflects th
101  However, they also receive unusually strong lateral inhibition, both pre- and postsynaptically, trig
102           Here, we provide new evidence that lateral inhibition, but not ro, is required for the init
103 ner ear is regulated by Notch signalling and lateral inhibition, but the dynamics of this process and
104 ximal pathway likely enables GCs to regulate lateral inhibition by defining time windows when lateral
105        R8 precursor cells are protected from lateral inhibition by Delta.
106 tic data indicate that MpFRH1 miRNA mediates lateral inhibition by repressing MpRSL1 during pattern f
107  is known to be influenced (via CPC-mediated lateral inhibition) by the non-hair cells.
108 e decisions, and that the standard model for lateral inhibition can account for a wider range of deve
109 operties of a standard mathematical model of lateral inhibition can lead to stable symmetric signalli
110                                              Lateral inhibition can subdivide an initially irregular
111                             We conclude that lateral inhibition can transform irregular distributions
112           Together these mechanisms, without lateral inhibition, can account for contrast-invariant s
113    We demonstrate that classical feedforward lateral inhibition cannot produce flexible categorizatio
114     Simulations show that this regulation of lateral inhibition causes decorrelation of mitral cell a
115  signaling events reveal a robust pattern of lateral inhibition conducted by Ato-coordinated Notch an
116                                      Because lateral inhibition confers both costs and benefits, the
117                                              Lateral inhibition depends on LET-99, which inhibits GPR
118 ites, the likely purveyors of Notch-mediated lateral inhibition, do not support a role for these site
119                        Mechanistically, such lateral inhibition does not depend on synapses and is pr
120 nstrate an important role for Notch-mediated lateral inhibition during cochlear hair cell patterning,
121  the generally assumed mode of operation for lateral inhibition during development; more generally, t
122             Notch and Delta are required for lateral inhibition during eye development.
123 ) becomes established through Notch-mediated lateral inhibition during G2 phase of the cell cycle, as
124 d that neu is required cell-autonomously for lateral inhibition during peripheral neurogenesis and fo
125 le for other N-mediated processes, including lateral inhibition during wing vein development and wing
126 lation between MSNs attributable to weakened lateral inhibition enables the strong influence of synch
127 upport a new model for R8 selection in which lateral inhibition establishes a transient pattern of se
128 bles additional spectral comparisons through lateral inhibition, expanding the range of chromatic enc
129 the root epidermis, which generates a second lateral inhibition feedback loop.
130        Dopamine D2 receptors (D2Rs) suppress lateral inhibition from iMSNs to disinhibit dMSNs, which
131 ells of the model receive strong (nonlinear) lateral inhibition from other neurons in the model corte
132  inhibition of NAc MSNs from CB1(+) FSIs and lateral inhibition from recurrent MSN collaterals.
133                       Thus, spatially offset lateral inhibition generates directionality at three dif
134 p early and in excess, in agreement with the lateral inhibition hypothesis.
135 ssible resolution of a debate on the role of lateral inhibition in cell fate specification.
136 otch-dependent cell fate decisions including lateral inhibition in Drosophila neurogenesis.
137    Notch signalling is well-known to mediate lateral inhibition in inner ear sensory patches, so as t
138 jacent ORN, suggesting a broad occurrence of lateral inhibition in insects and possible applications
139 e diverse response patterns reported in vivo-lateral inhibition in some cases, approximately balanced
140 ractions suggest that interneurons mediating lateral inhibition in the central retina, likely horizon
141 nization in the time domain is due to strong lateral inhibition in the highly specialized area of the
142 Neuron, Fantana et al. provide evidence that lateral inhibition in the olfactory bulb selectively act
143 sents a candidate mechanism for subthreshold lateral inhibition in the olfactory bulb.
144 gests novel mechanisms for the regulation of lateral inhibition in the olfactory bulb.
145                                    Moreover, lateral inhibition in the periphery can modulate olfacto
146 e signal, a fixed feature in the signal, and lateral inhibition in the receiver.
147 e-enhancement phenomena produced by means of lateral inhibition in the retina of the eye.
148   These findings reveal that protons mediate lateral inhibition in the retina, raising the possibilit
149 tion to delineating processes that establish lateral inhibition in the retina, these results contribu
150 r terminals and thus provide a substrate for lateral inhibition in the rod pathway.
