TopicNeuroscience
Content Overview
55Total items
40ePosters
15Seminars

Latest

SeminarNeuroscience

Analyzing Network-Level Brain Processing and Plasticity Using Molecular Neuroimaging

Alan Jasanoff
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Jan 28, 2025

Behavior and cognition depend on the integrated action of neural structures and populations distributed throughout the brain. We recently developed a set of molecular imaging tools that enable multiregional processing and plasticity in neural networks to be studied at a brain-wide scale in rodents and nonhuman primates. Here we will describe how a novel genetically encoded activity reporter enables information flow in virally labeled neural circuitry to be monitored by fMRI. Using the reporter to perform functional imaging of synaptically defined neural populations in the rat somatosensory system, we show how activity is transformed within brain regions to yield characteristics specific to distinct output projections. We also show how this approach enables regional activity to be modeled in terms of inputs, in a paradigm that we are extending to address circuit-level origins of functional specialization in marmoset brains. In the second part of the talk, we will discuss how another genetic tool for MRI enables systematic studies of the relationship between anatomical and functional connectivity in the mouse brain. We show that variations in physical and functional connectivity can be dissociated both across individual subjects and over experience. We also use the tool to examine brain-wide relationships between plasticity and activity during an opioid treatment. This work demonstrates the possibility of studying diverse brain-wide processing phenomena using molecular neuroimaging.

SeminarNeuroscience

Mitochondrial diversity in the mouse and human brain

Martin Picard
Columbia University, New York, USA
Apr 17, 2024

The basis of the mind, of mental states, and complex behaviors is the flow of energy through microscopic and macroscopic brain structures. Energy flow through brain circuits is powered by thousands of mitochondria populating the inside of every neuron, glial, and other nucleated cell across the brain-body unit. This seminar will cover emerging approaches to study the mind-mitochondria connection and present early attempts to map the distribution and diversity of mitochondria across brain tissue. In rodents, I will present convergent multimodal evidence anchored in enzyme activities, gene expression, and animal behavior that distinct behaviorally-relevant mitochondrial phenotypes exist across large-scale mouse brain networks. Extending these findings to the human brain, I will present a developing systematic biochemical and molecular map of mitochondrial variation across cortical and subcortical brain structures, representing a foundation to understand the origin of complex energy patterns that give rise to the human mind.

SeminarNeuroscience

Spatial and Single Cell Genomics for Next Generation Neuroscience

Evan Macosko
Broad Institute, Cambridge, USA
Oct 12, 2023

The advent of next generation sequencing ushered in a ten-year period of exuberant technology development, enabling the quantification of gene expression and epigenetic features within individual cells, and within intact tissue sections.  In this seminar, I will outline our technological contributions, beginning with the development of Drop-seq, a method for high-throughput single cell analysis, followed by the development of Slide-seq, a technique for measuring genome-wide expression at 10 micron spatial resolution.  Using a combination of these techniques, we recently constructed a comprehensive cell type atlas of the adult mouse brain, positioning cell types within individual brain structures.  I will discuss the major findings from this dataset, including emerging principles of neurotransmission, and the localization of disease gene signatures to specific cell types.  Finally, I will introduce a new spatial technology, Slide-tags, that unifies single cell and spatial genomics into a single, highly scalable assay.

SeminarNeuroscience

In vivo direct imaging of neuronal activity at high temporospatial resolution

Jang-Yeon Park
Sungkyunkwan University, Suwon, Korea
Jun 28, 2023

Advanced noninvasive neuroimaging methods provide valuable information on the brain function, but they have obvious pros and cons in terms of temporal and spatial resolution. Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) using blood-oxygenation-level-dependent (BOLD) effect provides good spatial resolution in the order of millimeters, but has a poor temporal resolution in the order of seconds due to slow hemodynamic responses to neuronal activation, providing indirect information on neuronal activity. In contrast, electroencephalography (EEG) and magnetoencephalography (MEG) provide excellent temporal resolution in the millisecond range, but spatial information is limited to centimeter scales. Therefore, there has been a longstanding demand for noninvasive brain imaging methods capable of detecting neuronal activity at both high temporal and spatial resolution. In this talk, I will introduce a novel approach that enables Direct Imaging of Neuronal Activity (DIANA) using MRI that can dynamically image neuronal spiking activity in milliseconds precision, achieved by data acquisition scheme of rapid 2D line scan synchronized with periodically applied functional stimuli. DIANA was demonstrated through in vivo mouse brain imaging on a 9.4T animal scanner during electrical whisker-pad stimulation. DIANA with milliseconds temporal resolution had high correlations with neuronal spike activities, which could also be applied in capturing the sequential propagation of neuronal activity along the thalamocortical pathway of brain networks. In terms of the contrast mechanism, DIANA was almost unaffected by hemodynamic responses, but was subject to changes in membrane potential-associated tissue relaxation times such as T2 relaxation time. DIANA is expected to break new ground in brain science by providing an in-depth understanding of the hierarchical functional organization of the brain, including the spatiotemporal dynamics of neural networks.

