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Mammalian Brain

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mammalian brain

Discover seminars, jobs, and research tagged with mammalian brain across World Wide.
21 curated items15 Seminars5 ePosters1 Position
Updated 2 days ago
21 items · mammalian brain
21 results
PositionComputational Neuroscience

Dr Andrej Bicanski

School of Psychology & Biosciences Institute, Faculty of Medical Sciences, Newcastle University
Newcastle University, UK
Dec 5, 2025

This project involves modelling the staggered development and the decline with age of spatial coding in the mammalian brain, as well as data analysis of single neuron recordings. The position is based at Newcastle University, UK, with a rotation in the lab of Prof. Colin Lever in Durham, UK. The project is fully funded for 4 years by the BBSRC. Both international and UK students can apply, and fees are covered.

SeminarNeuroscience

Circuit solutions for programming actions

Silvia Arber
University of Basel, Switzerland
Dec 1, 2022

The hippocampus is one of the few regions in the adult mammalian brain which is endowed with life-long neurogenesis. Despite intense investigation, it remains unclear how neurons newly-generated may retain unique functions that contribute to modulate hippocampal information processing and cognition. In this talk, I will present some recent findings revealing how enhanced forms of plasticity in adult-born neurons underlie the way they become incorporated into pre-existing networks in response to experience.

SeminarNeuroscience

The 15th David Smith Lecture in Anatomical Neuropharmacology: Professor Tim Bliss, "Memories of long term potentiation

Tim Bliss
Visiting Professor at UCL and the Frontier Institutes of Science and Technology, Xi’an Jiaotong University, China
Jun 13, 2022

The David Smith Lectures in Anatomical Neuropharmacology, Part of the 'Pharmacology, Anatomical Neuropharmacology and Drug Discovery Seminars Series', Department of Pharmacology, University of Oxford. The 15th David Smith Award Lecture in Anatomical Neuropharmacology will be delivered by Professor Tim Bliss, Visiting Professor at UCL and the Frontier Institutes of Science and Technology, Xi’an Jiaotong University, China, and is hosted by Professor Nigel Emptage. This award lecture was set up to celebrate the vision of Professor A David Smith, namely, that explanations of the action of drugs on the brain requires the definition of neuronal circuits, the location and interactions of molecules. Tim Bliss gained his PhD at McGill University in Canada. He joined the MRC National Institute for Medical Research in Mill Hill, London in 1967, where he remained throughout his career. His work with Terje Lømo in the late 1960’s established the phenomenon of long-term potentiation (LTP) as the dominant synaptic model of how the mammalian brain stores memories. He was elected as a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1994 and is a founding fellow of the Academy of Medical Sciences. He shared the Bristol Myers Squibb award for Neuroscience with Eric Kandel in 1991, the Ipsen Prize for Neural Plasticity with Richard Morris and Yadin Dudai in 2013. In May 2012 he gave the annual Croonian Lecture at the Royal Society on ‘The Mechanics of Memory’. In 2016 Tim, with Graham Collingridge and Richard Morris shared the Brain Prize, one of the world's most coveted science prizes. Abstract: In 1966 there appeared in Acta Physiologica Scandinavica an abstract of a talk given by Terje Lømo, a PhD student in Per Andersen’s laboratory at the University of Oslo. In it Lømo described the long-lasting potentiation of synaptic responses in the dentate gyrus of the anaesthetised rabbit that followed repeated episodes of 10-20Hz stimulation of the perforant path. Thus, heralded and almost entirely unnoticed, one of the most consequential discoveries of 20th century neuroscience was ushered into the world. Two years later I arrived in Oslo as a visiting post-doc from the National Institute for Medical Research in Mill Hill, London. In this talk I recall the events that led us to embark on a systematic reinvestigation of the phenomenon now known as long-term potentiation (LTP) and will then go on to describe the discoveries and controversies that enlivened the early decades of research into synaptic plasticity in the mammalian brain. I will end with an observer’s view of the current state of research in the field, and what we might expect from it in the future.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Flexible motor sequence generation by thalamic control of cortical dynamics through low-rank connectivity perturbations

Laureline Logiaco
Center for Theoretical Neuroscience, Columbia University
Mar 8, 2022

One of the fundamental functions of the brain is to flexibly plan and control movement production at different timescales to efficiently shape structured behaviors. I will present a model that clarifies how these complex computations could be performed in the mammalian brain, with an emphasis on the learning of an extendable library of autonomous motor motifs and the flexible stringing of these motifs in motor sequences. To build this model, we took advantage of the fact that the anatomy of the circuits involved is well known. Our results show how these architectural constraints lead to a principled understanding of how strategically positioned plastic connections located within motif-specific thalamocortical loops can interact with cortical dynamics that are shared across motifs to create an efficient form of modularity. This occurs because the cortical dynamics can be controlled by the activation of as few as one thalamic unit, which induces a low-rank perturbation of the cortical connectivity, and significantly expands the range of outputs that the network can produce. Finally, our results show that transitions between any motifs can be facilitated by a specific thalamic population that participates in preparing cortex for the execution of the next motif. Taken together, our model sheds light on the neural network mechanisms that can generate flexible sequencing of varied motor motifs.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

How does the metabolically-expensive mammalian brain adapt to food scarcity?

