TopicNeuroscience

cortical pyramidal cells

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4Total items
3ePosters
1Seminar

Latest

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

NMC4 Short Talk: Resilience through diversity: Loss of neuronal heterogeneity in epileptogenic human tissue impairs network resilience to sudden changes in synchrony

Scott Rich
Kremibl Brain Institute
Dec 1, 2021

A myriad of pathological changes associated with epilepsy, including the loss of specific cell types, improper expression of individual ion channels, and synaptic sprouting, can be recast as decreases in cell and circuit heterogeneity. In recent experimental work, we demonstrated that biophysical diversity is a key characteristic of human cortical pyramidal cells, and past theoretical work has shown that neuronal heterogeneity improves a neural circuit’s ability to encode information. Viewed alongside the fact that seizure is an information-poor brain state, these findings motivate the hypothesis that epileptogenesis can be recontextualized as a process where reduction in cellular heterogeneity renders neural circuits less resilient to seizure onset. By comparing whole-cell patch clamp recordings from layer 5 (L5) human cortical pyramidal neurons from epileptogenic and non-epileptogenic tissue, we present the first direct experimental evidence that a significant reduction in neural heterogeneity accompanies epilepsy. We directly implement experimentally-obtained heterogeneity levels in cortical excitatory-inhibitory (E-I) stochastic spiking network models. Low heterogeneity networks display unique dynamics typified by a sudden transition into a hyper-active and synchronous state paralleling ictogenesis. Mean-field analysis reveals a distinct mathematical structure in these networks distinguished by multi-stability. Furthermore, the mathematically characterized linearizing effect of heterogeneity on input-output response functions explains the counter-intuitive experimentally observed reduction in single-cell excitability in epileptogenic neurons. This joint experimental, computational, and mathematical study showcases that decreased neuronal heterogeneity exists in epileptogenic human cortical tissue, that this difference yields dynamical changes in neural networks paralleling ictogenesis, and that there is a fundamental explanation for these dynamics based in mathematically characterized effects of heterogeneity. These interdisciplinary results provide convincing evidence that biophysical diversity imbues neural circuits with resilience to seizure and a new lens through which to view epilepsy, the most common serious neurological disorder in the world, that could reveal new targets for clinical treatment.

ePosterNeuroscience

Cortical pyramidal cells express thyroid hormone transporters MCT8 and OATP1C1 in human and monkey brain

Yu Wang, Ting Wang, Lucía Prensa, Ana A. Guadaño, Estrella T. Rausell
ePosterNeuroscience

Dendritic signaling in cortical pyramidal cells during visual discrimination

Borbála Kertész, Eszter Báthory, Zoltán Szadai, Martin Stacho, Lídia Popara, Tamás Tompa, Katalin Ócsai, Gergely Szalay, István M. Takács, Andrius Plauska, Linda Sulcz-Judák, Gergely Katona, Balázs Rózsa
ePosterNeuroscience

Interhemispheric synaptic inputs to neocortical pyramidal cells with dendritic versus somatic axon origin

Aline Pannier, Andreas Draguhn, Martin Both

FENS Forum 2024

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