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intrinsic excitability

Discover seminars, jobs, and research tagged with intrinsic excitability across World Wide.
8 curated items4 Seminars4 ePosters
Updated almost 4 years ago
8 items · intrinsic excitability
8 results
SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Metabolic spikes: from rogue electrons to Parkinson's

Chaitanya Chintaluri
Vogels Lab, IST Austria
Feb 22, 2022

Conventionally, neurons are thought to be cellular units that process synaptic inputs into synaptic spikes. However, it is well known that neurons can also spike spontaneously and display a rich repertoire of firing properties with no apparent functional relevance e.g. in in vitro cortical slice preparations. In this talk, I will propose a hypothesis according to which intrinsic excitability in neurons may be a survival mechanism to minimize toxic byproducts of the cell’s energy metabolism. In neurons, this toxicity can arise when mitochondrial ATP production stalls due to limited ADP. Under these conditions, electrons deviate from the electron transport chain to produce reactive oxygen species, disrupting many cellular processes and challenging cell survival. To mitigate this, neurons may engage in ADP-producing metabolic spikes. I will explore the validity of this hypothesis using computational models that illustrate the implications of synaptic and metabolic spiking, especially in the context of substantia nigra pars compacta dopaminergic neurons and their degeneration in Parkinson's disease.

SeminarNeuroscience

Brief Sensory Deprivation Triggers Cell Type-Specific Structural and Functional Plasticity in Olfactory Bulb Neurons

Li Huang, Joseph Innes, Emily Winson-Bushby
University of Cambridge, PDN
Apr 27, 2021

Can alterations in experience trigger different plastic modifications in neuronal structure and function, and if so, how do they integrate at the cellular level? To address this question, we interrogated circuitry in the mouse olfactory bulb responsible for the earliest steps in odor processing. We induced experience-dependent plasticity in mice of either sex by blocking one nostril for one day, a minimally invasive manipulation that leaves the sensory organ undamaged and is akin to the natural transient blockage suffered during common mild rhinal infections. We found that such brief sensory deprivation produced structural and functional plasticity in one highly specialized bulbar cell type: axon-bearing dopaminergic neurons in the glomerular layer. After 24 h naris occlusion, the axon initial segment (AIS) in bulbar dopaminergic neurons became significantly shorter, a structural modification that was also associated with a decrease in intrinsic excitability. These effects were specific to the AIS-positive dopaminergic subpopulation because no experience-dependent alterations in intrinsic excitability were observed in AIS-negative dopaminergic cells. Moreover, 24 h naris occlusion produced no structural changes at the AIS of bulbar excitatory neurons, mitral/tufted and external tufted cells, nor did it alter their intrinsic excitability. By targeting excitability in one specialized dopaminergic subpopulation, experience-dependent plasticity in early olfactory networks might act to fine-tune sensory processing in the face of continually fluctuating inputs. (https://www.jneurosci.org/content/41/10/2135)

SeminarNeuroscience

K+ Channel Gain of Function in Epilepsy, from Currents to Networks

Matthew Weston
University of Vermont
Oct 20, 2020

Recent human gene discovery efforts show that gain-of-function (GOF) variants in the KCNT1gene, which encodes a Na+-activated K+ channel subunit, cause severe epilepsies and other neurodevelopmental disorders. Although the impact of these variants on the biophysical properties of the channels is well characterized, the mechanisms that link channel dysfunction to cellular and network hyperexcitability and human disease are unknown. Furthermore, precision therapies that correct channel biophysics in non-neuronal cells have had limited success in treating human disease, highlighting the need for a deeper understanding of how these variants affect neurons and networks. To address this gap, we developed a new mouse model with a pathogenic human variant knocked into the mouse Kcnt1gene. I will discuss our findings on the in vivo phenotypes of this mouse, focusing on our characterization of epileptiform neural activity using electrophysiology and widefield Ca++imaging. I will also talk about our investigations at the synaptic, cellular, and circuit levels, including the main finding that cortical inhibitory neurons in this model show a reduction in intrinsic excitability and action potential generation. Finally, I will discuss future directions to better understand the mechanisms underlying the cell-type specific effects, as well as the link between the cellular and network level effects of KCNT1 GOF.

SeminarNeuroscience

Cellular/circuit dysfunction in a model of Dravet syndrome - a severe childhood epilepsy

Ethan M. Goldberg, MD, PhD
The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia
Mar 16, 2020

Dravet syndrome is a severe childhood epilepsy due to heterozygous loss-of-function mutation of the gene SCN1A, which encodes the type 1 neuronal voltage gated sodium (Na+) channel alpha-subunit Nav1.1. Prior studies in mouse models of Dravet syndrome (Scn1a+/- mice) at early developmental time points indicate that, in cerebral cortex, Nav1.1 is predominantly expressed in GABAergic interneurons (INs) and, in particular, in parvalbumin-positive fast-spiking basket cells (PV-INs). This has led to a model of Dravet syndrome pathogenesis whereby Nav1.1 mutation leads to preferential IN dysfunction, decreased synaptic inhibition, hyperexcitability, and epilepsy. We found that, at later developmental time points, the intrinsic excitability of PV-INs has essentially normalized, via compensatory reorganization of axonal Na+ channels. Instead, we found persistent and seemingly paradoxical dysfunction of putative disinhibitory INs expressing vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP-INs). In vivo two-photon calcium imaging in neocortex during temperature-induced seizures in Scn1a+/- mice showed that mean activity of both putative principal cells and PV-INs was higher in Scn1a+/- relative to wild-type controls during quiet wakefulness at baseline and at elevated core body temperature. However, wild-type PV-INs showed a progressive synchronization in response to temperature elevation that was absent in PV-INs from Scn1a+/- mice immediately prior to seizure onset. We suggest that impaired PV-IN synchronization, perhaps via persistent axonal dysfunction, may contribute to the transition to the ictal state during temperature induced seizures in Dravet syndrome.

ePoster

CACNA1A haploinsufficiency leads to reduced synaptic function and increased intrinsic excitability

Marina Hommersom, Nina Doorn, Sofía Puvogel, Elly Lewerissa, Annika Mordelt, Ummi Ciptasari, Naoki Kogo, Monica Frega, Dirk Schubert, Bart van de Warrenburg, Nael Nadif Kasri, Hans van Bokhoven

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

The early cognitive decline in Alzheimer's disease models is linked to changes in the intrinsic excitability of the prefrontal cortex

Senka Hadzibegovic, Viviana Villicana Munoz, Francesca Bettoni, Melanie Ginger, Liangying Zhu, Olivier Nicole, Bruno Bontempi, Andreas Frick

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Intrinsic excitability of anterior to posterior insula (aIC-pIC) projection neurons are differently modified following retrieval of aversive conditioning

Sailendrakumar Kolatt Chandran, Haneen Kayyal, Federica Cruciani, Adonis Yiannakas, Efrat Edry, Kobi Rosenblum

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Non-canonical adrenergic neuromodulation of motoneuron intrinsic excitability through β-receptors in wild-type and SOD1 (G93A) mice

Guillaume Caron, Stefano Antonucci, Natalie Dikwella, Sruthi Sankari Krishnamurthy, Anthony Harster, Hina Zarrin, Aboud Tahanis, Florian olde Heuvel, Simon M. Danner, Albert C. Ludolph, Kamil Grycz, Marcin Baczyk, Daniel Zytnicki, Francesco Roselli

FENS Forum 2024