151                                              Lateral inhibition in the vertebrate retina depends on a
152      Here, however, we present an example of lateral inhibition in which unidirectional signaling dep
153                                      Reduced lateral inhibition in zebrafish mib mutant embryos permi
154 ptional regulator TAZ as a novel mediator of lateral inhibition in zebrafish oogenesis that directs c
155 , many response properties appear to require lateral inhibition, including precise orientation and di
156  quantitatively reproduced by simulations of lateral inhibition incorporating Delta-Notch signaling b
157                                              Lateral inhibition increases the level of feedforward in
158  Given the role of M/TCs in OB output and in lateral inhibition, increasing the number of M/TCs conne
159                                              Lateral inhibition, inhibitory postsynaptic potentials e
160 1(lof) mutants indicate that MpFRH1-mediated lateral inhibition involves the repression of MpRSL1 act
161                                              Lateral inhibition is a circuit motif found throughout t
162                                              Lateral inhibition is a common feature of cortical netwo
163                                              Lateral inhibition is a fundamental circuit operation th
164                                              Lateral inhibition is a fundamental feature of circuits
165 f particular odorants.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Lateral inhibition is a key feature of circuitry in many
166                                              Lateral inhibition is a pervasive process in which one c
167 acute OB slices from mice, we tested whether lateral inhibition is affected by prior odor exposure an
168 two mechanisms: 1) Where there are hotspots, lateral inhibition is amplified; 2) Where no hotspots em
169 n individual sensilla, we find that ephaptic lateral inhibition is asymmetric such that one ORN exert
170 ral inhibition by defining time windows when lateral inhibition is functional.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT
171 f cone inputs to the circuitry that mediates lateral inhibition is not cone-type specific, but whethe
172                                              Lateral inhibition is one of the key functions of Notch
173 naptic activity is required before effective lateral inhibition is recruited.
174 ctor, is sequestered apically at a time when lateral inhibition is required for patterning in the dev
175                 A second model proposes that lateral inhibition is sufficient to select a single R8 f
176                               Notch-mediated lateral inhibition is the proposed mechanism for creatin
177 f auditory processing in which broadly tuned lateral inhibition is used to limit excitatory receptive
178 positive feedback associated with widespread lateral inhibition, is mediated by the cortical neural n
179 tation--reciprocal inhibition of feedforward lateral inhibition--is structurally the simplest, and it
180 nt downstream mediators of Notch function in lateral inhibition, it is not known what genes function
181 ty represents the process by which effective lateral inhibition leads to diversification of progenito
182 te line communication.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Lateral inhibition (LI) is a fundamental feature of info
183                                              Lateral inhibition may be a general mechanism behind the
184                       In the olfactory bulb, lateral inhibition may occur between odorant receptor-sp
185                              Intraglomerular lateral inhibition may play a key role in olfactory proc
186 dels, e.g., adapting neural populations with lateral inhibition, may account for the dynamics of bist
187 t of a self-forming pattern, emerging from a lateral inhibition mechanism determined by a network of
188 fashion in the pronephros, suggesting that a lateral inhibition mechanism may play a role in their di
189 then participates in a negative feedback and lateral inhibition mechanism that defines the precise pa
190  The truncated MYB encoded by CPC mediates a lateral inhibition mechanism to negatively regulate WER,
191 ly, the interaction along scale implements a lateral inhibition mechanism, a canonical principle that
192 rol endocrine cell differentiation through a lateral inhibition mechanism; and that alpha and beta ce
193 imary or secondary fate using one of several lateral inhibition mechanisms.
194 otrusions that deliver temporally controlled lateral inhibition mediated at a distance.
195  potential to become sensory hair cells, and lateral inhibition mediated by Delta-Notch signaling res
196 ault in the absence of Notch activation, and lateral inhibition mediated by Delta-Notch signalling is
197                                              Lateral inhibition mediated by Delta/Notch (Dl/N) signal
198 in different networks engage in long-lasting lateral inhibition mediated by dendrodendritic synapses
199 ductive cellular determination signal, while lateral inhibition mediated by Notch antagonizes this ac
200                                              Lateral inhibition mediated by Notch is thought to gener
201 ion of this complex cellular mosaic requires lateral inhibition mediated by Notch signaling.
