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Circuit Function

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circuit function

Discover seminars, jobs, and research tagged with circuit function across World Wide.
19 curated items19 Seminars
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19 items · circuit function
19 results
SeminarNeuroscience

Spike train structure of cortical transcriptomic populations in vivo

Kenneth Harris
UCL, UK
Oct 28, 2025

The cortex comprises many neuronal types, which can be distinguished by their transcriptomes: the sets of genes they express. Little is known about the in vivo activity of these cell types, particularly as regards the structure of their spike trains, which might provide clues to cortical circuit function. To address this question, we used Neuropixels electrodes to record layer 5 excitatory populations in mouse V1, then transcriptomically identified the recorded cell types. To do so, we performed a subsequent recording of the same cells using 2-photon (2p) calcium imaging, identifying neurons between the two recording modalities by fingerprinting their responses to a “zebra noise” stimulus and estimating the path of the electrode through the 2p stack with a probabilistic method. We then cut brain slices and performed in situ transcriptomics to localize ~300 genes using coppaFISH3d, a new open source method, and aligned the transcriptomic data to the 2p stack. Analysis of the data is ongoing, and suggests substantial differences in spike time coordination between ET and IT neurons, as well as between transcriptomic subtypes of both these excitatory types.

SeminarNeuroscience

Metabolic-functional coupling of parvalbmunin-positive GABAergic interneurons in the injured and epileptic brain

Chris Dulla
Tufts
Jun 18, 2024

Parvalbumin-positive GABAergic interneurons (PV-INs) provide inhibitory control of excitatory neuron activity, coordinate circuit function, and regulate behavior and cognition. PV-INs are uniquely susceptible to loss and dysfunction in traumatic brain injury (TBI) and epilepsy but the cause of this susceptibility is unknown. One hypothesis is that PV-INs use specialized metabolic systems to support their high-frequency action potential firing and that metabolic stress disrupts these systems, leading to their dysfunction and loss. Metabolism-based therapies can restore PV-IN function after injury in preclinical TBI models. Based on these findings, we hypothesize that (1) PV-INs are highly metabolically specialized, (2) these specializations are lost after TBI, and (3) restoring PV-IN metabolic specializations can improve PV-IN function as well as TBI-related outcomes. Using novel single-cell approaches, we can now quantify cell-type-specific metabolism in complex tissues to determine whether PV-IN metabolic dysfunction contributes to the pathophysiology of TBI.

SeminarNeuroscience

Neuron-glial interactions in health and disease: from cognition to cancer

Michelle Monje
Stanford Medicine
Mar 13, 2023

In the central nervous system, neuronal activity is a critical regulator of development and plasticity. Activity-dependent proliferation of healthy glial progenitors, oligodendrocyte precursor cells (OPCs), and the consequent generation of new oligodendrocytes contributes to adaptive myelination. This plasticity of myelin tunes neural circuit function and contributes to healthy cognition. The robust mitogenic effect of neuronal activity on normal oligodendroglial precursor cells, a putative cellular origin for many forms of glioma, suggests that dysregulated or “hijacked” mechanisms of myelin plasticity might similarly promote malignant cell proliferation in this devastating group of brain cancers. Indeed, neuronal activity promotes progression of both high-grade and low-grade glioma subtypes in preclinical models. Crucial mechanisms mediating activity-regulated glioma growth include paracrine secretion of BDNF and the synaptic protein neuroligin-3 (NLGN3). NLGN3 induces multiple oncogenic signaling pathways in the cancer cell, and also promotes glutamatergic synapse formation between neurons and glioma cells. Glioma cells integrate into neural circuits synaptically through neuron-to-glioma synapses, and electrically through potassium-evoked currents that are amplified through gap-junctional coupling between tumor cells This synaptic and electrical integration of glioma into neural circuits is central to tumor progression in preclinical models. Thus, neuron-glial interactions not only modulate neural circuit structure and function in the healthy brain, but paracrine and synaptic neuron-glioma interactions also play important roles in the pathogenesis of glial cancers. The mechanistic parallels between normal and malignant neuron-glial interactions underscores the extent to which mechanisms of neurodevelopment and plasticity are subverted by malignant gliomas, and the importance of understanding the neuroscience of cancer.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Regional variation of photoreceptor and circuit function in the primate retina

Raunak Sinha
University of Wisconsin-Madison
Oct 23, 2022
SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Introducing dendritic computations to SNNs with Dendrify

