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Reconstructing Inhibitory Circuits Damaged

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SeminarPast EventNeuroscience

Reconstructing inhibitory circuits in a damaged brain

Robert Hunt

Prof

University of California-Irvine

Schedule
Tuesday, May 17, 2022

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Tuesday, May 17, 2022

5:00 PM Europe/London

Host: Clinical and Experimental Epilepsy

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Clinical and Experimental Epilepsy

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Abstract

Inhibitory interneurons govern the sparse activation of principal cells that permits appropriate behaviors, but they among the most vulnerable to brain damage. Our recent work has demonstrated important roles for inhibitory neurons in disorders of brain development, injury and epilepsy. These studies have motivated our ongoing efforts to understand how these cells operate at the synaptic, circuit and behavioral levels and in designing new technologies targeting specific populations of interneurons for therapy. I will discuss our recent efforts examining the role of interneurons in traumatic brain injury and in designing cell transplantation strategies - based on the generation of new inhibitory interneurons - that enable precise manipulation of inhibitory circuits in the injured brain. I will also discuss our ongoing efforts using monosynaptic virus tracing and whole-brain clearing methods to generate brain-wide maps of inhibitory circuits in the rodent brain. By comprehensively mapping the wiring of individual cell types on a global scale, we have uncovered a fundamental strategy to sustain and optimize inhibition following traumatic brain injury that involves spatial reorganization of local and long-range inputs to inhibitory neurons. These recent findings suggest that brain damage, even when focally restricted, likely has a far broader affect on brain-wide neural function than previously appreciated.

Topics

brain mappingcell transplantationepilepsyhuman cellsinhibitioninhibitory circuitsmonosynaptic virus tracingneural functionspatial reorganizationsynaptic circuitstraumatic brain injury

About the Speaker

Robert Hunt

Prof

University of California-Irvine

Contact & Resources

Personal Website

www.roberthuntlab.org

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