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Regulation of neutrophil endoplasmic reticulum stress response by IRE1a
Project Summary/Abstract: The lungs are exposed to pathogens and environmental toxins that trigger stress and cause numerous respiratory diseases. Effective host defenses against lung infection by bacterial pathogens, including methicillin- resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), rely on innate immune cells including neutrophils, prominent early responders to sites of infection. If host defenses are ineffective, MRSA causes serious lung infection, resulting in severe morbidity and a significant economic burden on healthcare facilities, where it is endemic. MRSA infections have a mortality rate of up to 14% and an estimated $500 million in healthcare costs in the US alone. Increasing resistance to vancomycin, the last resort antibiotic for MRSA infections, underscore the urgent need for innovative treatment approaches. Although directly targeting pathogens with antibiotics has been a successful approach for treating infections, many pathogens, including MRSA, eventually will become resistant to these drugs. As an alternative, immunomodulatory strategies to enhance host defenses, such as those shown to be effective against cancer cells, have the potential for treating drug-resistant pathogen infections. Recently, we showed that the inositol-requiring enzyme 1-α (IRE1α), an endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress sensor, is required for clearance of MRSA in a murine skin abscess model, where neutrophils are robustly recruited to the site of infection. Further, IRE1α coordinates signaling events upstream of calcium (Ca2+) mobilization, histone citrullination, and production of mitochondrial reactive oxygen species (mitoROS), all of which are important for neutrophil inflammatory responses including the formation of antimicrobial neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs). Because excessive neutrophil activation and NET release can be detrimental to vital organs, it is not clear whether neutrophil IRE1α-mediated stress responses aid or impede the resolution of infection in the lungs. While IRE1α activation has been linked to the development of lung fibrosis through the regulation of alveolar epithelial- to-mesenchymal transition in the context of chronic inflammatory diseases, its role in pulmonary neutrophil defenses is unknown. Thus, there is a gap in our knowledge of how cellular stress responses modulate pulmonary neutrophil defenses and infection outcomes in the lungs. The overarching goal of this proposal is to elucidate the mechanisms by which neutrophil IRE1α signaling influences production of mitoROS and Ca2+ mobilization to drive NET release, injure lungs, and regulate pulmonary host defense against MRSA. We will accomplish the following Aims: (1) Define the molecular mechanisms underlying IRE1α-mediated mitoROS hyperactivation of human and mouse primary neutrophils and excessive NET release, and (2) Elucidate the role of neutrophil IRE1α signaling in excessive NET release, lung injury, and immunity in vivo using a MRSA pneumonia infection mouse model. These studies will yield mechanistic insight into how IRE1α-driven ER stress responses impact pulmonary neutrophil defenses and lung injury revealing potential targets for anti-microbial immunotherapies.
Delineating the role of TREM2 in chronic pancreatitis
PROJECT SUMMARY Chronic pancreatitis (CP) is a progressive digestive disorder characterized by persistent inflammation, irreversible fibrosis, and acinar cell damage. However, current treatment options remain limited, underscoring the need for effective, targeted therapeutic strategies through a deeper understanding of the disease microenvironment. Macrophages are pivotal players in the CP microenvironment, exhibiting dual roles in inflammation and tissue remodeling. A defining feature of macrophages is their remarkable phenotypic plasticity, enabling them to transition between pro-inflammatory and anti-inflammatory phenotypes. However, the specific macrophage phenotypes contributing to the immune imbalance in CP and their precise mechanisms of action remain poorly understood. TREM2 (Triggering Receptor Expressed on Myeloid cells 2), a transmembrane receptor of the immunoglobulin superfamily, has emerged as a critical modulator of tissue damage responses in multiple disease settings, though its function in CP remains unexplored. Our preliminary single-cell RNA-seq analyses of human CP tissues reveal an enrichment of inflammatory macrophages alongside a marked downregulation of TREM2 compared to non-diseased controls. This reduction in TREM2 correlates with marked increases in pro-inflammatory mediators, such as IL-1β and NF-κB, suggesting that TREM2 in macrophages contributes to maintaining homeostasis and restraining inflammatory signaling. Accordingly, diminished TREM2 expression appears to skew macrophages toward a pathologically hyper-inflammatory state. We hypothesize that loss of TREM2 disrupts the delicate balance among immune cells, fibroblasts, and acinar cells, fueling a self-reinforcing cycle of inflammation and fibrosis that exacerbates pancreatitis. To test this hypothesis, our R01 will leverage integrative single-cell transcriptomics, spatially resolved imaging, transgenic mouse models, functional organoid co-culture assays, and in vivo experiments to elucidate TREM2’s regulatory mechanisms in CP. This research aims to address two key scientific questions: (1) How does TREM2 suppress pro-inflammatory macrophage phenotypes and restrain IL-1β-induced inflammatory signaling? (2) How does the crosstalk among pro-inflammatory macrophages, fibroblasts, and acinar cells exacerbate the local inflammatory environment, leading to further pancreatic damage? Through this study, we aim to establish TREM2 as a pivotal inhibitory checkpoint in the NF-κB/NLRP3/IL-1β axis, preventing unchecked macrophage-driven inflammation, fibroblast activation, and further acinar cell damage. Successful completion of this project will deepen our mechanistic understanding of CP and identify new therapeutic strategies to mitigate fibrotic progression and preserve pancreatic function. Ultimately, these insights may guide the development of immunomodulatory treatments to attenuate CP severity, thereby transforming the clinical management of this devastating disorder.