SeminarNeuroscience

The Synaptome Architecture of the Brain: Lifespan, disease, evolution and behavior

Seth Grant
Professor of Molecular Neuroscience, Centre for Clinical Brain Sciences, University of Edinburgh, UK
May 2, 2022

The overall aim of my research is to understand how the organisation of the synapse, with particular reference to the postsynaptic proteome (PSP) of excitatory synapses in the brain, informs the fundamental mechanisms of learning, memory and behaviour and how these mechanisms go awry in neurological dysfunction. The PSP indeed bears a remarkable burden of disease, with components being disrupted in disorders (synaptopathies) including schizophrenia, depression, autism and intellectual disability. Our work has been fundamental in revealing and then characterising the unprecedented complexity (>1000 highly conserved proteins) of the PSP in terms of the subsynaptic architecture of postsynaptic proteins such as PSD95 and how these proteins assemble into complexes and supercomplexes in different neurons and regions of the brain. Characterising the PSPs in multiple species, including human and mouse, has revealed differences in key sets of functionally important proteins, correlates with brain imaging and connectome data, and a differential distribution of disease-relevant proteins and pathways. Such studies have also provided important insight into synapse evolution, establishing that vertebrate behavioural complexity is a product of the evolutionary expansion in synapse proteomes that occurred ~500 million years ago. My lab has identified many mutations causing cognitive impairments in mice before they were found to cause human disorders. Our proteomic studies revealed that >130 brain diseases are caused by mutations affecting postsynaptic proteins. We uncovered mechanisms that explain the polygenic basis and age of onset of schizophrenia, with postsynaptic proteins, including PSD95 supercomplexes, carrying much of the polygenic burden. We discovered the “Genetic Lifespan Calendar”, a genomic programme controlling when genes are regulated. We showed that this could explain how schizophrenia susceptibility genes are timed to exert their effects in young adults. The Genes to Cognition programme is the largest genetic study so far undertaken into the synaptic molecular mechanisms underlying behaviour and physiology. We made important conceptual advances that inform how the repertoire of both innate and learned behaviours is built from unique combinations of postsynaptic proteins that either amplify or attenuate the behavioural response. This constitutes a key advance in understanding how the brain decodes information inherent in patterns of nerve impulses, and provides insight into why the PSP has evolved to be so complex, and consequently why the phenotypes of synaptopathies are so diverse. Our most recent work has opened a new phase, and scale, in understanding synapses with the first synaptome maps of the brain. We have developed next-generation methods (SYNMAP) that enable single-synapse resolution molecular mapping across the whole mouse brain and extensive regions of the human brain, revealing the molecular and morphological features of a billion synapses. This has already uncovered unprecedented spatiotemporal synapse diversity organised into an architecture that correlates with the structural and functional connectomes, and shown how mutations that cause cognitive disorders reorganise these synaptome maps; for example, by detecting vulnerable synapse subtypes and synapse loss in Alzheimer’s disease. This innovative synaptome mapping technology has huge potential to help characterise how the brain changes during normal development, including in specific cell types, and with degeneration, facilitating novel pathways to diagnosis and therapy.

SeminarNeuroscience

Untitled Seminar

Emilia Favuzzi (USA), Ewoud Schmidt (USA), Tracy Bale (USA), Anastassia Voronova (Canada)
Mar 31, 2022

Emilia Favuzzi (USA): Artisans of Brain Wiring: GABA-Receptive Microglia Selectively Sculpt Inhibitory Circuits; Ewoud Schmidt (USA): Humanizing the mouse brain: reorganizing cortical circuits through modified synaptic development; Tracy Bale (USA): Trophoblast mechanisms key in regulating neurodevelopment Anastassia Voronova (Canada): Regulation of neural stem cell fates by neuronal ligands

SeminarNeuroscience

Mapping the Dynamics of the Linear and 3D Genome of Single Cells in the Developing Brain