Michalis Pagkalos
IMBB FORTH
Sep 6, 2022

Current SNNs studies frequently ignore dendrites, the thin membranous extensions of biological neurons that receive and preprocess nearly all synaptic inputs in the brain. However, decades of experimental and theoretical research suggest that dendrites possess compelling computational capabilities that greatly influence neuronal and circuit functions. Notably, standard point-neuron networks cannot adequately capture most hallmark dendritic properties. Meanwhile, biophysically detailed neuron models are impractical for large-network simulations due to their complexity, and high computational cost. For this reason, we introduce Dendrify, a new theoretical framework combined with an open-source Python package (compatible with Brian2) that facilitates the development of bioinspired SNNs. Dendrify, through simple commands, can generate reduced compartmental neuron models with simplified yet biologically relevant dendritic and synaptic integrative properties. Such models strike a good balance between flexibility, performance, and biological accuracy, allowing us to explore dendritic contributions to network-level functions while paving the way for developing more realistic neuromorphic systems.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

The Standard Model of the Retina

Markus Meister
Caltech
May 24, 2022

The science of the retina has reached an interesting stage of completion. There exists now a consensus standard model of this neural system - at least in the minds of many researchers - that serves as a baseline against which to evaluate new claims. The standard model links phenomena from molecular biophysics, cell biology, neuroanatomy, synaptic physiology, circuit function, and visual psychophysics. It is further supported by a normative theory explaining what the purpose is of processing visual information this way. Most new reports of retinal phenomena fit squarely within the standard model, and major revisions seem increasingly unlikely. Given that our understanding of other brain circuits with comparable complexity is much more rudimentary, it is worth considering an example of what success looks like. In this talk I will summarize what I think are the ingredients that led to this mature understanding of the retina. Equally important, a number of practices and concepts that are currently en vogue in neuroscience were not needed or indeed counterproductive. I look forward to debating how these lessons might extend to other areas of brain research.

SeminarNeuroscience

MicroRNAs as targets in the epilepsies: hits, misses and complexes

David Henshall
The Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland
May 3, 2022

MicroRNAs are small noncoding RNAs that provide a critical layer of gene expression control. Individual microRNAs variably exert effects across networks of genes via sequence-specific binding to mRNAs, fine-tuning protein levels. This helps coordinate the timing and specification of cell fate transitions during brain development and maintains neural circuit function and plasticity by activity-dependent (re)shaping of synapses and the levels of neurotransmitter components. MicroRNA levels have been found to be altered in tissue from the epileptogenic zone resected from adults with drug-resistant focal epilepsy and this has driven efforts to explore their therapeutic potential, in particular using antisense oligonucleotide (ASOs) inhibitors termed antimirs. Here, we review the molecular mechanisms by which microRNAs control brain excitability and the latest progress towards a microRNA-based treatment for temporal lobe epilepsy. We also look at whether microRNA-based approaches could be used to treat genetic epilepsies, correcting individual genes or dysregulated pathways. Finally, we look at how cells have evolved to maximise the efficiency of the microRNA system via RNA editing, where single base changes is capable of altering the repertoire of genes under the control of a single microRNA. The findings improve our understanding of the molecular landscape of the epileptic brain and may lead to new therapies.

SeminarNeuroscience

Experience-Dependent Transcription: From Genomic Mechanisms to Neural Circuit Function

Michael Greenberg, Richard Tsien, Brenda Bloodgood, Jennifer Phillips-Cremins, Johannes Graeff
Mar 8, 2022

Experience-dependent transcription is a key molecular mechanisms for regulating the development and plasticity of synapses and neural circuits and is thought to underlie cognitive functions such as perception, learning and memory. After two years of COVID-pandemic, the goal of this online conference is to allow investigators in the field to reconnect and to discuss their recent scientific findings.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Efficient coding and receptive field coordination in the retina

Greg Field
Duke University School of Medicine
Jun 20, 2021

My laboratory studies how the retina processes visual scenes and transmits this information to the brain. We use multi-electrode arrays to record the activity of hundreds of retina neurons simultaneously in conjunction with transgenic mouse lines and chemogenetics to manipulate neural circuit function. We are interested in three major areas. First, we work to understand how neurons in the retina are functionally connected. Second we are studying how light-adaptation and circadian rhythms alter visual processing in the retina. Finally, we are working to understand the mechanisms of retinal degenerative conditions and we are investigating potential treatments in animal models.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Imaging the influences of sensory experience on visual system circuit development

Ed Ruthazer
Montreal Neurological Institute-Hospita
May 16, 2021

Using a combination of in vivo imaging of neuronal circuit functional and structural dynamics, we have investigated the mechanisms by which patterned neural activity and sensory experience alter connectivity in the developing brain. We have identified, in addition to the long-hypothesized Hebbian structural plasticity mechanisms, a kind of plasticity induced by the absence of correlated firing that we dubbed “Stentian plasticity”. In the talk I will discuss the phenomenology and some mechanistic insights regarding Stentian mechanisms in brain development. Further, I will show how glia may have a key role in circuit remodeling during development. These studies have led us to an appreciation of the importance of neuron-glia interactions in early development and the ability of patterned activity to guide circuit wiring.