Utilizing integrin-targeted PET imaging and therapeutics to predict and treat radiation-induced pulmonary fibrosis
Project Summary/Abstract. Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer death in the US, with over 125,000 deaths annually. Radiation therapy (RT) is a critical component of curative lung cancer treatment for many patients. However, radiationinduced pulmonary fibrosis (RIPF) is a common side effect that carries a poor prognosis with limited treatment options. Up to 40% of patients with lung cancer who receive RT may experience RIPF. RIPF is a late effect of RT, typically occurring 3 or more months after treatment. The symptoms of RIPF can include shortness of breath, pleural effusions, decreased lung function, and respiratory failure. Cell surface integrin heterodimers play a key role in the pathogenesis of RIPF. In particular, the integrin αvβ6, which is expressed at a low level in the alveolar epithelium at baseline, is significantly upregulated upon RT damage. The key role of integrin αvβ6 in RIPF is illustrated by studies in which mice lacking integrin αvβ6, or treated with an αvβ6-blocking antibody, do not develop RIPF. Here, we propose to translate this mechanistic understanding of RIPF into novel approaches for monitoring and treating RIPF. We hypothesize that non-invasive αvβ6 PET imaging will be safe and can specifically bind to αvβ6 in patients with RIPF. Additionally, we hypothesize that a novel small-molecule integrin antagonist, IDL2965, can mitigate and treat RIPF in mice. In this project, we are utilizing mice to model RIPF, as mice develop RIPF that mimics human disease. In addition, cellular and in vitro models do not approximate the complex biology leading to the development of RIPF. Our data using [64Cu]Cu-DOTA-αvβ6-BP to detect early RIPF in mice are compelling in both single-fraction high-dose RT and lower dose-larger volume RT models (Lo et. al, IJROBP 2025). However, to progress to clinical trials in patients with cancer, we will obtain data to submit an Investigational New Drug (IND) application to the FDA. Importantly, we propose translating [64Cu]Cu-DOTA-αvβ6-BP PET imaging into patients with lung cancer, allowing us to better identify RIPF and develop a tool to determine the efficacy of IDL-2965 in future clinical studies. The specific aims of the proposal are: (1) Characterize the utility of [64Cu]Cu-DOTA-αvβ6-BP in mice with conventionally fractionated RT and identify circulating biomarkers of RIPF, and determine the in vivo toxicology of [64Cu]Cu-DOTA-αvβ6-BP to prepare and submit an exploratory Investigational New Drug (eIND) application to the FDA, (2) Conduct a first-in-human clinical trial of [64Cu]Cu-DOTA-αvβ6-BP to determine its safety and human dosimetry in patients with evidence of RIPF from computed tomography or in healthy controls, and (3) Determine the effect of integrin antagonism using IDL-2965 on mitigating RIPF in preclinical mouse models. The goals of this proposal are two-fold: (1) demonstrate safety and target specificity for [64Cu]Cu-DOTA-αvβ6-BP so that it can be used in future studies to identify RIPF and evaluate the efficacy of anti-fibrotic therapies, and 2) determine the ability of IDL-2965 to prevent RIPF in preclinical mouse models.