Longzhi Tan
Stanford
Mar 30, 2022

Three intimately related dimensions of the mammalian genome—linear DNA sequence, gene transcription, and 3D genome architecture—are crucial for the development of nervous systems. Changes in the linear genome (e.g., de novo mutations), transcriptome, and 3D genome structure lead to debilitating neurodevelopmental disorders, such as autism and schizophrenia. However, current technologies and data are severely limited: (1) 3D genome structures of single brain cells have not been solved; (2) little is known about the dynamics of single-cell transcriptome and 3D genome after birth; (3) true de novo mutations are extremely difficult to distinguish from false positives (DNA damage and/or amplification errors). Here, I filled in this longstanding technological and knowledge gap. I recently developed a high-resolution method—diploid chromatin conformation capture (Dip-C)—which resolved the first 3D structure of the human genome, tackling a longstanding problem dating back to the 1880s. Using Dip-C, I obtained the first 3D genome structure of a single brain cell, and created the first transcriptome and 3D genome atlas of the mouse brain during postnatal development. I found that in adults, 3D genome “structure types” delineate all major cell types, with high correlation between chromatin A/B compartments and gene expression. During development, both transcriptome and 3D genome are extensively transformed in the first month of life. In neurons, 3D genome is rewired across scales, correlated with gene expression modules, and independent of sensory experience. Finally, I examined allele-specific structure of imprinted genes, revealing local and chromosome-wide differences. More recently, I expanded my 3D genome atlas to the human and mouse cerebellum—the most consistently affected brain region in autism. I uncovered unique 3D genome rewiring throughout life, providing a structural basis for the cerebellum’s unique mode of development and aging. In addition, to accurately measure de novo mutations in a single cell, I developed a new method—multiplex end-tagging amplification of complementary strands (META-CS), which eliminates nearly all false positives by virtue of DNA complementarity. Using META-CS, I determined the true mutation spectrum of single human brain cells, free from chemical artifacts. Together, my findings uncovered an unknown dimension of neurodevelopment, and open up opportunities for new treatments for autism and other developmental disorders.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Dancing to a Different Tune: TANGO Gives Hope for Dravet Syndrome

Lori Isom
University of Michigan
Oct 20, 2021

The long-term goal of our research is to understand the mechanisms of SUDEP, defined as Sudden, Unexpected, witnessed or unwitnessed, nontraumatic and non-drowning Death in patients with EPilepsy, excluding cases of documented status epilepticus. The majority of SUDEP patients die during sleep. SUDEP is the most devastating consequence of epilepsy, yet little is understood about its causes and no biomarkers exist to identify at risk patients. While SUDEP accounts for 7.5-20% of all epilepsy deaths, SUDEP risk in the genetic epilepsies varies with affected genes. Patients with ion channel gene variants have the highest SUDEP risk. Indirect evidence variably links SUDEP to seizure-induced apnea, pulmonary edema, dysregulation of cerebral circulation, autonomic dysfunction, and cardiac arrhythmias. Arrhythmias may be primary or secondary to hormonal or metabolic changes, or autonomic discharges. When SUDEP is compared to Sudden Cardiac Death secondary to Long QT Syndrome, especially to LQT3 linked to variants in the voltage-gated sodium channel (VGSC) gene SCN5A, there are parallels in the circumstances of death. To gain insight into SUDEP mechanisms, our approach has focused on channelopathies with high SUDEP incidence. One such disorder is Dravet syndrome (DS), a devastating form of developmental and epileptic encephalopathy (DEE) characterized by multiple pharmacoresistant seizure types, intellectual disability, ataxia, and increased mortality. While all patients with epilepsy are at risk for SUDEP, DS patients may have the highest risk, up to 20%, with a mean age at SUDEP of 4.6 years. Over 80% of DS is caused by de novo heterozygous loss-of-function (LOF) variants in SCN1A, encoding the VGSC Nav1.1  subunit, resulting in haploinsufficiency. A smaller cohort of patients with DS or a more severe DEE have inherited, homozygous LOF variants in SCN1B, encoding the VGSC 1/1B non-pore-forming subunits. A related DEE, Early Infantile EE (EIEE) type 13, is linked to de novo heterozygous gain-of-function variants in SCN8A, encoding the VGSC Nav1.6. VGSCs underlie the rising phase and propagation of action potentials in neurons and cardiac myocytes. SCN1A, SCN8A, and SCN1B are expressed in both the heart and brain of humans and mice. Because of this, we proposed that cardiac arrhythmias contribute to the mechanism of SUDEP in DEE. We have taken a novel approach to the development of therapeutics for DS in collaboration with Stoke Therapeutics. We employed Targeted Augmentation of Nuclear Gene Output (TANGO) technology, which modulates naturally occurring, non-productive splicing events to increase target gene and protein expression and ameliorate disease phenotype in a mouse model. We identified antisense oligonucleotides (ASOs) that specifically increase the expression of productive Scn1a transcript in human and mouse cell lines, as well as in mouse brain. We showed that a single intracerebroventricular dose of a lead ASO at postnatal day 2 or 14 reduced the incidence of electrographic seizures and SUDEP in the F1:129S-Scn1a+/- x C57BL/6J mouse model of DS. Increased expression of productive Scn1a transcript and NaV1.1 protein were confirmed in brains of treated mice. Our results suggest that TANGO may provide a unique, gene-specific approach for the treatment of DS.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Colour processing in the mouse brain for vision and beyond