SeminarNeuroscience

Memory, learning to learn, and control of cognitive representations

André Fenton
New York University
May 6, 2021

Biological neural networks can represent information in the collective action potential discharge of neurons, and store that information amongst the synaptic connections between the neurons that both comprise the network and govern its function. The strength and organization of synaptic connections adjust during learning, but many cognitive neural systems are multifunctional, making it unclear how continuous activity alternates between the transient and discrete cognitive functions like encoding current information and recollecting past information, without changing the connections amongst the neurons. This lecture will first summarize our investigations of the molecular and biochemical mechanisms that change synaptic function to persistently store spatial memory in the rodent hippocampus. I will then report on how entorhinal cortex-hippocampus circuit function changes during cognitive training that creates memory, as well as learning to learn in mice. I will then describe how the hippocampus system operates like a competitive winner-take-all network, that, based on the dominance of its current inputs, self organizes into either the encoding or recollection information processing modes. We find no evidence that distinct cells are dedicated to those two distinct functions, rather activation of the hippocampus information processing mode is controlled by a subset of dentate spike events within the network of learning-modified, entorhinal-hippocampus excitatory and inhibitory synapses.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Memory, learning to learn, and control of cognitive representations

André Fenton
New York University
May 6, 2021

Biological neural networks can represent information in the collective action potential discharge of neurons, and store that information amongst the synaptic connections between the neurons that both comprise the network and govern its function. The strength and organization of synaptic connections adjust during learning, but many cognitive neural systems are multifunctional, making it unclear how continuous activity alternates between the transient and discrete cognitive functions like encoding current information and recollecting past information, without changing the connections amongst the neurons. This lecture will first summarize our investigations of the molecular and biochemical mechanisms that change synaptic function to persistently store spatial memory in the rodent hippocampus. I will then report on how entorhinal cortex-hippocampus circuit function changes during cognitive training that creates memory, as well as learning to learn in mice. I will then describe how the hippocampus system operates like a competitive winner-take-all network, that, based on the dominance of its current inputs, self organizes into either the encoding or recollection information processing modes. We find no evidence that distinct cells are dedicated to those two distinct functions, rather activation of the hippocampus information processing mode is controlled by a subset of dentate spike events within the network of learning-modified, entorhinal-hippocampus excitatory and inhibitory synapses.

SeminarNeuroscience

Dorothy J Killam Lecture: Cell Type Classification and Circuit Mapping in the Mouse Brain

Hongkui Zeng
Executive Vice President and Director of Allen Institute for Brain Science, Seattle, USA
Feb 23, 2021

To understand the function of the brain and how its dysfunction leads to brain diseases, it is essential to have a deep understanding of the cell type composition of the brain, how the cell types are connected with each other and what their roles are in circuit function. At the Allen Institute, we have built multiple platforms, including single-cell transcriptomics, single and multi-patching electrophysiology, 3D reconstruction of neuronal morphology, high throughput brain-wide connectivity mapping, and large-scale neuronal activity imaging, to characterize the transcriptomic, physiological, morphological, and connectional properties of different types of neurons in a standardized way, towards a taxonomy of cell types and a description of their wiring diagram for the mouse brain, with a focus on the visual cortico-thalamic system. Building such knowledge base lays the foundation towards the understanding of the computational mechanisms of brain circuit function.

SeminarNeuroscience

Firing Homeostasis in Neural Circuits: From Basic Principles to Malfunctions

Inna Slutsky
Tel Aviv University
Feb 18, 2021

Neural circuit functions are stabilized by homeostatic mechanisms at long timescales in response to changes in experience and learning. However, we still do not know which specific physiological variables are being stabilized, nor which cellular or neural-network components comprise the homeostatic machinery. At this point, most evidence suggests that the distribution of firing rates amongst neurons in a brain circuit is the key variable that is maintained around a circuit-specific set-point value in a process called firing rate homeostasis. Here, I will discuss our recent findings that implicate mitochondria as a central player in mediating firing rate homeostasis and its impairments. While mitochondria are known to regulate neuronal variables such as synaptic vesicle release or intracellular calcium concentration, we searched for the mitochondrial signaling pathways that are essential for homeostatic regulation of firing rates. We utilize basic concepts of control theory to build a framework for classifying possible components of the homeostatic machinery in neural networks. This framework may facilitate the identification of new homeostatic pathways whose malfunctions drive instability of neural circuits in distinct brain disorders.