Pilot and Feasibility Program
PILOT AND FEASIBILITY PROGRAM: PROJECT SUMMARY The goal of the Cedars-Sinai Digestive Diseases Research Center (CSDDRC) Pilot and Feasibility (P&F) Program is to provide monetary support, expertise, and technical support to advance innovative basic, translational, and clinical research that matches the overall goal and themes of the Center. The central theme of the CSDDRC is mechanisms and measurements of the fibroinflammatory response in gastrointestinal (GI) tissues, which reflects Center members’ research in three subthemes: 1) Gut Microbiome, 2) Gastrointestinal (GI) and Liver Metabolism, and 3) GI and Liver Injury. The mission of CSDDRC P&F Program is to support new investigators, established investigators who are new to digestive and liver disease research, and established digestive and liver disease investigators who want to start new or collaborative research that promises to lead to a paradigm shift in the digestive diseases field. In partnership with the Enrichment Program, we will provide guidance for P&F awardees in the form of mentorship and collaboration opportunities. The CSDDRC Biomedical Research Cores will also support P&F awardees, facilitating rapid progress of their new and collaborative digestive and liver disease research. The P&F Program’s outcome measures will include the number of high-impact research publications, grant applications, and subsequent extramural funding for P&F awardees. We will accomplish our goals through the following three specific aims. Aim 1 will solicit research proposals from P&F candidates whose proposed research aligns with the central theme and the subthemes of the CSDDRC. We will advertise P&F support widely across campuses, in addition to contacting department/institute directors to solicit their recommendations for promising young and established investigators who are interested in working in digestive and liver diseases. Aim 2 will select pilot project applications that meet CSDDRC P&F Program goals using rigorous review criteria. Each year, the P&F Program will select four pilot projects to be funded by the P30 grant and matched by institutional support. Submitted applications will be peer- reviewed and preliminarily scored based on the NIH review format by three local expert reviewers. Subsequently, after oral presentations by the P&F applicants, the External Advisory Board (EAB) members will undertake a second round of review, scoring, and discussion at the P&F Program Review meeting following the CSDDRC Annual Symposium. Funding decisions will be made during the P&F Program Review meeting. Aim 3 will assist P&F project investigators with career development and obtaining extramural funding for digestive disease research. P&F awardees will benefit from the Enrichment Program’s well-organized mentoring structure, led by experienced members of the CSDDRC, which includes the Grants-in-Progress Mentoring Program, Gastrointestinal Research-in-Progress meetings, and grant application workshops. P&F awardees will also be mentored through direct interactions with P&F Program Directors, Core Directors, members of the Internal Advisory Board and EAB, and individual or collaborative mentor teams.
Calcium signaling in MR1-dependent presentation of Mycobacterium tuberculosis antigens
Project Summary The fundamental role of the immune system is to detect self from non-self. The detection and elimination of microbial infection is critical for human survival. One challenge to the immune system is infection from an intracellular microbe because the microbe masks its presence in a host cell. One strategy of the immune system to detect microbes is the sampling of different kinds of antigens, such as peptides, lipids and glycolipids, by antigen presenting molecules. A fundamentally unique arm of the immune system is MR1, which is an antigen presenting molecule that is intracellular, ubiquitously expressed across tissues, and detects small molecules derived from microbial metabolism. These features suggest that MR1 is poised to detect intracellular microbes. MR1 presents antigens to MR1-restricted T cells. These T cells are highly prevalent in the lungs and can kill infected cells. Because MR1 presents small molecule antigens and adopts an intracellular distribution, the mechanisms governing MR1 sampling of the intracellular environment are distinct from other antigen presenting molecules. These mechanisms remain unknown. Our over-arching hypothesis is that intracellular calcium signaling is important for MR1 antigen presentation. We use Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) as a model for intracellular infection and have identified calcium-sensitive trafficking proteins and calcium channels important for MR1 antigen presentation. Aim 1 of this study will determine the mechanism of two-pore channel 1 in MR1- dependent antigen presentation, with a focus on endoplasmic reticulum-endosome contact sites. Aim 2 will determine the role of specific calcium-sensitive Synaptotagmins and their binding partners. Aim 3 will determine the mechanism behind augmented MR1 antigen presentation following modulation of the of the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator. Successful completion of these Aims has the potential to lead to new MR1-based immunotherapies.