202 toreceptor interactions were consistent with lateral inhibition mediated by retinal horizontal cells
203 ted from proneural clusters via a process of lateral inhibition mediated by the Notch signaling pathw
204 ay serve to modulate, over a long timescale, lateral inhibition mediated by these cells.
205          Mathematical modeling predicts that lateral inhibition, mediated by Notch signaling, functio
206                                              Lateral inhibition, mediated by Notch signaling, leads t
207                                      Second, lateral inhibition, mediated by the neurogenic genes, ac
208 have used computer modelling to test whether lateral inhibition might transform an initial population
209                   In support of the standard lateral inhibition model, both continuous and Hes5-regul
210                            Unlike a standard lateral inhibition model, our picture implies that R8s a
211  in contrast to the predictions of classical lateral inhibition models.
212 nderlying the regulation of neurogenesis and lateral inhibition of boundary cell formation by Wnt1 ha
213 on selectivity, and we show that it includes lateral inhibition of glutamatergic bipolar cells and se
214 ng MSX2 expression, which, in turn, leads to lateral inhibition of hair follicle formation within the
215 other photoreceptor fates and is involved in lateral inhibition of interommatidial bristles but is no
216 back loop between Notch and Delta leading to lateral inhibition of neighboring cells.
217            One early-acting mechanism is the lateral inhibition of neighbouring cells from acquiring
218 ections between glomeruli mediated only weak lateral inhibition of OSN inputs in slices and did not d
219 ty between projection neurons, feedback, and lateral inhibition of these axons by a large population
220                      Differential effects of lateral inhibition onto MCs and TCs via distinct lateral
221                                We found that lateral inhibition onto Off SACs from non-SAC amacrine c
222                                 In contrast, lateral inhibition onto On SACs is not necessary for dir
223 actory neural circuitry shows that decreased lateral inhibition onto projection neurons relaying sens
224 rons, increases the strength of M72-mediated lateral inhibition onto TCs, but not MCs, that project t
225 ne increased the strength of interglomerular lateral inhibition onto TCs, but not MCs, when the M72 g
226 istent with a theoretical model where either lateral inhibition or co-tuning can predominate, dependi
227 gh level of Neurog3 expression could mediate lateral inhibition or other unknown feedback mechanisms
228 prisingly, while misexpression of m6 impairs lateral inhibition, overexpression of m2 potentiates it,
229                                              Lateral inhibition patterns differentiated cell types am
230 itates the formation of sharp boundaries and lateral-inhibition patterns in models of development, an
231  both the early prosensory phase and a later lateral inhibition phase.
232 is sufficient to rescue neur function in the lateral inhibition process by which adult sensory organ
233 dence that Barbu can antagonize Notch during lateral inhibition processes in the embryonic mesoderm,
234 s cellular differentiation in Notch-mediated lateral inhibition processes, such that smaller cells ar
235 hancement of glycinergic IPSPs and transient lateral inhibition produced by a rotating windmill patte
236 al approaches, we show that Notch1a-mediated lateral inhibition produces a bistable switch that relia
237                                              Lateral inhibition produces the centre-surround organiza
238 rovided pure inhibition, consistent with the lateral inhibition proposed earlier.
239 romatin in equipotent progenitors undergoing lateral inhibition quickly enables distinct, transiently
240                            We found that the lateral inhibition received by mitral cells is gated by
241 nd circuit modeling indicate that asymmetric lateral inhibition reflects a surprisingly simple mechan
242               We propose that Notch mediated lateral inhibition regulates the relative numbers of spe
243 anisms underlying this underexplored form of lateral inhibition remain unclear.
244 ontal cells to photoreceptors that generates lateral inhibition remains uncertain.
245                                              Lateral inhibition requires the Notch intracellular doma
246                                       Later, lateral inhibition restores the repression of neural dev
247 enesis, Notch ligands from nascent HCs exert lateral inhibition, restricting HC production.
248 h signalling within each such patch mediates lateral inhibition, restricting the proportion of cells
249  for many developmental processes, including lateral inhibition, segmentation, sex determination, dor
250 the olfactory bulb in vitro and measured how lateral inhibition shapes correlations across timescales
251 on Ca(2+) imaging in awake mice to show that lateral inhibition shapes frequency tuning in primary au
252 ry and cell division makes ECs refractory to lateral inhibition signalling, fixing their fate.