SeminarNeuroscience

What is hippocampal sclerosis? A cell-type specific perspective

Liset de la Prida
INSTITUTO CAJAL
Jan 19, 2021

Temporal lobe epilepsy is considered a neuronal microcircuit dysfunction, yet mechanisms are poorly understood. Here we will discuss recent data on cell-type specific alterations of hippocampal microcircuit function in experimental models of temporal lobe epilepsy. We will highlight the importance of leveraging on cellular heterogeneity to better understand the complexities accompanying hippocampal sclerosis.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Thalamic reticular nucleus dysfunction in neurodevelopmental disorders

Guoping Feng
MIT Dept. of Brain and Cognitive Sciences
May 13, 2020

The thalamic reticular nucleus (TRN), the major source of thalamic inhibition, is known to regulate thalamocortical interactions critical for sensory processing, attention and cognition. TRN dysfunction has been linked to sensory abnormality, attention deficit and sleep disturbance across multiple neurodevelopmental disorders. Currently, little is known about the organizational principles underlying its divergent functions. In this talk, I will start with an example of how dysfunction of TRN contributes to attention deficit and sleep disruption using a mouse model of Ptchd1 mutation, which in humans cause neurodevelopmental disorder with ASD. Building on these findings, we further performed an integrative single-cell analysis linking molecular and electrophysiological features of the TRN to connectivity and systems-level function. We identified two subnetworks of the TRN with segregated anatomical structure, distinct electrophysiological properties, differential connections to the functionally distinct first-order and higher-order thalamic nuclei, and differential role in regulating sleep. These studies provide a comprehensive atlas for TRN neurons at the single-cell resolution and a foundation for studying diverse functions and dysfunctions of the TRN. Finally, I will describe the newly developed minimally invasive optogenetic tool for probing circuit function and dysfunction.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

A human-specific modifier of synaptic development, cortical circuit connectivity and function

Franck Polleux
Columbia University
Apr 29, 2020

The remarkable cognitive abilities characterizing humans has been linked to unique patterns of connectivity characterizing the neocortex. Comparative studies have shown that human cortical pyramidal neurons (PN) receive a significant increase of synaptic inputs when compared to other mammals, including non-human primates and rodents, but how this may relate to changes in cortical connectivity and function remained largely unknown. We previously identified a human-specific gene duplication (HSGD), SRGAP2C, that, when induced in mouse cortical PNs drives human-specific features of synaptic development, including a correlated increase in excitatory (E) and inhibitory (I) synapse density through inhibition of the ancestral SRGAP2A protein (Charrier et al. 2012; Fossatti et al. 2016; Schmidt et al. 2019). However, the origin and nature of this increased connectivity and its impact on cortical circuit function was unknown. I will present new results exploring these questions (see Schmidt et al. (2020) https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/852970v1). Using a combination of transgenic approaches and quantitative monosynaptic tracing, we discovered that humanization of SRGAP2C expression in the mouse cortex leads to a specific increase in local and long-range cortico-cortical inputs received by layer 2/3 cortical PNs. Moreover, using in vivo two-photon imaging in the barrel cortex of awake mice, we show that humanization of SRGAP2C expression increases the reliability and selectivity of sensory- evoked responses in layer 2/3 PNs. We also found that mice humanized for SRGAP2C in all cortical pyramidal neurons and throughout development are characterized by improved behavioural performance in a novel whisker-based sensory discrimination task compared to control wild-type mice. Our results suggest that the emergence of SRGAP2C during human evolution underlie a new substrate for human brain evolution whereby it led to increased local and long-range cortico-cortical connectivity and improved reliability of sensory-evoked cortical coding. References cited Charrier C.*, Joshi K. *, Coutinho-Budd J., Kim, J-E., Lambert N., de Marchena, J., Jin W-L., Vanderhaeghen P., Ghosh A., Sassa T, and Polleux F. (2012) Inhibition of SRGAP2 function by its human-specific paralogs induces neoteny of spine maturation. Cell 149:923-935. * Co-first authors. Fossati M, Pizzarelli R, Schmidt ER, Kupferman JV, Stroebel D, Polleux F*, Charrier C*. (2016) SRGAP2 and Its Human-Specific Paralog Co-Regulate the Development of Excitatory and Inhibitory Synapses. Neuron. 91(2):356-69. * Co-senior corresponding authors. Schmidt E.R.E., Kupferman J.V., Stackmann M., Polleux F. (2019) The human-specific paralogs SRGAP2 and SRGAP2C differentially modulate SRGAP2A-dependent synaptic development. Scientific Rep. 9(1):18692. Schmidt E.R.E, Zhao H.T., Hillman E.M.C., Polleux F. (2020) Humanization of SRGAP2C expression increases cortico-cortical connectivity and reliability of sensory-evoked responses in mouse brain. Submitted. See also: https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/852970v1