TopicNeuroscience
Content Overview
8Total items
6ePosters
2Seminars

Latest

SeminarNeuroscience

Neuromodulation of striatal D1 cells shapes BOLD fluctuations in anatomically connected thalamic and cortical regions

Marija Markicevic
Yale
Jan 19, 2024

Understanding how macroscale brain dynamics are shaped by microscale mechanisms is crucial in neuroscience. We investigate this relationship in animal models by directly manipulating cellular properties and measuring whole-brain responses using resting-state fMRI. Specifically, we explore the impact of chemogenetically neuromodulating D1 medium spiny neurons in the dorsomedial caudate putamen (CPdm) on BOLD dynamics within a striato-thalamo-cortical circuit in mice. Our findings indicate that CPdm neuromodulation alters BOLD dynamics in thalamic subregions projecting to the dorsomedial striatum, influencing both local and inter-regional connectivity in cortical areas. This study contributes to understanding structure–function relationships in shaping inter-regional communication between subcortical and cortical levels.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Prefrontal top-down projections control context-dependent strategy selection

Olivier Gschwend
Medidee Services SA, (former postdoc at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)
Dec 7, 2022

The rules governing behavior often vary with behavioral contexts. As a result, an action rewarded in one context may be discouraged in another. Animals and humans are capable of switching between behavioral strategies under different contexts and acting adaptively according to the variable rules, a flexibility that is thought to be mediated by the prefrontal cortex (PFC). However, how the PFC orchestrates the context-dependent switch of strategies remains unclear. Here we show that pathway-specific projection neurons in the medial PFC (mPFC) differentially contribute to context-instructed strategy selection. In mice trained in a decision-making task in which a previously established rule and a newly learned rule are associated with distinct contexts, the activity of mPFC neurons projecting to the dorsomedial striatum (mPFC-DMS) encodes the contexts and further represents decision strategies conforming to the old and new rules. Moreover, mPFC-DMS neuron activity is required for the context-instructed strategy selection. In contrast, the activity of mPFC neurons projecting to the ventral midline thalamus (mPFC-VMT) does not discriminate between the contexts, and represents the old rule even if mice have adopted the new one. Furthermore, these neurons act to prevent the strategy switch under the new rule. Our results suggest that mPFC-DMS neurons promote flexible strategy selection guided by contexts, whereas mPFC-VMT neurons favor fixed strategy selection by preserving old rules.

ePosterNeuroscience

A Multi-region, Multi-task RNN Model of How Dorsomedial Striatum Implements Flexible Behavior

Sreejan Kumar, Moufan Li, Marcelo Mattar

COSYNE 2025

ePosterNeuroscience

Distinct involvement of direct and indirect pathways from the dorsolateral and dorsomedial striatum in the pathophysiology of Huntington’s disease

Sara Conde-Berriozabal, Laia Sitjà-Roqueta, Esther García-García, Lia García-Gilabert, Sara García-Fernández, Ened Rodríguez-Urgellés, Guadalupe Soria, Manuel José Rodríguez, Jordi Alberch, Mercè Masana
ePosterNeuroscience

Lipopolysaccharide-induced neuroinflammation in the posterior dorsomedial striatum facilitates goal-directed action

Arvie R. Abiero
ePosterNeuroscience

Synchronization of multisensory information in dorsomedial striatum

María Sáez, Javier Alegre-Cortes, Nicolás A. Morgenstern, Cristina García-Frigola, Roberto De la Torre-Martínez, Ramon Reig
ePosterNeuroscience

Action-outcome based flexible behavior requires medial prefrontal cortex lead and its enhanced functional connectivity with dorsomedial striatum

Áron Kőszeghy, Wei Xu, Mingshan Liu, Peiheng Lu, Long Wan, Peggy Series, Jian Gan

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

BMAL1 in the dorsomedial striatum affects alcohol consumption, affective behavior, and motor function sex-specifically in mice

Mahgol Darvishmolla, Richard Courtemanche, Konrad Schottner, Shimon Amir

FENS Forum 2024

dorsomedial striatum coverage

8 items

ePoster6
Seminar2

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