Hepatotoxicity of Legacy and Replacement PFAS: Role of BRUCE-Mitochondrial Interactions
Epidemiological studies have shown a strong association between exposure to PFAS (Per- and Poly- fluoroalkyl Substances) and liver toxicity. Particularly, legacy C8-PFAS members, PFOS (perfluorooctane sulfonate) and PFOA (perfluorooctanoic acid), are highly toxic, with PFOS estimated to be approximately 10 times more toxic than PFOA in ecotoxicity models. Consequently, PFAS replacements such as GenX and PFBS are marketed as safe alternatives, although growing evidence indicates that these substitutes also exhibit toxic effects. Lab animal model studies have shown hepatotoxic effects of both legacy and replacement PFAS members, characterized by Metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) and its severe form Metabolic dysfunction- associated steatohepatitis (MASH), the two chronic liver diseases affecting an estimated 80-100 million Americans. The broader objective of this project is to understand the underlying mechanisms of PFAS hepatotoxicity in MASLD/MASH. In this context, our initial studies have shown that PFAS exposure of mice downregulates hepatic BRUCE, an autophagy inhibitor, resulting in development of MASLD in WT, and more severe MASLD and even progression to MASH in BRUCE liver-knockdown (BKO) mice. Using primary hepatocytes, we found PFAS-induced BRUCE reduction compromised mitochondrial (mt) functions (respiration, fatty acid oxidation/FAO, and ATP production) and suppressed mitophagy in WT and more so in BKO mice. Pharmacological restoration of mt function in mice prevented PFAS-induced MASLD/MASH. Guided by these compelling preliminary data and scientific premise, we hypothesize that PFAS degradation of BRUCE in hepatocytes induces excessive autophagy (resulting in cytotoxicity) and inhibits mitophagy (resulting in accumulation of damaged mitochondria), leading to release of mtDAMPs to activate inflammation/ fibrosis, thereby facilitating progression from MASLD to MASH. We will test this by three specific aims. Aim 1 (ex vivo) is to determine the human-relevant PFAS doses that modulate BRUCE levels for homeostatic vs cytotoxic autophagy and how BRUCE in turn regulates autophagy. Aim 2 (ex vivo) will investigate BRUCE-driven mitophagy pathway specific to PFAS exposure at human-relevant doses. Aim 3 (ex vivo and in vivo) will involve ex vivo simulation experiments to characterize the role of PFAS-induced, BRUCE-dependent hepatocyte- released mt DAMPs in activation of immune and fibrogenic cells using co-culture assays. Next, we will perform in vivo intervention to validate the role of PFAS-damaged mitochondria in driving MASH progression in mouse models. Furthermore, human relevance of the delineated mechanisms will be ascertained and validated using iPSC-derived human liver organoid system. Impact: This project will advance our understanding of autophagy/mitophagy-centric mechanisms with therapeutic potential in the context of PFAS-induced liver disease MASLD/MASH.
Tbx4-Driven Pulmonary Hypertension: Mechanisms and Therapeutic Targets
Project Summary: Heterozygous rare variants in TBX4 are the second most common cause of heritable pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH). Presentation of this form is commonly in children. Patients with mutations in TBX4 generally have alveolar simplification or hypoplasia in addition to elevated pulmonary vascular resistance. We have developed a set of three tools to help determine the molecular etiology of TBX4-induced PAH; (1) we identified the direct binding targets using a combination of ChIP-seq and RNA-seq; (2) we developed a mouse model with Tbx4 knockout after birth, that substantially phenocopies human disease; (3) we performed single-cell RNA-seq on these mice. By combining these three tools, we can develop a complete model for how loss of a transcription factor leads to the molecular and physiologic changes we see in our mice. The phenotype in mice appears to be dominated by defects in pericytes, resulting in impaired angiogenesis. Pericytes, which strongly express Tbx4, are cells located on the outside of capillaries and precapillary arterioles, and can either stabilize vessels (mesh pericytes), or drive angiogenesis (angiogenic pericytes). The pericytes in Tbx4 mutant mice are heavily skewed towards mesh and away from the angiogenic phenotype. Loss of Tbx4 results in derepression of Tbx4 binding target Rgs5 (10x induction), which directly results in inhibition of Pi3K, and the phenotypic switch in pericytes. We will test this hypothesis through pericyte-specific Tbx4 knockout (Aim 1) and pharmacologic induction of Pi3K in vivo in prevention and rescue models, as well as by siRNA to Rgs5 in precision-cut lung slices from Tbx4 KO mice (Aim 3). We will also test the role of Tbx4 in fibroblasts and smooth muscle using cell-specific knockouts – based on our mouse and single cell data, we expect they contribute somewhat, but primarily through increased stiffness (Aim 2). Finally, we will confirm relevance to human disease through spatial transcriptomics in lung sections explanted from patients with TBX4 mutation or rearrangement (Aim 1), and through determining whether defects in human patient iPSC-derived pericytes can be corrected through Rgs5 or Pi3K interventions (Aim 3). In combination, these aims determine the cellular and molecular mechanisms leading from mutation to physiology with loss of TBX4, and establish therapeutic targets.
