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Connexin

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connexin

Discover seminars, jobs, and research tagged with connexin across World Wide.
6 curated items4 ePosters2 Seminars
Updated about 4 years ago
6 items · connexin
6 results
SeminarNeuroscience

Astrocytes, guardians of critical period plasticity in the visual cortex

Nathalie Rouach
College de France, Paris
Nov 29, 2021
SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

A fresh look at the bird retina

Karin Dedek
University of Oldenburg
May 30, 2021

I am working on the vertebrate retina, with a main focus on the mouse and bird retina. Currently my work is focused on three major topics: Functional and molecular analysis of electrical synapses in the retina Circuitry and functional role of retinal interneurons: horizontal cells Circuitry for light-dependent magnetoreception in the bird retina Electrical synapses Electrical synapses (gap junctions) permit fast transmission of electrical signals and passage of metabolites by means of channels, which directly connect the cytoplasm of adjoining cells. A functional gap junction channel consists of two hemichannels (one provided by each of the cells), each comprised of a set of six protein subunits, termed connexins. These building blocks exist in a variety of different subtypes, and the connexin composition determines permeability and gating properties of a gap junction channel, thereby enabling electrical synapses to meet a diversity of physiological requirements. In the retina, various connexins are expressed in different cell types. We study the cellular distribution of different connexins as well as the modulation induced by transmitter action or change of ambient light levels, which leads to altered electrical coupling properties. We are also interested in exploiting them as therapeutic avenue for retinal degeneration diseases. Horizontal cells Horizontal cells receive excitatory input from photoreceptors and provide feedback inhibition to photoreceptors and feedforward inhibition to bipolar cells. Because of strong electrical coupling horizontal cells integrate the photoreceptor input over a wide area and are thought to contribute to the antagonistic organization of bipolar cell and ganglion cell receptive fields and to tune the photoreceptor–bipolar cell synapse with respect to the ambient light conditions. However, the extent to which this influence shapes retinal output is unclear, and we aim to elucidate the functional importance of horizontal cells for retinal signal processing by studying various transgenic mouse models. Retinal circuitry for light-dependent magnetoreception in the bird We are studying which neuronal cell types and pathways in the bird retina are involved in the processing of magnetic signals. Likely, magnetic information is detected in cryptochrome-expressing photoreceptors and leaves the retina through ganglion cell axons that project via the thalamofugal pathway to Cluster N, a part of the visual wulst essential for the avian magnetic compass. Thus, we aim to elucidate the synaptic connections and retinal signaling pathways from putatively magnetosensitive photoreceptors to thalamus-projecting ganglion cells in migratory birds using neuroanatomical and electrophysiological techniques.

ePoster

Astroglial connexins differentially drive chronic seizures in mice and humans

Razmig Derounian, Giselle Cheung, Elena Dossi, Julien Moulard, Glenn Dallérac, Agnès Villers, Pascal Ezan, Gilles Huberfeld, Laurent Capelle, Johan Pallud, Thomas Blauwblomme, Chun-Yao Lee, Nathalie Rouach

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Targeting connexin hemichannels and the inflammasome response in an acute mouse model of Alzheimer’s disease

Aimee Mills, Aoife O’Connell, Monica Acosta, Colin Green, Helen Danesh-Meyer, Lola Mugisho, Andrea Kwakowsky

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Three-dimensional organization of connexin clusters along axonal cisternal organelle networks in human pyramidal neurons

Jan Maximilian Janssen, Giulia Glatting, Tobias Herbinger, Florence Pelletier, Christophe Leterrier, Maren Engelhardt

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

In vivo study of intercellular communication in a glioblastoma mouse model via connexin hemichannels

Viola Donati, Chiara Di Pietro, Chiara Peres, Chiara Nardin, Gina La Sala, Ferdinando Scavizzi, Daniela Marazziti, Marcello Raspa, Fabio Mammano

FENS Forum 2024