Timothy Brown
University of Manchester
Jul 19, 2021

Colour vision plays important roles in regulating animal behaviour, yet understanding of how such information is processed in the brain is still incomplete. Here I discuss our work addressing this issue in mice where, despite aspects of retinal organisation that might suggest limited capacity for colour vision, we find evidence of extensive cone-dependent spectral opponency across subcortical visual centres. In particular, our data both reveals important contributions of such colour signals to non-image-forming functions (regulation of the circadian system) but also indicate surprisingly sophisticated support for more conventional aspects of colour vision.

SeminarNeuroscience

A brain circuit for curiosity

Mehran Ahmadlou
Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience
Jul 12, 2021

Motivational drives are internal states that can be different even in similar interactions with external stimuli. Curiosity as the motivational drive for novelty-seeking and investigating the surrounding environment is for survival as essential and intrinsic as hunger. Curiosity, hunger, and appetitive aggression drive three different goal-directed behaviors—novelty seeking, food eating, and hunting— but these behaviors are composed of similar actions in animals. This similarity of actions has made it challenging to study novelty seeking and distinguish it from eating and hunting in nonarticulating animals. The brain mechanisms underlying this basic survival drive, curiosity, and novelty-seeking behavior have remained unclear. In spite of having well-developed techniques to study mouse brain circuits, there are many controversial and different results in the field of motivational behavior. This has left the functions of motivational brain regions such as the zona incerta (ZI) still uncertain. Not having a transparent, nonreinforced, and easily replicable paradigm is one of the main causes of this uncertainty. Therefore, we chose a simple solution to conduct our research: giving the mouse freedom to choose what it wants—double freeaccess choice. By examining mice in an experimental battery of object free-access double-choice (FADC) and social interaction tests—using optogenetics, chemogenetics, calcium fiber photometry, multichannel recording electrophysiology, and multicolor mRNA in situ hybridization—we uncovered a cell type–specific cortico-subcortical brain circuit of the curiosity and novelty-seeking behavior. We found in mice that inhibitory neurons in the medial ZI (ZIm) are essential for the decision to investigate an object or a conspecific. These neurons receive excitatory input from the prelimbic cortex to signal the initiation of exploration. This signal is modulated in the ZIm by the level of investigatory motivation. Increased activity in the ZIm instigates deep investigative action by inhibiting the periaqueductal gray region. A subpopulation of inhibitory ZIm neurons expressing tachykinin 1 (TAC1) modulates the investigatory behavior.

SeminarNeuroscience

Dorothy J Killam Lecture: Cell Type Classification and Circuit Mapping in the Mouse Brain

Hongkui Zeng
Executive Vice President and Director of Allen Institute for Brain Science, Seattle, USA
Feb 23, 2021

To understand the function of the brain and how its dysfunction leads to brain diseases, it is essential to have a deep understanding of the cell type composition of the brain, how the cell types are connected with each other and what their roles are in circuit function. At the Allen Institute, we have built multiple platforms, including single-cell transcriptomics, single and multi-patching electrophysiology, 3D reconstruction of neuronal morphology, high throughput brain-wide connectivity mapping, and large-scale neuronal activity imaging, to characterize the transcriptomic, physiological, morphological, and connectional properties of different types of neurons in a standardized way, towards a taxonomy of cell types and a description of their wiring diagram for the mouse brain, with a focus on the visual cortico-thalamic system. Building such knowledge base lays the foundation towards the understanding of the computational mechanisms of brain circuit function.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Microglia function and dysfunction in Alzheimer’s disease

Beth Stevens
Harvard Medical School
Oct 8, 2020

Emerging genetic studies of late-onset Alzheimer’s Disease implicate the brain’s resident macrophages in the pathogenesis of AD. More than half the risk genes associated with late-onset AD are selectively expressed in microglia and peripheral myeloid cells; yet we know little about the underlying biology or how myeloid cells contribute to AD pathogenesis. Using single-cell RNA sequencing and spatial transcriptomics we identified molecular signatures that can be used to localize and monitor distinct microglia functional states in the human and mouse brain. Our results show that microglia assume diverse functional states in development, aging and injury, including populations corresponding to known microglial functions including proliferation, migration, inflammation, and synaptic phagocytosis. We identified several innate immune pathways by which microglia recognize and prune synapses during development and in models of Alzheimer’s disease, including the classical complement cascade. Illuminating the mechanisms by which developing synaptic circuits are sculpted is providing important insight on understanding how to protect synapses in Alzheimer’s and other neurodegenerative diseases of synaptic dysfunction.