Zahid Padamsey
Rochefort lab, University of Edinburgh
Feb 22, 2022

Information processing is energetically expensive. In the mammalian brain, it is unclear how information coding and energy usage are regulated during food scarcity. I addressed this in the visual cortex of awake mice using whole-cell recordings and two-photon imaging to monitor layer 2/3 neuronal activity and ATP usage. I found that food restriction reduced synaptic ATP usage by 29% through a decrease in AMPA receptor conductance. Neuronal excitability was nonetheless preserved by a compensatory increase in input resistance and a depolarized resting membrane potential. Consequently, neurons spiked at similar rates as controls, but spent less ATP on underlying excitatory currents. This energy-saving strategy had a cost since it amplified the variability of visually-evoked subthreshold responses, leading to a 32% broadening in orientation tuning and impaired fine visual discrimination. This reduction in coding precision was associated with reduced levels of the fat mass-regulated hormone leptin and was restored by exogenous leptin supplementation. These findings reveal novel mechanisms that dynamically regulate energy usage and coding precision in neocortex.

SeminarNeuroscience

Untitled Seminar

Laura Fenlon (Australia), Laurent Nguyen (Belgium), Carol Ann Mason (USA), Thomas Perlmann (Sweden)
Oct 26, 2021

Laura Fenlon (Australia): Time shapes all brains: timing of a conserved transcriptional network underlies divergent cortical connectivity routes in mammalian brain development and evolution; Laurent Nguyen (Belgium): Regulation of cerebral cortex morphogenesis by migrating cells; Carol Ann Mason (USA): Wiring the eye to brain for binocular vision: lessons from the albino visual system. Thomas Perlmann (Sweden): Interrogating dopamine neuron development at the single cell level

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Neocortex saves energy by reducing coding precision during food scarcity

Nathalie Rochefort
University of Edinburgh
Sep 26, 2021

Information processing is energetically expensive. In the mammalian brain, it is unclear how information coding and energy usage are regulated during food scarcity. We addressed this in the visual cortex of awake mice using whole-cell patch clamp recordings and two-photon imaging to monitor layer 2/3 neuronal activity and ATP usage. We found that food restriction resulted in energy savings through a decrease in AMPA receptor conductance, reducing synaptic ATP usage by 29%. Neuronal excitability was nonetheless preserved by a compensatory increase in input resistance and a depolarized resting membrane potential. Consequently, neurons spiked at similar rates as controls, but spent less ATP on underlying excitatory currents. This energy-saving strategy had a cost since it amplified the variability of visually-evoked subthreshold responses, leading to a 32% broadening in orientation tuning and impaired fine visual discrimination. These findings reveal novel mechanisms that dynamically regulate energy usage and coding precision in neocortex.

SeminarNeuroscience

Locally-ordered representation of 3D space in the entorhinal cortex

Gily Ginosar
Ulanovsky lab, Weizmann Institute, Rehovot, Israel
Apr 28, 2021

When animals navigate on a two-dimensional (2D) surface, many neurons in the medial entorhinal cortex (MEC) are activated as the animal passes through multiple locations (‘firing fields’) arranged in a hexagonal lattice that tiles the locomotion-surface; these neurons are known as grid cells. However, although our world is three-dimensional (3D), the 3D volumetric representation in MEC remains unknown. Here we recorded MEC cells in freely-flying bats and found several classes of spatial neurons, including 3D border cells, 3D head-direction cells, and neurons with multiple 3D firing-fields. Many of these multifield neurons were 3D grid cells, whose neighboring fields were separated by a characteristic distance – forming a local order – but these cells lacked any global lattice arrangement of their fields. Thus, while 2D grid cells form a global lattice – characterized by both local and global order – 3D grid cells exhibited only local order, thus creating a locally ordered metric for space. We modeled grid cells as emerging from pairwise interactions between fields, which yielded a hexagonal lattice in 2D and local order in 3D – thus describing both 2D and 3D grid cells using one unifying model. Together, these data and model illuminate the fundamental differences and similarities between neural codes for 3D and 2D space in the mammalian brain.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Cortical networks for flexible decisions during spatial navigation

Christopher Harvey
Harvard University
Feb 18, 2021

My lab seeks to understand how the mammalian brain performs the computations that underlie cognitive functions, including decision-making, short-term memory, and spatial navigation, at the level of the building blocks of the nervous system, cell types and neural populations organized into circuits. We have developed methods to measure, manipulate, and analyze neural circuits across various spatial and temporal scales, including technology for virtual reality, optical imaging, optogenetics, intracellular electrophysiology, molecular sensors, and computational modeling. I will present recent work that uses large scale calcium imaging to reveal the functional organization of the mouse posterior cortex for flexible decision-making during spatial navigation in virtual reality. I will also discuss work that uses optogenetics and calcium imaging during a variety of decision-making tasks to highlight how cognitive experience and context greatly alter the cortical circuits necessary for navigation decisions.

