TopicNeuroscience
Content Overview
11Total items
7ePosters
4Seminars

Latest

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Combined electrophysiological and optical recording of multi-scale neural circuit dynamics

Chris Lewis
University of Zurich
Apr 30, 2024

This webinar will showcase new approaches for electrophysiological recordings using our silicon neural probes and surface arrays combined with diverse optical methods such as wide-field or 2-photon imaging, fiber photometry, and optogenetic perturbations in awake, behaving mice. Multi-modal recording of single units and local field potentials across cortex, hippocampus and thalamus alongside calcium activity via GCaMP6F in cortical neurons in triple-transgenic animals or in hippocampal astrocytes via viral transduction are brought to bear to reveal hitherto inaccessible and under-appreciated aspects of coordinated dynamics in the brain.

SeminarNeuroscience

Identifying central mechanisms of glucocorticoid circadian rhythm dysfunction in breast cancer

Jeremy C. Borniger
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Oct 18, 2022

The circadian release of endogenous glucocorticoids is essential in preparing and synchronizing the body’s daily physiological needs. Disruption in the rhythmic activity of glucocorticoids has been observed in individuals with a variety of cancer types, and blunting of this rhythm has been shown to predict cancer mortality and declines in quality of life. This suggests that a disrupted glucocorticoid rhythm is potentially a shared phenotype across cancers. However, where this phenomenon is driven by the cancer itself, and the causal mechanisms that link glucocorticoid rhythm dysfunction and cancer outcomes remain preliminary at best. The regulation of daily glucocorticoid activity has been well-characterized and is maintained, in part, by the coordinated response of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, consisting of the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) and corticotropin-releasing hormone-expressing neurons of the paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus (PVNCRH). Consequently, we set out to examine if cancer-induced glucocorticoid dysfunction is regulated by disruptions within these hypothalamic nuclei. In comparison to their tumor-free baseline, mammary tumor-bearing mice exhibited a blunting of glucocorticoid rhythms across multiple timepoints throughout the day, as measured by the overall levels and the slope of fecal corticosterone rhythms, during tumor progression. We further examined how peripheral tumors shape hypothalamic activity within the brain. Serial two-photon tomography for whole-brain cFos imaging suggests a disrupted activation of the PVN in mice with tumors. Additionally, we found GFP labeled CRH+ neurons within the PVN after injection of pseudorabies virus expressing GFP into the tumor, pointing to the PVN as a primary target disrupted by mammary tumors. Preliminary in vivo fiber photometry data show that PVNCRH neurons exhibit enhanced calcium activity during tumor progression, as compared to baseline (no tumor) activity. Taken together, this suggests that there may be an overactive HPA response during tumor progression, which in turn, may result in a subsequent negative feedback on glucocorticoid rhythms. Current studies are examining whether tumor progression modulates SCN calcium activity, how the transcriptional profile of PVNCRH neurons is changed, and test if manipulation of the neurocircuitry surrounding glucocorticoid rhythmicity alters tumor characteristics.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Technologies for large scale cortical imaging and electrophysiology

Suhasa Kodandaramaiah
University of Minnesota
Jun 22, 2021

Neural computations occurring simultaneously in multiple cerebral cortical regions are critical for mediating behaviors. Progress has been made in understanding how neural activity in specific cortical regions contributes to behavior. However, there is a lack of tools that allow simultaneous monitoring and perturbing neural activity from multiple cortical regions. We have engineered a suite of technologies to enable easy, robust access to much of the dorsal cortex of mice for optical and electrophysiological recordings. First, I will describe microsurgery robots that can programmed to perform delicate microsurgical procedures such as large bilateral craniotomies across the cortex and skull thinning in a semi-automated fashion. Next, I will describe digitally designed, morphologically realistic, transparent polymer skulls that allow long-term (>300 days) optical access. These polymer skulls allow mesoscopic imaging, as well as cellular and subcellular resolution two-photon imaging of neural structures up to 600 µm deep. We next engineered a widefield, miniaturized, head-mounted fluorescence microscope that is compatible with transparent polymer skull preparations. With a field of view of 8 × 10 mm2 and weighing less than 4 g, the ‘mini-mScope’ can image most of the mouse dorsal cortex with resolutions ranging from 39 to 56 µm. We used the mini-mScope to record mesoscale calcium activity across the dorsal cortex during sensory-evoked stimuli, open field behaviors, social interactions and transitions from wakefulness to sleep.