SeminarNeuroscience

The cellular phase of Alzheimer’s Disease: from genes to cells

Bart De Strooper
UK Dementia Research Institute, UCL, London & & KU Leuven & VIB Center for Brain and Disease Research, Belgium KU Leuven & VIB Center for Brain and Disease Research, Belgium
Oct 1, 2020

The amyloid cascade hypothesis for Alzheimer disease ((Hardy and Selkoe, 2002; Hardy and Higgins, 1992; Selkoe, 1991), updated in (Karran et al., 2011) provides a linear model for the pathogenesis of AD with Aβ accumulation upstream and Tau pathology, inflammation, synaptic dysfunction, neuronal loss and dementia downstream, all interlinked, initiated and driven by Aβ42 peptides or oligomers. The genetic mutations causing familial Alzheimer disease seem to support this model. The nagging problem remains however that the postulated causal, and especially the ’driving’ role of abnormal Aβ aggregation or Aβ oligomer formation could not be convincingly demonstrated until now. Indeed, many questions (e.g. what causes Aβ toxicity, what is the relation between Aβ and Tau pathology, what causes neuronal death, why is amyloid deposition not correlated with dementia etc…) were already raised when the amyloid hypothesis was conceived 25 years ago. These questions remain in essence unanswered. It seems that the old paradigm is not tenable: the amyloid cascade is too linear, too neurocentric, and does not take into account the long time lag between the biochemical phase i.e. the appearance of amyloid plaques and neuronal tangles and the ultimate clinical phase, i.e. the manifestation of dementia. The pathways linking these two phases must be complex and tortuous. We have called this the cellular phase of AD (De Strooper and Karran, 2016) to suggest that a long period of action and reaction involving neurons, neuronal circuitry but also microglia, astroglia, oligodendrocytes, and the vasculature underlies the disease. In fact it is this long disease process that should be studied in the coming years. While microglia are part of this process, they should not be considered as the only component of the cellular phase. We expect that further clinical investigations and novel tools will allow to diagnose the effects of the cellular changes in the brain and provide clinical signs for this so called preclinical or prodromal AD. Furthermore the better understanding of this phase will lead to completely novel drug targets and treatments and will lead to an era where patients will receive an appropriate therapy according to their clinical stage. In this view anti-amyloid therapy is probably only effective and useful in the very early stage of the disease and AD does no longer equal to dementia. We will discuss in our talk how single cell technology and transplantation of human iPS cells into mouse brain allow to start to map in a systematic way the cellular phase of Alzheimer’s Disease.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

The subcellular organization of excitation and inhibition underlying high-fidelity direction coding in the retina

Gautam Awatramani
University of Victoria
May 11, 2020

Understanding how neural circuits in the brain compute information not only requires determining how individual inhibitory and excitatory elements of circuits are wired together, but also a detailed knowledge of their functional interactions. Recent advances in optogenetic techniques and mouse genetics now offer ways to specifically probe the functional properties of neural circuits with unprecedented specificity. Perhaps one of the most heavily interrogated circuits in the mouse brain is one in the retina that is involved in coding direction (reviewed by Mauss et al., 2017; Vaney et al., 2012). In this circuit, direction is encoded by specialized direction-selective (DS) ganglion cells (DSGCs), which respond robustly to objects moving in a ‘preferred’ direction but not in the opposite or ‘null’ direction (Barlow and Levick, 1965). We now know this computation relies on the coordination of three transmitter systems: glutamate, GABA and acetylcholine (ACh). In this talk, I will discuss the synaptic mechanisms that produce the spatiotemporal patterns of inhibition and excitation that are crucial for shaping directional selectivity. Special emphasis will be placed on the role of ACh, as it is unclear whether it is mediated by synaptic or non-synaptic mechanisms, which is in fact a central issue in the CNS. Barlow, H.B., and Levick, W.R. (1965). The mechanism of directionally selective units in rabbit's retina. J Physiol 178, 477-504. Mauss, A.S., Vlasits, A., Borst, A., and Feller, M. (2017). Visual Circuits for Direction Selectivity. Annu Rev Neurosci 40, 211-230. Vaney, D.I., Sivyer, B., and Taylor, W.R. (2012). Direction selectivity in the retina: symmetry and asymmetry in structure and function. Nat Rev Neurosci 13, 194-208