Engineering of a temperate Burkholderia cepacia complex phage to improve efficacy as a potential therapeutic
Project Summary Bacteria in the Burkholderia cepacia complex (Bcc) cause difficult to treat infections in patients with compromised respiratory systems, such as those with cystic fibrosis (CF). Alternative treatment options are needed, since antibiotics often fail these patients. Bacteriophage (phage) therapy is a promising strategy, yet therapeutically ideal phages are difficult to find and narrow in their range of use due to host specificity. In the proposed study, we continue development of a potential phage therapeutic sourced from Burkholderia itself. We have isolated a phage, called BCC02, that was present within the genome of a Burkholderia bacteria (a prophage) and have shown that it can kill other bacteria within the same genus. However, this phage still has the potential to integrate into other bacterial genomes, which is an undesirable trait for phage therapy. By engineering changes to the BCC02 genome using synthetic biology techniques, we hypothesize that we can increase its range of therapeutic potential by disabling its ability to integrate into the bacterial genome, and that this change will increase the number of bacteria that it can lyse. The specific aims of this project are to (1) engineer this phage to lose the ability to lysogenize (integrate into bacterial genomes) then test the effects of these modifications on bacterial host range and (2) test activity of our originally isolated phage, BCC02 as well as our engineered variant on a clinically relevant panel of patho-adapted isolates from patients with CF. We propose to use transformation-associated recombination (TAR) cloning methods to target the lysogeny control region of the BCC02 genome for removal. We hypothesize that loss of integration ability will force this phage into an obligately lytic lifestyle, where it will lyse all bacteria it is able to infect. Successful completion of this project will determine the feasibility of engineering obligately lytic Burkholderia-targeting phages from Burkholderia spp. prophages, shed light on the effects of lytic lifestyle on host range, and establish the utility of these phages for tackling particularly problematic clinical infections. In addition, this study may produce a Bcc- targeting phage that is primed for development to be used for phage therapy.
Primary cilia protein IFT88 governs smooth muscle phenotype and vascular remodeling
Project Summary/Abstract Cardiovascular disease remains the leading cause of death in the United States, accounting for nearly 1 million deaths in 2022. Vascular diseases such as atherosclerosis, aneurysm, and coronary artery disease are regulated largely by smooth muscle cells (SMCs) residing in the blood vessel wall. The central dogma of vascular SMC biology is that differentiated cells can de-differentiate and give rise to a spectrum of alternative phenotypes promoting invasion, proliferation, fibrosis, and inflammation, but the mechanisms regulating SMC phenotypic transitions are poorly understood. Intraflagellar transport 88 (IFT88) is an essential protein for the formation of primary cilia, centriole-associated plasma membrane organelles that project into the extracellular milieu and regulate cell cycle reentry and responses to stimuli like growth factors and mechanical strain. Non- ciliary functions of IFT88 also include progression of the cell cycle checkpoint and polarized motility, both of which are functionally critical for SMC-mediated vascular remodeling. Little is known about the functional role of the primary cilia in SMCs and the role of the essential cilia protein IFT88 in regulating SMC phenotype. To address this gap in knowledge, my postdoctoral studies focus on the role of IFT88 in the context of intimal hyperplasia (K99). During the independent phase (R00), I will apply these findings to arteriovenous fistula (AVF) maturation, a surgical intervention often required for dialysis individuals with polycystic kidney disease (PKD), an IFT88 loss-of-function disease. I will test my central hypothesis that cilia are key regulators of SMC phenotype in three Specific Aims: 1) determine the role of IFT88-dependent SMC primary cilia in mechanotransduction of extracellular matrix (ECM) stiffness (K99), 2) determine the role of IFT88 in pathological intimal hyperplasia (K99), and 3) test whether SMC IFT88 expression is required for adaptive remodeling of grafted veins following AVF placement (R00). Overall, we propose that IFT88+ ciliated SMC represent an unidentified subclass of the SMC phenotype spectrum that is primarily responsible for vascular remodeling and is an attractive potential target for treatment of vascular diseases. Building on strong existing collaborations, we have formed a research and mentoring team with expertise in SMC pathophysiology, primary cilia biology, mechanobiology, AVF surgery, and PKD to complete the proposed aims. The additional training in cell-ECM interactions (Aim 1, K99), in vivo murine ligation injury and in vivo cilia imaging (Aim 2, K99), and AVF surgery and PKD pathology (Aim 3, R00) will be indispensable for preparing the PI, Dr. O’Brien, for his career as an independent investigator. Completion of the proposed aims will also contribute directly to an understanding of the function of IFT88-dependent primary cilia in SMCs and may likely identify novel therapeutic targets for treatment of vascular diseases.
