TopicNeuroscience
Content Overview
5Total items
2Seminars
2ePosters
1Grant

Latest

GrantNeuroscience

Molecular strategies for resolving differential regulation of dopamine subpopulations

National Institute of Mental Health
Jun 9, 2028

Project Summary/Abstract Dopamine neurons in the ventral tegmental area (VTA) fire action potentials in complex patterns of tonic and phasic activity in response to environmental stimuli and during behavioral tasks. Transcriptomic, anatomical, and functional studies have established that VTA dopamine neurons can be divided into multiple subpopulations with variable gene expression, projection patterns, and response profiles. We recently completed a transcriptomic study that identified genetic markers for three distinct subpopulations of VTA dopamine neurons, and also found evidence for variability in ion channel gene expression between populations that correlated with differences in activity-dependent gene expression. However, much remains unknown regarding how specific genes encoding ion channels, receptors, transcription factors, or other signaling components contribute to the variability in baseline physiological properties observed across the VTA. Here we propose to combine slice electrophysiology recordings of VTA dopamine neurons with post-hoc single-cell sequencing analysis (i.e. patch-seq), which will allow us to directly correlate gene expression and physiological properties in order to identify candidate genes that may be key drivers of the variability between subpopulations. We also propose to validate and utilize a novel dual-recombinase CRISPR/Cas9 system for targeted gene mutagenesis in intersectional neuronal populations, which will provide a mechanism for testing gene function with unprecedented precision. We will use this approach to test the function of two candidate ion channel genes, the potassium channels Kcnh5 and Kcnh7, previously identified in our transcriptomic study as potential contributors to dopamine neuron action potential firing properties. We hypothesize that these genes are important for enabling rapid action potential firing in highly excitable dopamine neurons found in specific subpopulations. As a whole, with this proposal we aim to generate a valuable dataset linking gene expression in VTA dopamine neurons with physiology and subpopulation identification, as well as develop an intersectional gene mutagenesis strategy that can be used throughout the brain to precisely target neuronal subpopulations to test gene function. With this approach, we hope to facilitate future precision targeting of the dopamine system and dopamine-dependent behaviors.

SeminarNeuroscience

Metabolic-functional coupling of parvalbmunin-positive GABAergic interneurons in the injured and epileptic brain

Chris Dulla
Tufts
Jun 19, 2024

Parvalbumin-positive GABAergic interneurons (PV-INs) provide inhibitory control of excitatory neuron activity, coordinate circuit function, and regulate behavior and cognition. PV-INs are uniquely susceptible to loss and dysfunction in traumatic brain injury (TBI) and epilepsy but the cause of this susceptibility is unknown. One hypothesis is that PV-INs use specialized metabolic systems to support their high-frequency action potential firing and that metabolic stress disrupts these systems, leading to their dysfunction and loss. Metabolism-based therapies can restore PV-IN function after injury in preclinical TBI models. Based on these findings, we hypothesize that (1) PV-INs are highly metabolically specialized, (2) these specializations are lost after TBI, and (3) restoring PV-IN metabolic specializations can improve PV-IN function as well as TBI-related outcomes. Using novel single-cell approaches, we can now quantify cell-type-specific metabolism in complex tissues to determine whether PV-IN metabolic dysfunction contributes to the pathophysiology of TBI.

SeminarNeuroscience

Synchrony and Synaptic Signaling in Cerebellar Circuits

Indira Raman
Northwestern University
Apr 30, 2021

The cerebellum permits a wide range of behaviors that involve sensorimotor integration. We have been investigating how specific cellular and synaptic specializations of cerebellar neurons measured in vitro, give rise to circuit activity in vivo. We have investigated these issues by studying Purkinje neurons as well as the large neurons of the mouse cerebellar nuclei, which form the major excitatory premotor projection from the cerebellum. Large CbN cells have ion channels that favor spontaneous action potential firing and GABAA receptors that generate ultra-fast inhibitory synaptic currents, raising the possibility that these biophysical attributes may permit CbN cells to respond differently to the degree of temporal coherence of their Purkinje cell inputs. In vivo, self-initiated motor programs associated with whisking correlates with asynchronous changes in Purkinje cell simple spiking that are asynchronous across the population. The resulting inhibition converges with mossy fiber excitation to yield little change in CbN cell firing, such that cerebellar output is low or cancelled. In contrast, externally applied sensory stimuli elicits a transient, synchronous inhibition of Purkinje cell simple spiking. During the resulting strong disinhibition of CbN cells, sensory-induced excitation from mossy fibers effectively drives cerebellar outputs that increase the magnitude of reflexive whisking. Purkinje cell synchrony, therefore, may be a key variable contributing to the “positive effort” hypothesized by David Marr in 1969 to be necessary for cerebellar control of movement.

ePosterNeuroscience

Low action potential firing threshold facilitates "in-out" function of fast-spiking interneurons in the human neocortex

Emőke Bakos, Ádám Tiszlavicz, Viktor Szegedi, Abdennour Douida, Daphne Welter, Jonathan Landry, Pál Barzó, Gábor Tamás, Vladimir Benes, Attila Szűcs, Karri Lamsa

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Spontaneous and tonic action potential firing is sustained by membrane potential instabilities in peripheral sensory neurons

Enrique Velasco, Michael Mazar, Alina Milici, Ellaline Cami, María José Giner, Víctor Meseguer, Juana Gallar, Alexander Binshtok, Julio Álvarez, Karel Talavera

FENS Forum 2024

action potential firing coverage

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