TopicNeuroscience
Content Overview
5Total items
2Seminars
2ePosters
1Grant

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GrantNeuroscience

Impact of environmental toxicants on frontal cortical circuits

National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences
Jun 10, 2028

Abstract: Human mercury (Hg) exposure has been known for many decades to produce cognitive impairment and mood disorder symptoms. Hg is a global pollutant that poses widespread potential for neurotoxic exposure, earning it a position on the WHO’s list of the top 10 chemicals of major public health concern. However, little is known about the neural mechanisms that lead to neuropsychiatric symptoms from Hg exposure. The objective of this application is to identify specific mechanisms, within the neocortical circuits that control emotion and cognition, that are disrupted by the neurotoxicant, methylmercury (MeHg). The neocortex exhibits especially strong bioaccumulation of Hg, magnifying the risk to these circuits. Therefore, we hypothesize that chronic MeHg exposure leads to persistent circuit dysfunction in prefrontal and insular cortices (mPFC and aIC) – two brain regions critical in control of emotion and cognition. Our recent work showed that mPFC neurons in brain slices are negatively affected by acute MeHg exposure, resulting in hyperexcitability and altered synaptic transmission. Currently, it unknown how these acute effects on synaptic transmission translate to altered neuronal function in vivo. This proposal applies an integrative approach to determine the in vivo effects of MeHg on mPFC and aIC circuits, at the systems neurophysiology, synaptic and molecular levels. We will compare the effects of MeHg exposure on in vivo spiking activity patterns in brain regions of the mPFC-aIC circuit, using multiunit electrophysiological recordings in awake animals. Action potentials will be recorded simultaneously from multiple neurons, distributed across cortical layers, to evaluate effects on spike frequency, temporal patterning and correlation. Using acute brain slices derived from animals chronically treated with MeHg in vivo, electrophysiologically recorded synaptic estimates will be made to compare the effects of MeHg exposure on synaptic transmission and EI-balance within brain regions of the mPFC-aIC circuit. Based on previous evidence, we hypothesize that TDP-43 hyper-phosphorylation and aggregation link MeHg exposure to mPFC and aIC dysfunction. Therefore, immunohistochemistry will be used to measure TDP-43 hyper-phosphorylation and nuclear redistribution from animals treated in vivo +/- MeHg. In addition, tissue will be co-labeled with antibodies for nPAS4, a well-stablished molecular marker of activity, to determine whether TDP-43 hallmarks correlate with MeHg-induced hyper-excitability. The results of our study will substantively improve our mechanistic understanding of how Hg disrupts frontal cortical function and contribute to our understanding of the biological basis of emotional and cognitive sympoms. Identifying specific actions of MeHg at the functional microcircuitry level and cellular/molecular level will help significantly in finding novel targets for therapeutic interventions. If our hypothesis is correct, this will also raise the question of the extent to which chronic low-level environmental mercury exposure contributes to the etiology of fronto-cortical disorders with symptoms that overlap mercury exposure but do not have definitive genetic origins. This is particularly important because fronto-cortical disorders are predominantly sporadic in nature.

SeminarNeuroscience

Autism-Associated Shank3 Is Essential for Homeostatic Compensation in Rodent Visual Cortex

Gina Turrigiano
Brandeis University
Jul 21, 2020

Neocortical networks must generate and maintain stable activity patterns despite perturbations induced by learning and experience- dependent plasticity. There is abundant theoretical and experimental evidence that network stability is achieved through homeostatic plasticity mechanisms that adjust synaptic and neuronal properties to stabilize some measure of average activity, and this process has been extensively studied in primary visual cortex (V1), where chronic visual deprivation induces an initial drop in activity and ensemble average firing rates (FRs), but over time activity is restored to baseline despite continued deprivation. Here I discuss recent work from the lab in which we followed this FR homeostasis in individual V1 neurons in freely behaving animals during a prolonged visual deprivation/eye-reopening paradigm. We find that - when FRs are perturbed by manipulating sensory experience - over time they return precisely to a cell-autonomous set-point. Finally, we find that homeostatic plasticity is perturbed in a mouse model of Autism spectrum disorder, and this results in a breakdown of FRH within V1. These data suggest that loss of homeostatic plasticity is one primary cause of excitation/inhibition imbalances in ASD models. Together these studies illuminate the role of stabilizing plasticity mechanisms in the ability of neocortical circuits to recover robust function following challenges to their excitability.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Fate and freedom in developing neocortical circuits

Denis Jabaudon
University of Geneva
Apr 23, 2020

During brain development, neurons are born in specialized niches and migrate to target regions where they assemble to form the circuits that underlie mammalian behaviour. During their journey, neurons follow cell-intrinsic, genetic programs transmitted by their mother cells but also environmental cues, which together drive their maturation. Here, focusing on the neocortex, I will discuss recent findings from our laboratory in which we untangle and manipulate the programs at play in progenitors and their daughter neurons to better understand the emergence of cellular diversity in the developing brain.

ePosterNeuroscience

Hippocampal-neocortical circuits involved in inferential learning

Cal M. Shearer, Olivia Mcginnis, Katja Hartwich, Pavel Perestenko, David Dupret, Helen Barron
ePosterNeuroscience

Harmonic oscillator networks (HORNs) and the functional role of oscillatory dynamics in neocortical circuits

Felix Effenberger, Pedro Carvalho, Dubinin Igor, Wolf Singer

FENS Forum 2024

neocortical circuits coverage

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