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SeminarPast EventNeuroscience

Neuro-Immune Coupling: How the Immune System Sculpts Brain Circuitry

Beth Stevens

Dr.

Boston Children's Hospital/Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA

Schedule
Monday, June 21, 2021

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Schedule

Monday, June 21, 2021

4:00 PM Europe/Lisbon

Host: Brain-Body Interactions

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Event Information

Domain

Neuroscience

Original Event

View source

Host

Brain-Body Interactions

Duration

70 minutes

Abstract

In this lecture, Dr Stevens will discuss recent work that implicates brain immune cells, called microglia, in sculpting of synaptic connections during development and their relevance to autism, schizophrenia and other brain disorders. Her recent work revealed a key role for microglia and a group of immune related molecules called complement in normal developmental synaptic pruning, a normal process required to establish precise brain wiring. Emerging evidence suggests aberrant regulation of this pruning pathway may contribute to synaptic and cognitive dysfunction in a host of brain disorders, including schizophrenia. Recent research has revealed that a person’s risk of schizophrenia is increased if they inherit specific variants in complement C4, gene plays a well-known role in the immune system but also helps sculpt developing synapses in the mouse visual system (Sekar et al., 2016). Together these findings may help explain known features of schizophrenia, including reduced numbers of synapses in key cortical regions and an adolescent age of onset that corresponds with developmentally timed waves of synaptic pruning in these regions. Stevens will discuss this and ongoing work to understand the mechanisms by which complement and microglia prune specific synapses in the brain. A deeper understanding of how these immune mechanisms mediate synaptic pruning may provide novel insight into how to protect synapses in autism and other brain disorders, including Alzheimer’s and Huntington’s Disease.

Topics

autismbrain disorderscognitioncomplementcomplement C4developmentmicroglianeuroimmunologyneuron-glia communicationschizophreniasynaptic connectionssynaptic physiologysynaptic pruning

About the Speaker

Beth Stevens

Dr.

Boston Children's Hospital/Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA

Contact & Resources

Personal Website

www.stevenslab.org

@stevens1lab

Follow on Twitter/X

twitter.com/stevens1lab

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