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

A human-specific modifier of synaptic development, cortical circuit connectivity and function

Franck Polleux
Columbia University
Apr 30, 2020

The remarkable cognitive abilities characterizing humans has been linked to unique patterns of connectivity characterizing the neocortex. Comparative studies have shown that human cortical pyramidal neurons (PN) receive a significant increase of synaptic inputs when compared to other mammals, including non-human primates and rodents, but how this may relate to changes in cortical connectivity and function remained largely unknown. We previously identified a human-specific gene duplication (HSGD), SRGAP2C, that, when induced in mouse cortical PNs drives human-specific features of synaptic development, including a correlated increase in excitatory (E) and inhibitory (I) synapse density through inhibition of the ancestral SRGAP2A protein (Charrier et al. 2012; Fossatti et al. 2016; Schmidt et al. 2019). However, the origin and nature of this increased connectivity and its impact on cortical circuit function was unknown. I will present new results exploring these questions (see Schmidt et al. (2020) https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/852970v1). Using a combination of transgenic approaches and quantitative monosynaptic tracing, we discovered that humanization of SRGAP2C expression in the mouse cortex leads to a specific increase in local and long-range cortico-cortical inputs received by layer 2/3 cortical PNs. Moreover, using in vivo two-photon imaging in the barrel cortex of awake mice, we show that humanization of SRGAP2C expression increases the reliability and selectivity of sensory- evoked responses in layer 2/3 PNs. We also found that mice humanized for SRGAP2C in all cortical pyramidal neurons and throughout development are characterized by improved behavioural performance in a novel whisker-based sensory discrimination task compared to control wild-type mice. Our results suggest that the emergence of SRGAP2C during human evolution underlie a new substrate for human brain evolution whereby it led to increased local and long-range cortico-cortical connectivity and improved reliability of sensory-evoked cortical coding. References cited Charrier C.*, Joshi K. *, Coutinho-Budd J., Kim, J-E., Lambert N., de Marchena, J., Jin W-L., Vanderhaeghen P., Ghosh A., Sassa T, and Polleux F. (2012) Inhibition of SRGAP2 function by its human-specific paralogs induces neoteny of spine maturation. Cell 149:923-935. * Co-first authors. Fossati M, Pizzarelli R, Schmidt ER, Kupferman JV, Stroebel D, Polleux F*, Charrier C*. (2016) SRGAP2 and Its Human-Specific Paralog Co-Regulate the Development of Excitatory and Inhibitory Synapses. Neuron. 91(2):356-69. * Co-senior corresponding authors. Schmidt E.R.E., Kupferman J.V., Stackmann M., Polleux F. (2019) The human-specific paralogs SRGAP2 and SRGAP2C differentially modulate SRGAP2A-dependent synaptic development. Scientific Rep. 9(1):18692. Schmidt E.R.E, Zhao H.T., Hillman E.M.C., Polleux F. (2020) Humanization of SRGAP2C expression increases cortico-cortical connectivity and reliability of sensory-evoked responses in mouse brain. Submitted. See also: https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/852970v1

ePosterNeuroscience

A census of neural timescales across the mouse brain

Roxana Zeraati, Yanliang Shi, The International Brain Laboratory, Anna Levina, Tatiana Engel

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Universal scaling of intrinsic timescales across the whole mouse brain

Yanliang Shi, Roxana Zeraati, Yuzheng Lin, Anna Levina, Tatiana Engel

COSYNE 2025

ePosterNeuroscience

Analysis of neuronal activity in 3D volume of tissue-cleared mouse brain: challenges and advances

Margaryta Tevosian, Stefan Pastore, Stanislav Sys, Irina Kovlyagina, Monika Chongtham, Susanne Gerber, Beat Lutz
ePosterNeuroscience

Analysis of synaptic nanoarchitecture using FRET at the level of single protein complexes and at the whole mouse brain scale

Takeshi Kaizuka, Katie Morris, Ricky Qiu, Edita Bulovaite, Gabor Varga, Noboru H. Komiyama, Mathew Horrocks, Seth G. Grant
ePosterNeuroscience

Astrocyte-derived HMGB1 regulates gliovascular maturation in the postnatal mouse brain

Moises Freitas-Andrade, Cesar H. Comin, Peter Van Dyken, Micaël Carrier, Jingjing Gong, Joanna Raman-Nair, Karan Thakur, Marie-Ève Tremblay, Natalina Salmaso, Luciano Da F. Costa, Baptiste Lacoste
ePosterNeuroscience

Astroglial heterogeneity assessed across regions by cell type-specific proteomic labeling in the young and aged mouse brain