Targeting the fibrogenic ECM as an alternative approach to treating IPF
Project Abstract Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis and, more broadly, progressive pulmonary fibrosis are wound healing disorders whose hallmark is unorganized and unchecked extracellular matrix (ECM) deposition leading to scarring/stiffening of the lung interstitium. A highly complex, multicellular process, the generation of scar itself is primarily a function of activated fibroblasts with contributions from multiple subpopulations and non-fibroblastic cells. Myofibroblasts, the contractile cohort of activated fibroblasts, physically perturb (i.e. stretch) the local ECM microenvironment, which we have recently shown triggers site-specific, stretch-dependent conformational changes within the ECM protein fibronectin. We have previously demonstrated that a specific stretch-induced conformational change in the critical receptor binding domain of fibronectin triggers a cellular “integrin switch”, a stark change in the ECM receptors used by cells to engage fibronectin. This integrin switch is sufficient to drive activation of naïve lung fibroblasts, acquisition of mesenchymal characteristics in alveolar epithelial cells, and pathogenic remodeling of vascular structures. In this proposal we hypothesize that fibronectin displays a stretch- dependent conformational change specifically in regions of active lung fibrogenesis and that this conformational change disrupts homeostatic integrin binding dynamics in fibroblasts, leading to their acquisition of a pro-fibrogenic phenotype and transcriptional program. We address this hypothesis in a systematic way through three proposed aims. The first aim focuses on quantifying the presence and spatial localization of the stretch-induced conformational change within a cohort of lung fibrosis patient tissue samples, determining if it represents a consistent marker of active fibrogenic regions and elucidation of critical microenvironmental signatures that further expand our understanding of the impact of fibronectin's integrin switch in driving disease. In the second aim we will begin to unravel the molecular mechanism explaining how the integrin switch that emerges because of the stretch-induced conformational change drives fibroblast activation and fibrogenic gene programs using both idealized in vitro culture systems as well as ex vivo human disease tissue models. Finally, in the third aim we will explore the therapeutic potential of binding and blocking this specific stretch-induced conformation of fibronectin using a promising new and potential antibody drug in both in vivo and ex vivo models of disease.
Walk the talk: concrete actions to promote diversity in neuroscience in Latin America
Building upon the webinar "What are the main barriers to succeed in brain sciences in Latin America?" (February 2021) and the paper "Addressing the opportunity gap in the Latin American neuroscience community" (Silva, A., Iyer, K., Cirulli, F. et al. Nat Neurosci August 2022), this ALBA-IBRO Webinar is the next chapter in our journey towards fostering inclusivity and diversity in neuroscience in Latin America. The webinar is designed to go beyond theoretical discussions and provide tangible solutions. We will showcase 3-4 best practice case studies, shining a spotlight on real-life actions and campaigns implemented at the institutional level, be it within government bodies, universities, or other organisations. Our goal is to empower neuroscientists across Latin America by equipping them with practical knowledge they can apply in their own institutions and countries.
A Toolkit to Succeed in Neuroscience in Africa - an IBRO-ALBA-WWN-SANS Webinar
Following up on last year's webinar - What it takes to succeed as a neuroscientist in Africa, this panel discussion aims at creating a guide to the skill set needed to be a neuroscientist in the African continent. Chairs and panelists will illustrate different areas of expertise as part of the "Toolkit" by matching them to real life experience and solutions that they had to find while building their career as scientists.
Spontaneous activity competes with externally evoked responses in sensory cortex
The interaction between spontaneously and externally evoked neuronal activity is fundamental for a functional brain. Increasing evidence suggests that bursts of high-power oscillations in the 15-30 Hz beta-band represent activation of resting state networks and can mask perception of external cues. Yet demonstration of the effect of beta power modulation on perception in real-time is missing, and little is known about the underlying mechanism. In this talk I will present the methods we developed to fill this gap together with our recent results. We used a closed-loop stimulus-intensity adjustment system based on online burst-occupancy analyses in rats involved in a forepaw vibrotactile detection task. We found that the masking influence of burst-occupancy on perception can be counterbalanced in real-time by adjusting the vibration amplitude. Offline analysis of firing-rates and local field potentials across cortical layers and frequency bands confirmed that beta-power in the somatosensory cortex anticorrelated with sensory evoked responses. Mechanistically, bursts in all bands were accompanied by transient synchronization of cell assemblies, but only beta-bursts were followed by a reduction of firing-rate. Our closed loop approach reveals that spontaneous beta-bursts reflect a dynamic state that competes with external stimuli.