253 cortical properties of localized processing, lateral inhibition, simultaneous contrast, and nonlinear
254                                      Without lateral inhibition, some cells acquire ectopic fates.
255                            However, how this lateral inhibition system works at the molecular level i
256 erved for patterns with cellular homogeneity-lateral inhibition tends to give short-range patterns, w
257 imprecise rebound bursting; (2) TRN-mediated lateral inhibition that further desynchronizes firing in
258 ompetition appears to involve Notch-mediated lateral inhibition that prevents extra cells from assumi
259 ef, early exposure to light to stabilize the lateral inhibition that shapes receptive fields.
260     The role of the Notch pathway during the lateral inhibition that underlies binary cell fate choic
261 of excitatory and inhibitory neurons induces lateral inhibition that, through the timing and strength
262                                        As in lateral inhibition, the metalloprotease Kuzbanian, the E
263 tory-specific transcription factor, controls lateral inhibition through delta-like notch ligand genes
264 e speculate that mGluRs amplify spike-driven lateral inhibition through the mitral-to-granule cell ci
265 me have long been proposed in the context of lateral inhibition through the Notch-Delta pathway, some
266 tine crypts, where notch signalling mediates lateral inhibition to assign progenitor cells into absor
267 is dynamic regulation allows the strength of lateral inhibition to be enhanced between cells with cor
268  additional mechanisms operate downstream of lateral inhibition to eliminate patterning errors in the
269 tributions of these two forms of presynaptic lateral inhibition to ganglion cell light sensitivity by
270 hese events act together with the process of lateral inhibition to generate precursor cells (neurobla
271 previous models require local excitation and lateral inhibition to maintain spatially localized persi
272                      Feedback models rely on lateral inhibition to refine selectivity relative to a w
273 theoretical explanations ranging from simple lateral inhibition to those based on the influence of kn
274   The model predicted that in the absence of lateral inhibition, two-dimensional rhizoid cell groups
275 tationary edges on any surrounds, ruling out lateral inhibition-type explanations.
276                    Proneural enhancement and lateral inhibition use similar ligand binding and recept
277   However, circuits in which the strength of lateral inhibition varies with the relative strength of
278                   Cell fate determination by lateral inhibition via Notch/Delta signalling has been e
279 ing behavior emerges from the interaction of lateral inhibition (via the surround pathways), which is
280 thermore, the network suppression underlying lateral inhibition was blocked by inactivation of somato
281                                 The observed lateral inhibition was entirely dependent on circuitry w
282                                     However, lateral inhibition was not uniformly larger during a par
283 binoid (eCB) signaling, whereas MSN-mediated lateral inhibition was unaffected.
284             In the absence of nasal airflow, lateral inhibition was weaker in mitral cells and less m
285 as been thought to arise from an increase in lateral inhibition, we find that the inhibition that cel
286          To test if MpFRH1 miRNA acts during lateral inhibition, we generated loss-of-function (lof)
287 ication has been well studied in the case of lateral inhibition, where ligand binding at the cell sur
288  bipotential progenitors is then governed by lateral inhibition, where Notch>Hes1-mediated Ngn3 prote
289 rk for an updated model of the intrastriatal lateral inhibition, where we explore its contribution to
290 some theories invoke enhancement of edges by lateral inhibition, whereas others rely on transients ca
291                                              Lateral inhibition, wherein a single cell signals to its
292  to cone signals is horizontal-cell-mediated lateral inhibition, which imparts a spatially antagonist
293  particular circuit element, interglomerular lateral inhibition, which is known to be critical for a
294 pared the effects of blocking just the known lateral inhibition with blocking all GABAergic inhibitio
295 near summation of non-patterned stimuli, and lateral inhibition with spatial patterns [5], which incr
296 n of a repressive patterning signal, such as lateral inhibition, with continued developmental plastic
297 k connections between areas, and short-range lateral inhibition within each area.
298  conductance-based model that only contained lateral inhibition within L1 recapitulated the sensory r
299                                 This induces lateral inhibition, yielding a pattern in which each Del
300                                 We show that lateral inhibition yields robustness to changes in prepa

 
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