TopicNeuroscience
Content Overview
6Total items
4ePosters
2Seminars

Latest

SeminarNeuroscience

Use of brain imaging data to improve prescriptions of psychotropic drugs - Examples of ketamine in depression and antipsychotics in schizophrenia

Xenia Marlene HART.
Central Institute of Mental Health, Department of Molecular Neuroimaging, Medical Faculty Mannheim, University of Heidelberg, Mannheim, Germany & Department of Neuropsychiatry, Keio University School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan
Oct 13, 2023

The use of molecular imaging, particularly PET and SPECT, has significantly transformed the treatment of schizophrenia with antipsychotic drugs since the late 1980s. It has offered insights into the links between drug target engagement, clinical effects, and side effects. A therapeutic window for receptor occupancy is established for antipsychotics, yet there is a divergence of opinions regarding the importance of blood levels, with many downplaying their significance. As a result, the role of therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) as a personalized therapy tool is often underrated. Since molecular imaging of antipsychotics has focused almost entirely on D2-like dopamine receptors and their potential to control positive symptoms, negative symptoms and cognitive deficits are hardly or not at all investigated. Alternative methods have been introduced, i.e. to investigate the correlation between approximated receptor occupancies from blood levels and cognitive measures. Within the domain of antidepressants, and specifically regarding ketamine's efficacy in depression treatment, there is limited comprehension of the association between plasma concentrations and target engagement. The measurement of AMPA receptors in the human brain has added a new level of comprehension regarding ketamine's antidepressant effects. To ensure precise prescription of psychotropic drugs, it is vital to have a nuanced understanding of how molecular and clinical effects interact. Clinician scientists are assigned with the task of integrating these indispensable pharmacological insights into practice, thereby ensuring a rational and effective approach to the treatment of mental health disorders, signaling a new era of personalized drug therapy mechanisms that promote neuronal plasticity not only under pathological conditions, but also in the healthy aging brain.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

How does the metabolically-expensive mammalian brain adapt to food scarcity?

Zahid Padamsey
Rochefort lab, University of Edinburgh
Feb 23, 2022

Information processing is energetically expensive. In the mammalian brain, it is unclear how information coding and energy usage are regulated during food scarcity. I addressed this in the visual cortex of awake mice using whole-cell recordings and two-photon imaging to monitor layer 2/3 neuronal activity and ATP usage. I found that food restriction reduced synaptic ATP usage by 29% through a decrease in AMPA receptor conductance. Neuronal excitability was nonetheless preserved by a compensatory increase in input resistance and a depolarized resting membrane potential. Consequently, neurons spiked at similar rates as controls, but spent less ATP on underlying excitatory currents. This energy-saving strategy had a cost since it amplified the variability of visually-evoked subthreshold responses, leading to a 32% broadening in orientation tuning and impaired fine visual discrimination. This reduction in coding precision was associated with reduced levels of the fat mass-regulated hormone leptin and was restored by exogenous leptin supplementation. These findings reveal novel mechanisms that dynamically regulate energy usage and coding precision in neocortex.

ePosterNeuroscience

Describing the long-range trafficking dynamics of the AMPA receptors in hippocampal neurons using a quantitative model framework

Surbhit Wagle, Nataliya Kraynyukova, Maximilian Kracht, Maximilian Eggl, Anne-Sophie C. Hafner, Amparo Acker-Palmer, Erin Schuman, Tatjana Tchumatchenko
ePosterNeuroscience

Fluorescence nanoscopy unravels Arc fine structures for AMPA receptors regulation

Martina Damenti, Giovanna Coceano, Jonatan Alvelid, Mariline Mendes Silva, Lea Rems, Yvonne Johansson, Erdinc Sezdig, Lucie Delemotte, Gilad Silberberg, Ilaria Testa
ePosterNeuroscience

Proteins of the tetraspanin family as potential modulators of AMPA receptors

Amina Becic, Aron Struß, Michael Hollmann
ePosterNeuroscience

Role of Ca++-permeable AMPA receptors in interneurons and pyramidal cells in seizure onset and propagation in human neocortex

Alice Podestà, Martin Holtkamp, Jörg Geiger, Pawel Fidzinski

AMPA receptors coverage

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