Priyadharshini Prabhakar, Rainer Pielot, Peter Landgraf, Josef Wissing, Lothar Jaensch, Anne Bayrhammer, Daniela Dieterich, Anke Müller
ePosterNeuroscience

AAV biodistribution in the mouse brain and periphery: effects of capsid and route of administration

Astrid Mentani, Celine Fournier, Marco Bruestle, Nicole Hellbach, Eva Harde
ePosterNeuroscience

Custom Light-Sheet Microscopy setups for large-scale human and mouse brain mapping

Giacomo Mazzamuto, Ludovico Silvestri, Vladislav Gavryusev, Giuseppe Sancataldo, Francesco Saverio Pavone
ePosterNeuroscience

Cyclase-associated protein 1 (CAP1) represses MRTF-SRF-dependent gene expression in the mouse brain

Sharof Khudayberdiev, Kerstin Weiß, Anika Heinze, Uwe Linne, Marco B. Rust
ePosterNeuroscience

Defensive behaviors between nature and nurture: functional characterization of the defensive behaviors circuit in the mouse brain

Valentina Khalil, Islam Faress, Noemie Mermet-Joret, Sadegh Nabavi
ePosterNeuroscience

DiffBrainNet: A combined resource of differential networks and differential expression to analyze transcriptomic responses to glucocorticoids in 8 mouse brain regions

Nathalie Gerstner, Anthi C. Krontira, Elisabeth B. Binder, Janine Knauer-Arloth
ePosterNeuroscience

Effects of Tlr2 deficiency on neuroinflammation after ischemic lesion in the mouse brain - worse functional outcome and more inflammation than in wild type controls?

Sanja Srakočić, Paula Josić, Rok Ister, Siniša Škokić, Anton Glasnović, Marina Radmilović Dobrivojević, Srecko Gajovic
ePosterNeuroscience

An eighteen-channel multielectrode array for combining epidural recordings and optogenetic stimulation in the mouse brain

Julia Morais Gancz, Andreas Schander, Lutz Wallhorn, Olivia Masseck, Detlef Wegener
ePosterNeuroscience

Evaluation of the circadian expression of orexin receptors in the mouse brain by RNAscope®

Gina M. Krause, Anne Albrecht
ePosterNeuroscience

Evaluation of the relaxivity and contrast enhancement of a new MRI molecular probe targeting Tau lesions in mouse brains : a pilot study

Laura Mouton, Mathieu Santin, - Bay, - Ganneau, Nadege Sarrazin, - Prigent, - Lafaye, - Delatour, - Petiet
ePosterNeuroscience

Expression pattern and functions of the mitochondrial SPIRE1 isoform in the mouse brain

Anna Huber, Tobias Welz, Javier Martin-Gonzalez, Saida Zoubaa, Andrea Dannullis, Annette Samol-Wolf, Markus J. Riemenschneider, Cord Brakebusch, Eugen Kerkhoff
ePosterNeuroscience

Functional Fingerprinting of Drugs on Brain Activation and Connectivity Patterns in the Awake Mouse Brain

Jean-Charles Mariani, Samuel Diebolt, Laurianne Beynac, Thomas Deffieux, Mickael Tanter, Renata Santos, Andrea Kliewer, Zsolt Lenkei
ePosterNeuroscience

Heterogeneity and developmental dynamics of LYVE-1 perivascular macrophages distribution in the mouse brain

Marie Karam, Isabelle Brunet
ePosterNeuroscience

Investigating the region-specific function of Zfhx3 in the mouse brain, and characterising its molecular activity

Paige Street, Gareth Banks, Patrick Nolan
ePosterNeuroscience

Longitudinal imaging of electrical synapses in the awake mouse brain using a novel, customizable, 3D-printed holding system

Marcel Weinreich, David E. Koser, Katharina Held, Thomas Kuner, Johannes Knabbe, Hannah Monyer
ePosterNeuroscience

Metabolic defects in 16p11.2-deficient primary mouse brain endothelial cells

Julie Ouellette, Shama Naz, David Patten, Baptiste Lacoste
ePosterNeuroscience

Regional changes in density and spatial distribution of calbindin- and parvalbumin expressing neurons in the developing mouse brain

Olga B. Rogulina, Monika I. Overdevest, Menno P. Witter, Trygve B. Leergaard, Ingvild Elise Bjerke
ePosterNeuroscience

Role of RAP1GAP2 in Serotonin Autoregulation in Mouse Brain

Yunqing Cao, Oliver Popp, Philipp Mertins, Natalia Alenina, Michael Bader
ePosterNeuroscience

Serotonergic modulation of neural activity across the mouse brain

Guido T. Meijer, Joana A. Catarino, Laura Freitas-Silva, Inês Laranjeira, - International Brain Laboratory, Zachary F. Mainen
ePosterNeuroscience

Single-cell RNA sequencing reveals senescent-like neurons in the injured mouse brain and treatment with senolytic drug ABT263 improves injury-induced cognitive impairment: is there therapeutic potential?