The wonders and complexities of brain microstructure: Enabling biomedical engineering studies combining imaging and models
Brain microstructure plays a key role in driving the transport of drug molecules directly administered to the brain tissue as in Convection-Enhanced Delivery procedures. This study reports the first systematic attempt to characterize the cytoarchitecture of commissural, long association and projection fiber, namely: the corpus callosum, the fornix and the corona radiata. Ovine samples from three different subjects have been imaged using scanning electron microscope combined with focused ion beam milling. Particular focus has been given to the axons. For each tract, a 3D reconstruction of relatively large volumes (including a significant number of axons) has been performed. Namely, outer axonal ellipticity, outer axonal cross-sectional area and its relative perimeter have been measured. This study [1] provides useful insight into the fibrous organization of the tissue that can be described as composite material presenting elliptical tortuous tubular fibers, leading to a workflow to enable accurate simulations of drug delivery which include well-resolved microstructural features. As a demonstration of the use of these imaging and reconstruction techniques, our research analyses the hydraulic permeability of two white matter (WM) areas (corpus callosum and fornix) whose three-dimensional microstructure was reconstructed starting from the acquisition of the electron microscopy images. Considering that the white matter structure is mainly composed of elongated and parallel axons we computed the permeability along the parallel and perpendicular directions using computational fluid dynamics [2]. The results show a statistically significant difference between parallel and perpendicular permeability, with a ratio about 2 in both the white matter structures analysed, thus demonstrating their anisotropic behaviour. This is in line with the experimental results obtained using perfusion of brain matter [3]. Moreover, we find a significant difference between permeability in corpus callosum and fornix, which suggests that also the white matter heterogeneity should be considered when modelling drug transport in the brain. Our findings, that demonstrate and quantify the anisotropic and heterogeneous character of the white matter, represent a fundamental contribution not only for drug delivery modelling but also for shedding light on the interstitial transport mechanisms in the extracellular space. These and many other discoveries will be discussed during the talk." "1. https://www.researchsquare.com/article/rs-686577/v1, 2. https://www.pnas.org/content/118/36/e2105328118, 3. https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/abstract/document/9198110
Learning to perceive with new sensory signals
I will begin by describing recent research taking a new, model-based approach to perceptual development. This approach uncovers fundamental changes in information processing underlying the protracted development of perception, action, and decision-making in childhood. For example, integration of multiple sensory estimates via reliability-weighted averaging – widely used by adults to improve perception – is often not seen until surprisingly late into childhood, as assessed by both behaviour and neural representations. This approach forms the basis for a newer question: the scope for the nervous system to deploy useful computations (e.g. reliability-weighted averaging) to optimise perception and action using newly-learned sensory signals provided by technology. Our initial model system is augmenting visual depth perception with devices translating distance into auditory or vibro-tactile signals. This problem has immediate applications to people with partial vision loss, but the broader question concerns our scope to use technology to tune in to any signal not available to our native biological receptors. I will describe initial progress on this problem, and our approach to operationalising what it might mean to adopt a new signal comparably to a native sense. This will include testing for its integration (weighted averaging) alongside the native senses, assessing the level at which this integration happens in the brain, and measuring the degree of ‘automaticity’ with which new signals are used, compared with native perception.
Bedside to bench and back again, a path to translational pain research?
Pain has both a sensory and emotional component and is driven by activation of sensory neurones called nociceptors that are tuned to detect noxious stimuli in a process called nociception. Although nociception functions as a detect and protect mechanism. and is found in many organisms, this system becomes dysregulated in a number of conditions where chronic pain presents as a key symptom, for example osteoarthritis. Nociceptors do not innervate empty space though and do not act alone. Going beyond the neurone, other cell types, such as fibroblast-like synoviocytes interact with and modify the function of nociceptors, which is likely a key contributor to the chronification of pain. In this talk, I will look at how combining pre-clinical mouse work with human tissue and genetics might provide a way to accelerate new analgesics from bench to bedside, giving examples from our work in joint pain, bowel pain and labour pain.
