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Seminar✓ Recording AvailableNeuroscience

The thalamus that speaks to the cortex: spontaneous activity in the developing brain

Guillermina Lopez Bendito

Instituto de Neurociencias, Alicante (Spain)

Schedule
Monday, June 22, 2020

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Schedule

Monday, June 22, 2020

7:00 PM Europe/Paris

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Host: WWNDev

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Event Information

Domain

Neuroscience

Original Event

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Host

WWNDev

Duration

70 minutes

Abstract

Our research team runs several related projects studying the cellular and molecular mechanisms involved in the development of axonal connections in the brain. In particular, our aim is to uncover the principles underlying thalamocortical axonal wiring, maintenance and ultimately the rewiring of connections, through an integrated and innovative experimental programme. The development of the thalamocortical wiring requires a precise topographical sorting of its connections. Each thalamic nucleus receives specific sensory information from the environment and projects topographically to its corresponding cortical. A second level of organization is achieved within each area, where thalamocortical connections display an intra-areal topographical organization, allowing the generation of accurate spatial representations within each cortical area. Therefore, the level of organization and specificity of the thalamocortical projections is much more complex than other projection systems in the CNS. The central hypothesis of our laboratory is that thalamocortical input influences and maintains the functional architecture of the sensory cortices. We also believe that rewiring and plasticity events can be triggered by activity-dependent mechanisms in the thalamus. Three major questions are been focused in the laboratory: i) the role of spontaneous patterns of activity in thalamocortical wiring and cortical development, ii) the role of the thalamus and its connectivity in the neuroplastic cortical changes following sensory deprivation, and iii) reprogramming thalamic cells for sensory circuit restoration. Within these projects we are using several experimental programmes, these include: optical imaging, manipulation of gene expression in vivo, cell and molecular biology, biochemistry, cell culture, sensory deprivation paradigms and electrophysiology. The results derived from our investigations will contribute to our understating of how reprogramming of cortical wiring takes place following brain damage and how cortical structure is maintained.

Topics

axonal connectionscortical developmentdevelopmentgene expressionneuroplasticityoptical imagingsensory corticessensory deprivationspontaneous activitythalamocortical wiring

About the Speaker

Guillermina Lopez Bendito

Instituto de Neurociencias, Alicante (Spain)

Contact & Resources

Personal Website

lopezbenditolab.com

@GLB_Lab

Follow on Twitter/X

twitter.com/GLB_Lab

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