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How Does Metabolically Expensive

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Seminar✓ Recording AvailableNeuroscience

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

Zahid Padamsey

Rochefort lab, University of Edinburgh

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Wednesday, February 23, 2022

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Wednesday, February 23, 2022

6:35 PM Europe/Berlin

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Abstract

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.

Topics

AMPA receptorsATP usagefood scarcityleptinmammalian brainneuronal excitabilityorientation tuningsynaptic conductancevisual cortex

About the Speaker

Zahid Padamsey

Rochefort lab, University of Edinburgh

Contact & Resources

Personal Website

www.ed.ac.uk/discovery-brain-sciences/our-staff/postdoc-researchers/zahid-padamsey

@ZPadamsey

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twitter.com/ZPadamsey

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