Nicole Schwab, Daria Taskina, Youngjun Ju, Lili-Naz Hazrati
ePosterNeuroscience

Slow maturation of dormant neuronal precursors in the aged mouse brain

Maximilian Reisinger, Bruno Benedetti, Ariane Benedetti, Gabriele Gabriele, Christina Kreutzer, Rodolphe Poupardin, Sébastien Couillard-Després
ePosterNeuroscience

Spatio-temporal dynamics of germinal zones in the mouse brain

Natalia Baumann, Robin Wagener, Philipp Abe, Andrea Lopes, Adrien Lavalley, Elia Magrinelli, Sabine Fièvre, Denis Jabaudon
ePosterNeuroscience

Spatiotemporal expression of the 5-HT6 receptor in the mouse brain, from embryo to adult

Séverine Chaumont-Dubel, Vincent Dupuy, Joël Bockaert, Philippe Marin
ePosterNeuroscience

Spreading of P301S aggregated tau investigated in organotypic mouse brain slices

Dhwani S. Korde, Christian Humpel
ePosterNeuroscience

Subpopulations of excitatory and inhibitory synapses express SV2A in mouse brain

Theresa Wong, Zhen Qiu, Catriona Wimberley, Carlos Alcaide-Corral, Timaeus E. Morgan, Holly Mcerlain, Andrew Sutherland, Adriana Tavares, Seth G. Grant
ePosterNeuroscience

3D topography and dynamics of mouse brain neurogenic zones

Alexander Lazutkin, Julia Starovatykh, Anna Ivanova, Sergey Shuvaev, Konstantin V. Anokhin, Alexei A. Koulakov, Grigori Enikolopov
ePosterNeuroscience

Tracing Glia-into-Neuron Conversion in the Aged Mouse Brain using Single Cell Spatial Transcriptomics

Roy Maimon, Carlos Chilion Marinas, Don W. Cleveland
ePosterNeuroscience

User friendly analysis toolbox for three-dimensional light-sheet microscopy data in hemispheric and whole mouse brain samples

Stefan Pastore, Margaryta Tevosian, Stanislav Sys, Nils Molnar, Irina Kovlyagina, Monika Chongtham, Beat Lutz, Susanne Gerber
ePosterNeuroscience

In vivo direct reprogramming of OPCs into GABAergic neurons in adolescent and adult mouse brain

Srisaiyini Kidnapillai
ePosterNeuroscience

Whole-brain 3D transcranial functional connectivity of the mouse brain with MultiArray functional ultrasound imaging

Adrien Bertolo, Jérémy Ferrier, Silvia Cazzanelli, Mickael Tanter, Bruno F. Osmanski, Mathieu Pernot, Thomas Deffieux
ePosterNeuroscience

Advancing in-vivo brain vasculature imaging: Super-resolution 3D ultrasound localization microscopy of the mouse brain and in non-human primate using RCA probes

Adrien Bertolo, Jeremy Ferrier, Tanguy Delaporte, Julien Claron, Oscar Demeulenaere, Mickael Tanter, Pierre Pouget, Bruno Osmanski, Mathieu Pernot, Thomas Deffieux

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Aging of the blood-brain barrier: Metabolic profiling of mouse brain endothelial cell senescence

Hari Baskar Balasubramanian, Ammar Tahir, Dominik Kahr, Florian Haage, Marietta Zille

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Altered cell membrane ganglioside composition affects enzyme activity, expression, and submembrane localization of Na+,K+-ATPase in mouse brain

Borna Puljko, Mario Stojanović, Katarina Ilić, Nikolina Maček Hrvat, Marta Balog, Marija Heffer, Svjetlana Kalanj Bognar, Kristina Mlinac Jerković

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Assessing histological processing of mouse brain tissue for the reconstruction of tridimensional astrocyte structure

Sara Barsanti, João Luís Machado, João Filipe Viana, Alexandra Veiga, Daniela Sofia Abreu, Duarte Dias, Susana Monteiro, Nuno A. Silva, João Filipe Oliveira

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

ClearFinder: A Python GUI for annotating cells in cleared mouse brain

Margarita Tevosian, Stefan Pastore, Philipp Hillenbrand, Nils Molnar, Irina Kovlyagina, Monika Chanu Chongtham, Stanislav Sys, Beat Lutz, Susanne Gerber

FENS Forum 2024

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