Young IBRO NextInNeuro Webinar - The retinal basis of colour vision: from fish to humans
Colour vision is based on circuit-level comparison of the signals from spectral distinct types of photoreceptors. In our own eyes, the presence of three types of cones enable trichromatic colour vision. However, many phylogenetically ‘older’ vertebrates have four or more cone types, and in almost all their cases the circuits that enable tetra- or possibly even pentachromatic colour vision are not known. This includes the majority of birds, reptiles, amphibians, and bony fish. In the lab we study neuronal circuits for colour vision in non-mammalian vertebrates, with a focus on zebrafish, a tetrachromatic surface dwelling species of teleost. I will discuss how in the case of zebrafish, retinal colour computations are implemented in a fundamentally different, and probably much more efficient way compared to how they are thought to work in humans. I will then highlight how these fish circuits might be linked with those in mammals, possibly providing a new way of thinking about how circuits for colour vision are organized in vertebrates.
Neurotoxicity is a major health problem in Africa: focus on Parkinson's / Parkinsonism
Parkinson's disease (PD) is the second most present neurodegenerative disease in the world after Alzheimer's. It is due to the progressive and irreversible loss of dopaminergic neurons of the substantia nigra Pars Compacta. Alpha synuclein deposits and the appearance of Lewi bodies are systematically associated with it. PD is characterized by four cardinal motor symptoms: bradykinesia / akinesia, rigidity, postural instability and tremors at rest. These symptoms appear when 80% of the dopaminergic endings disappear in the striatum. According to Braak's theory, non-motor symptoms appear much earlier and this is particularly the case with anxiety, depression, anhedonia, and sleep disturbances. In 90 to 95% of cases, the causes of the appearance of the disease remain unknown, but polluting toxic molecules are incriminated more and more. In Africa, neurodegenerative diseases of the Parkinson's type are increasingly present and a parallel seems to exist between the increase in cases and the presence of toxic and polluting products such as metals. My Web conference will focus on this aspect, i.e. present experimental arguments which reinforce the hypothesis of the incrimination of these pollutants in the incidence of Parkinson's disease and / or Parkinsonism. Among the lines of research that we have developed in my laboratory in Rabat, Morocco, I have chosen this one knowing that many of our PhD students and IBRO Alumni are working or trying to develop scientific research on neurotoxicity in correlation with pathologies of the brain.
AUTONOMIC REGULATION VIA DERMAL VIBROTACTILE TRIGGERING OF PIEZOELECTRIC CHANNELS: AN EMERGING NONMEDICATION APPROACH TO SYMPTOM RELIEF
FENS Forum 2026
Ciliopathy in Meningeal Fibroblast Accompanying the Delayed Maturation of Pial Basement Membrane during Cortical Development of Fmr1-/y Mice
Imaging the brain in action: an active optical rotary joint for wide field fibroscopy in freely moving animals
Injury-induced upregulation of fibronectin and BMP4 modulates the differentiation of oligodendrocyte progenitor cells into Schwann cells
Potential role of Fibroblast Growth Factor Receptor 1 (Fgfr1) in the development of the retrosplenial cortex
Transformation of neural coding for vibrotactile sensation along the ascending somatosensory pathway
TUBB3 missense mutation is associated with congenital fibrosis of extra ocular muscles type 3 in an Iranian family
Designing a transmodal technology to feel sound through touch: The multichannel vibrotactile gloves
FENS Forum 2024
Differential sleep-like deficits of Neurofibromatosis 1 mutations in Drosophila melanogaster
FENS Forum 2024
AI exploration of fibromyalgia: Decoding molecular complexity for targeted therapies
FENS Forum 2024
Induction of NF1 exon 51 skipping in primary neurons reveals novel properties of neurofibromin isoforms
FENS Forum 2024
Innovative models for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis research: Dermal fibroblasts and direct cell reprogramming
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Modelling cognitive and psychiatric behavioural traits in a mouse model of neurofibromatosis type I
FENS Forum 2024
Olfactory ensheathing cells and fibroblasts: Dynamic partners in nervous system repair and regeneration
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The predictive power of neurological factors for differentiated attention functions in children and adolescents with the genetic disorder neurofibromatosis type 1
FENS Forum 2024
Cannabinoids effects on neural correlates of the pain modulation system in fibromyalgia syndrome
Unraveling behavioral deficits in neurofibromatosis type 1: Insights from Drosophila and mouse models
FENS Forum 2024
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