TopicNeuroscience
Content Overview
19Total items
15ePosters
4Seminars

Latest

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

How does the metabolically-expensive mammalian brain adapt to food scarcity?

Zahid Padamsey
Rochefort lab, University of Edinburgh
Feb 23, 2022

Information processing is energetically expensive. In the mammalian brain, it is unclear how information coding and energy usage are regulated during food scarcity. I addressed this in the visual cortex of awake mice using whole-cell recordings and two-photon imaging to monitor layer 2/3 neuronal activity and ATP usage. I found that food restriction reduced synaptic ATP usage by 29% through a decrease in AMPA receptor conductance. Neuronal excitability was nonetheless preserved by a compensatory increase in input resistance and a depolarized resting membrane potential. Consequently, neurons spiked at similar rates as controls, but spent less ATP on underlying excitatory currents. This energy-saving strategy had a cost since it amplified the variability of visually-evoked subthreshold responses, leading to a 32% broadening in orientation tuning and impaired fine visual discrimination. This reduction in coding precision was associated with reduced levels of the fat mass-regulated hormone leptin and was restored by exogenous leptin supplementation. These findings reveal novel mechanisms that dynamically regulate energy usage and coding precision in neocortex.

SeminarNeuroscience

Sympathetic nerve remodeling in adipose tissue

Ken Loh
The Rockefeller University
Oct 11, 2021

Sympathetic nerve activation of adrenergic receptors on fat is the major pathway the brain uses to drive non-shivering thermogenesis in brown adipose tissue and lipolysis in white fat. There is accumulating evidence that the peripheral nerve architecture inside of organs is plastic (can be remodeled) but the factors and conditions that regulate or result in remodeling are largely unknown. Particularly for fat, it remains unclear if nerves in fat can be remodeled in step with hyperplasia/trophy of adipose tissue as result of a prolonged energy surfeit. This talk will discuss our recent work identifying the sympathetic nerve architecture in adipose tissue as highly plastic in response to the adipose hormone leptin, the brain circuitry leptin acts on to regulate this and the physiological effects remodeling of innervation has on fat tissue function.

SeminarNeuroscience

Brain-body interactions in the metabolic/nutritional control of puberty: Neuropeptide pathways and central energy sensors

Manuel Tena-Sempere
IMIBIC Cordoba
May 31, 2021

Puberty is a brain-driven phenomenon, which is under the control of sophisticated regulatory networks that integrate a large number of endogenous and environmental signals, including metabolic and nutritional cues. Puberty onset is tightly bound to the state of body energy reserves, and deregulation of energy/metabolic homeostasis is often associated with alterations in the timing of puberty. However, despite recent progress in the field, our knowledge of the specific molecular mechanisms and pathways whereby our brain decode metabolic information to modulate puberty onset remains fragmentary and incomplete. Compelling evidence, gathered over the last fifteen years, supports an essential role of hypothalamic neurons producing kisspeptins, encoded by Kiss1, in the neuroendocrine control of puberty. Kiss1 neurons are major components of the hypothalamic GnRH pulse generator, whose full activation is mandatory pubertal onset. Kiss1 neurons seemingly participate in transmitting the regulatory actions of metabolic cues on pubertal maturation. However, the modulatory influence of metabolic signals (e.g., leptin) on Kiss1 neurons might be predominantly indirect and likely involves also the interaction with other transmitters and neuronal populations. In my presentation, I will review herein recent work of our group, using preclinical models, addressing the molecular mechanisms whereby Kiss1 neurons are modulated by metabolic signals, and thereby contribute to the nutritional control of puberty. In this context, the putative roles of the energy/metabolic sensors, AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) and SIRT1, in the metabolic control of Kiss1 neurons and puberty will be discussed. In addition, I will summarize recent findings from our team pointing out a role of central de novo ceramide signaling in mediating the impact of obesity of (earlier) puberty onset, via non-canonical, kisspeptin-related pathways. These findings are posed of translational interest, as perturbations of these molecular pathways could contribute to the alterations of pubertal timing linked to conditions of metabolic stress in humans, ranging from malnutrition to obesity, and might become druggable targets for better management of pubertal disorders.