SeminarNeuroscience

The Spatial Memory Pipeline: a deep learning model of egocentric to allocentric understanding in mammalian brains

Benigno Uria
DeepMind
Jan 12, 2021
SeminarNeuroscience

Stem Cells in the Adult Brain: Regulation and Diversity

Fiona Doetsch
Biozentrum University of Basel
Nov 29, 2020

Neural stem cells reside in the adult mammalian brain. The ventricular-subventricular zone (V-SVZ) gives rise to olfactory bulb neurons, as well as small numbers of glia throughout life. Adult V-SVZ neural stem cells dynamically integrate intrinsic and extrinsic signals to either maintain the quiescent state or to become activated to divide and generate progeny. I will present our recent findings highlighting adult neural stem cell heterogeneity, including the identification of novel gliogenic domains and cell types, and the key roles of physiological state and long-range signals in the regulation of regionally distinct pools of adult neural stem cells.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Virus-like intercellular communication in the nervous system

Jason Shepherd
University of Utah
Nov 16, 2020

The neuronal gene Arc is essential for long-lasting information storage in the mammalian brain and mediates various forms of synaptic plasticity. We recently discovered that Arc self-assembles into virus-like capsids that encapsulate RNA. Endogenous Arc protein is released from neurons in extracellular vesicles that mediate the transfer of Arc mRNA into new target cells. Evolutionary analysis indicates that Arc is derived from a vertebrate lineage of Ty3/gypsy retrotransposons, which are also ancestral to retroviruses such as HIV. These findings suggest that Gag retroelements have been repurposed during evolution to mediate intercellular communication in the nervous system that may underlie cognition and memory.

SeminarNeuroscience

Fate and freedom in the developing mammalian brain

Denis Jabaudon
Unige
Nov 15, 2020

While the diversity of neurons in the adult mammalian brain is staggering, these cells emerge from a seemingly limited set of progenitors during development. This begs the question of how complexity emerges from a finite number of elements during dynamic biological processes. Here, I will discuss recent work from my laboratory addressing relationships between genetic diversity and connectivity in single-cell types, and how progenitor diversity may constrain adult brain cellular states during normal and abnormal brain development.

SeminarNeuroscience

Presynaptic plasticity in hippocampal circuits

Christophe Mulle
University of Bordeaux
Sep 30, 2020

Christophe Mulle is a cellular neurobiologist with expertise in electrophysiology of synaptic transmission and an international leader in studies on glutamate receptors and hippocampal synaptic plasticity. He was among the first to identify and characterize functional nicotinic receptors in the mammalian brain while working in the laboratory of Jean-Pierre Changeux at the Pasteur Institute. He then generated knock-out mice for KAR subunits at the Salk Institute in the laboratory of Steve Heinemann, which have proven to be instrumental for understanding the function of these elusive glutamate receptors in synaptic function and plasticity.

ePoster

A computational model of the mammalian brainstem to solve sound localization

Francesco de Santis, Alberto Antonietti, Alessandra Pedrocchi

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Dense reconstruction of mammalian brain tissue with light microscopy

Mojtaba Tavakoli, Julia Lyudchik, Michał Januszewski, Nathalie Agudelo, Jakob Vorlaufer, Vitali Vistunou, Barbara Oliveira, Alban Cenameri, Christoph Sommer, Gaia Novarino, Viren Jain, Johann Danzl

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Identification of XK-related protein 6 (XKR6) as a novel presynaptic protein in the mammalian brain

Spyridon Thivaios, Bernd Fakler, Jochen Schwenk

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Longitudinal autophagy profiling of mammalian brain circuits reveals dynamic and sustained mitophagy throughout healthy aging

Anna Rappe, Homa Ehsan, Fumi Suomi, Helena A. Vihinen, Eija S. Jokitalo, Thomas G. McWilliams

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Protein levels and post-translational modifications of inhibitory synapse proteins in the mammalian brain are regulated by the plant-derived artemisinins

Eva Kiss, Stefan Kins, Gabriela Patrichi, Kinga Hajnal Venczel Szakács, Karin Gorgas, Joachim Kirsch, Jochen Kuhse

FENS Forum 2024