SeminarNeuroscience

A paradoxical kind of sleep In Drosophila melanogaster

Bruno van Swinderen
University of Queensland
Apr 30, 2020

The dynamic nature of sleep in most animals suggests distinct stages which serve different functions. Genetic sleep induction methods in animal models provide a powerful way to disambiguate these stages and functions, although behavioural methods alone are insufficient to accurately identify what kind of sleep is being engaged. In Drosophila, activation of the dorsal fan-shaped body (dFB) promotes sleep, but it remains unclear what kind of sleep this is, how the rest of the fly brain is behaving, or if any specific sleep functions are being achieved. Here, we developed a method to record calcium activity from thousands of neurons across a volume of the fly brain during dFB-induced sleep, and we compared this to the effects of a sleep-promoting drug. We found that drug-induced spontaneous sleep decreased brain activity and connectivity, whereas dFB sleep was not different from wakefulness. Paradoxically, dFB-induced sleep was found to be even deeper than drug- induced sleep. When we probed the sleeping fly brain with salient visual stimuli, we found that the activity of visually-responsive neurons was blocked by dFB activation, confirming a disconnect from the external environment. Prolonged optogenetic dFB activation nevertheless achieved a significant sleep function, by correcting visual attention defects brought on by sleep deprivation. These results suggest that dFB activation promotes a distinct form of sleep in Drosophila, where brain activity and connectivity remain similar to wakefulness, but responsiveness to external sensory stimuli is profoundly suppressed.

ePosterNeuroscience

A latent model of calcium activity outperforms alternatives at removing behavioral artifacts in two-channel calcium imaging

Matthew Creamer,Kevin Chen,Andrew M Leifer,Jonathan Pillow

COSYNE 2022

ePosterNeuroscience

A latent model of calcium activity outperforms alternatives at removing behavioral artifacts in two-channel calcium imaging

Matthew Creamer,Kevin Chen,Andrew M Leifer,Jonathan Pillow

COSYNE 2022

ePosterNeuroscience

The correlation between calcium activity in astrocytes and mouse behavior

Anna Fedotova, Alexey Brazhe, Alisa Tiaglik, Pavel Denisov, Vladimir Muravlev, Dmytro Toptunov, Evgeny Pryazhnikov, Leonard Khiroug, Ilya Fedotov, Maxim Solotenkov, Andrei Fedotov, Aleksei Zheltikov, Alexey Semyanov
ePosterNeuroscience

The endoplasmic reticulum in fine astrocytic processes: presence, shape, distribution and effect on calcium activity

Audrey Denizot, María Fernanda Veloz Castillo, Pavel Puchenkov, Corrado Calì, Erik De Schutter
ePosterNeuroscience

Cortical oligodendrocyte precursor cells exhibit distinct calcium activity patterns during fate progression

Frederic Fiore, Khaleel Alhalaseh, Ram Dereddi, Felipe Bodaleo, Amit Agarwal

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

In-vivo co-registering of functional calcium activity with nine other virally expressed fluorophores through an implanted GRIN lens

Nicolai Urban, Mary L Phillips, Ryohei Yasuda

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Links between novelty, c-Fos expression, and hippocampal calcium activity in mice

Olga Rogozhnikova, Nikita Dokukin, Anna Ivanova, Olga Ivashkina, Victor Plusnin, Nikita Saveliev, Vladimir Sotskov, Ksenia Toropova, Konstantin Anokhin

FENS Forum 2024

calcium activity coverage

11 items

ePoster7
Seminar4

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