SeminarNeuroscience

Using human pluripotent stem cells to model obesity in vitro

Florian Merkle
University of Cambridge
Apr 15, 2021

Obesity and neurodegeneration lead to millions of premature deaths each year and lack broadly effective treatments. Obesity is largely caused by the abnormal function of cell populations in the hypothalamus that regulate appetite. We have developed methods generate human hypothalamic neurons from hPSCs to study how they respond to nutrients and hormones (e.g. leptin) and how disease-associated mutations alter their function. Since human hypothalamic neurons can be produced in large numbers, are functionally responsive, have a human genome that can be readily edited, and are in culture environment that can be readily controlled, there is an unprecedented opportunity to study the genetic and environmental factors underlying obesity. In addition, we are fascinated by the fact that mid-life obesity is a risk factor for dementia later in life, and caloric restriction, exercise, and certain anti-obesity drugs are neuroprotective, suggesting that there are shared mechanisms between obesity and neurodegeneration. Studies of HPSC-derived hypothalamic neurons may help bridge the mechanistic gulf between human genetic data and organismic phenotypes, revealing new therapeutic targets. ​

ePosterNeuroscience

AMPK involvement in the control of tanycytic leptin shuttle

Eleonora Deligia, Daniela Fernandois, Florent Sauve, Ines Martinez-Corral, Marc Baroncini, Markus Schwaninger, Ruben Nogueiras, Monica Imbernon, Vincent Prevot
ePosterNeuroscience

Antagonistic control of social interaction by leptin receptor-expressing and neurotensin-expressing neurons in the lateral hypothalamus

Rebecca Figge, Anne Petzold, Hanna E. Van den Munkhof, Tatiana Korotkova
ePosterNeuroscience

Contribution of the adipocyte hormone leptin in the pathogenesis of Rett syndrome

Yasmine Belaidouni, Diabé Diabira, Jean-Charles Graziano, Clément Menuet, Gary A. Wayman, Jean-Luc Gaïarsa
ePosterNeuroscience

Effect of saturated vs unsaturated dietary fat on leptin receptor signalling in the prefrontal cortex and hippocampus

Jesús Fernández Felipe, Ana Belén Sanz Martos, Victoria Cano, Nuria Del Olmo, Mariano Ruiz Gayo, Beatriz Merino
ePosterNeuroscience

Two endophenotypes of anorexia nervosa based on clinical factors related to physical activity and leptin levels

Anna Yamamotova, Josef Bulant, Hana Papezova
ePosterNeuroscience

Leptin prevents amyloid-beta-induced aberrant targeting of phosphorylated tau via PI 3 kinase signalling

Kirsty Hamilton, Kate Morrow, Jenni Harvey
ePosterNeuroscience

LRP2 function in the control of leptin transport by hypothalamic tanycytes

Fatima Timzoura
ePosterNeuroscience

Sympathetic Associated Perineurial Cells (SAPCs) orchestrate neuroendocrine loop of leptin action to maintain metabolic homeostasis

Gitalee Sarker, Emma Haberman, Thomas Monfeuga, Anandhakumar Chandran, Noelia M. Sánchez, Bernardo Arús, Matteo Iannacone, Miguel López, Florent Ginhoux, Enrique T. Maldonado, Ana Domingos
ePosterNeuroscience

Central actions of leptin sensitizer celastrol

Miriam Bernecker, Sonja Schriever, Ekta Pathak, Michael Sterr, Heiko Lickert, Jessica Yue, Paul Pfluger

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

The effect of altered ganglioside composition on leptin receptor and Na⁺,K⁺-ATPase in mouse thalamus

Vinka Potočki, Borna Puljko, Nikolina Maček Hrvat, Marta Balog, Marija Heffer, Svjetlana Kalanj Bognar, Kristina Mlinac Jerković

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Extracellular vesicles from hypothalamic astrocytes modify transcription factors of the leptin signaling pathway in proopiomelanocortin (POMC) neurons

Alfonso Gómez Romero, Roberto Collado-Pérez, María Jiménez-Hernáiz, J Argente, Julie Ann Chowen, Laura María Frago

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Hypothalamic-thalamic pathways enable leptin to regulate social and sexual behaviours

Anne Petzold, Rebecca Figge-Schlensok, Chantal Wissing, Deema Awad, Hanna van den Munkhof, Tatiana Korotkova

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Leptin regulates the development of glutamatergic synapses in the developing hippocampus through the proteases matrix metalloproteinase 9 and cathepsin B

Jose Luis Rodriguez Llamas, Crystal Dillon, Gary Wayman

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Oxytocin and leptin crosstalk in the regulation of the energy balance

Chiara Galli, Georgia Colleluori, Simone Moretti, Valentina Cinquina, Roman A. Romanov, Jessica Perugini, Ilenia Severi, Gabriele Cruciani, Tibor Harkany, Antonio Giordano

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Regulation of anxiety-related behaviors by leptin receptor-expressing neurons in the lateral hypothalamus

Rebecca Figge-Schlensok, Anne Petzold, Nele Hugger, Tatiana Korotkova

FENS Forum 2024

leptin coverage

19 items

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Seminar4

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