TopicNeuroscience
Content Overview
7Total items
5ePosters
2Seminars

Latest

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Reprogramming the nociceptive circuit topology reshapes sexual behavior in C. elegans

Vladyslava Pechuk
Oren lab, Weizmann Institute of Science
Jun 8, 2022

In sexually reproducing species, males and females respond to environmental sensory cues and transform the input into sexually dimorphic traits. Yet, how sexually dimorphic behavior is encoded in the nervous system is poorly understood. We characterize the sexually dimorphic nociceptive behavior in C. elegans – hermaphrodites present a lower pain threshold than males in response to aversive stimuli, and study the underlying neuronal circuits, which are composed of the same neurons that are wired differently. By imaging receptor expression, calcium responses and glutamate secretion, we show that sensory transduction is similar in the two sexes, and therefore explore how downstream network topology shapes dimorphic behavior. We generated a computational model that replicates the observed dimorphic behavior, and used this model to predict simple network rewirings that would switch the behavior between the sexes. We then showed experimentally, using genetic manipulations, artificial gap junctions, automated tracking and optogenetics, that these subtle changes to male connectivity result in hermaphrodite-like aversive behavior in-vivo, while hermaphrodite behavior was more robust to perturbations. Strikingly, when presented with aversive cues, rewired males were compromised in finding mating partners, suggesting that the network topology that enables efficient avoidance of noxious cues would have a reproductive "cost". To summarize, we present a deconstruction of a sex-shared neural circuit that affects sexual behavior, and how to reprogram it. More broadly, our results are an example of how common neuronal circuits changed their function during evolution by subtle topological rewirings to account for different environmental and sexual needs.

SeminarNeuroscience

Plasticity of Pain and Pleasure

Robert Bonin
University of Toronto Centre for the Study of Pain
Feb 1, 2021

What happens when the nervous system fails to adapt? Our perception of the world relies on a nervous system that learns and adapts to sensory information. Based on our experience we can predict what a wooden surface will feel like, that fire is hot, and that a gentle caress from a partner can be soothing. But our sensory experience of the world is not static – warm water can feel like fire on sunburned skin and the gentle brush of our clothes can be excruciating after an injury. In pathological conditions such as chronic pain, changes in nervous system function can cause normally innocuous sensory stimuli to be perceived as aversive or painful long after the initial injury has happened. These changes can sometimes be similar to the formation of a pain ‘memory’ that can modulate and distort our perception of sensory information. Our research program seeks to understand how fundamental processes that govern the formation and maintenance of plastic changes in the nervous system can lead to pathological conditions and how we can reverse engineer these changes to treat chronic conditions.

ePosterNeuroscience

MIR-34A SELECTIVELY MODULATES INHIBITORY INPUT ONTO DRN→PFC SEROTONERGIC NEURONS IN RESPONSE TO AVERSIVE STIMULI

Elena Tittarelli, Donals Ielpo, Serafina Manila Guzzo, Luisa Lo Iacono, Cristina Marchetti, Diego Andolina

FENS Forum 2026

ePosterNeuroscience

FIGHT, FLIGHT, AND FIRING: INVESTIGATING THE EFFECTS OF AVERSIVE STIMULI ON GLUTAMATERGIC CELL ACTIVITY IN THE MEDIAL ZONA INCERTA

Manjusha Goli, Sandeep Sharma, Cecilia Reuther, Michelle Tran, Patrick Whelan

FENS Forum 2026

ePosterNeuroscience

REPRESENTATION OF MULTIPLE REWARDING AND AVERSIVE STIMULI IN THE ROSTROMEDIAL TEGMENTAL NUCLEUS

Kamil Pradel, Katharina Wolff, Tatiana Korotkova

FENS Forum 2026

ePosterNeuroscience

LATERAL SEPTAL CHOLINERGIC NEURONS REPRESENT AVERSIVE STIMULI AND MEDIATE AVOIDANCE BEHAVIOR

Irisz Szabo, Victoria Lyakhova, Daniel Schlingloff, Reka Kispal, Erika Gyengesi, Balazs Hangya

FENS Forum 2026

ePosterNeuroscience

Dynamic representation of appetitive and aversive stimuli in nucleus accumbens shell D1- and D2-medium spiny neurons

Ana Verónica Domingues, Tawan T. A. Carvalho, Barbara Coimbra, Gabriela J. Martins, Raquel Correia, Ricardo Gonçaslves, Marcelina Wezik, Rita Gaspar, Luísa Pinto, Nuno Sousa, Rui M Costa, Carina Soares-Cunha, Ana João Rodrigues

FENS Forum 2024

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