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Maturation

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maturation

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52 curated items32 Seminars19 ePosters1 Position
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52 items · maturation
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Position

Sofia Lizarraga, Assistant Professor

University of South Carolina
Columbia, South Carolina, USA
Dec 5, 2025

We are studying the role of histone modifiers in human neuronal development using stem cell based models. The research assistant will conduct experiments with various human-induced pluripotent stem cell lines using cellular and molecular approaches. In addition, this person will be responsible for ordering supplies, keeping the laboratory organized, helping manage hazardous waste, maintaining the chemical inventory, and routine equipment maintenance. This person will also be expected to contribute to the intellectual environment in the laboratory by participating in the laboratory group meetings and helping train undergraduates.

SeminarNeuroscience

Regulation of cortical circuit maturation and plasticity by oligodendrocytes and myelin

Wendy Xin
UCSF
Mar 5, 2025
SeminarNeuroscience

Maturation and plasticity of cortical interneurons

Oscar Marin
King's College London, UK
Jun 16, 2024
SeminarNeuroscience

Myelin Formation and Oligodendrocyte Biology in Epilepsy

Angelika Mühlebner
Universitair Medisch Centrum Utrecht
Feb 15, 2023

Epilepsy is one of the most common neurological diseases according to the World Health Organization (WHO) affecting around 70 million people worldwide [WHO]. Patients who suffer from epilepsy also suffer from a variety of neuro-psychiatric co-morbidities, which they can experience as crippling as the seizure condition itself. Adequate organization of cerebral white matter is utterly important for cognitive development. The failure of integration of neurologic function with cognition is reflected in neuro-psychiatric disease, such as autism spectrum disorder (ASD). However, in epilepsy we know little about the importance of white matter abnormalities in epilepsy-associated co-morbidities. Epilepsy surgery is an important therapy strategy in patients where conventional anti-epileptic drug treatment fails . On histology of the resected brain samples, malformations of cortical development (MCD) are common among the epilepsy surgery population, especially focal cortical dysplasia (FCD) and tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC). Both pathologies are associated with constitutive activation of the mTOR pathway. Interestingly, some type of FCD is morphological similar to TSC cortical tubers including the abnormalities of the white matter. Hypomyelination with lack of myelin-producing cells, the oligodendrocytes, within the lesional area is a striking phenomenon. Impairment of the complex myelination process can have a major impact on brain function. In the worst case leading to distorted or interrupted neurotransmissions. It is still unclear whether the observed myelin pathology in epilepsy surgical specimens is primarily related to the underlying malformation process or is just a secondary phenomenon of recurrent epileptic seizures creating a toxic micro-environment which hampers myelin formation. Interestingly, mTORC1 has been implicated as key signal for myelination, thus, promoting the maturation of oligodendrocytes . These results, however, remain controversial. Regardless of the underlying pathophysiologic mechanism, alterations of myelin dynamics, depending on their severity, are known to be linked to various kinds of developmental disorders or neuropsychiatric manifestations.

SeminarPsychology

Biological and experience-based trajectories in adolescent brain and cognitive development

Ilona Kovács
Pázmány Péter Catholic University & Eötvös Loránd University
Nov 7, 2022

Adolescent development is not only shaped by the mere passing of time and accumulating experience, but it also depends on pubertal timing and the cascade of maturational processes orchestrated by gonadal hormones. Although individual variability in puberty onset confounds adolescent studies, it has not been efficiently controlled for. Here we introduce ultrasonic bone age assessment to estimate biological maturity and disentangle the independent effects of chronological and biological age on adolescent cognitive abilities, emotional development, and brain maturation. Comparing cognitive performance of participants with different skeletal maturity we uncover the impact of biological age on both IQ and specific abilities. With respect to emotional development, we find narrow windows of highest vulnerability determined by biological age. In terms of neural development, we focus on the relevance of neural states unrelated to sensory stimulation, such as cortical activity during sleep and resting states, and we uncover a novel anterior-to-posterior pattern of human brain maturation. Based on our findings, bone age is a promising biomarker of adolescent maturity.

SeminarNeuroscience

Myelin Formation and Oligodendrocyte Biology in Epilepsy

Angelika Mühlebner
Universitair Medisch Centrum Utrecht
Oct 18, 2022

Epilepsy is one of the most common neurological diseases according to the World Health Organization (WHO) affecting around 70 million people worldwide [WHO]. Patients who suffer from epilepsy also suffer from a variety of neuro-psychiatric co-morbidities, which they can experience as crippling as the seizure condition itself. Adequate organization of cerebral white matter is utterly important for cognitive development. The failure of integration of neurologic function with cognition is reflected in neuro-psychiatric disease, such as autism spectrum disorder (ASD). However, in epilepsy we know little about the importance of white matter abnormalities in epilepsy-associated co-morbidities. Epilepsy surgery is an important therapy strategy in patients where conventional anti-epileptic drug treatment fails . On histology of the resected brain samples, malformations of cortical development (MCD) are common among the epilepsy surgery population, especially focal cortical dysplasia (FCD) and tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC). Both pathologies are associated with constitutive activation of the mTOR pathway. Interestingly, some type of FCD is morphological similar to TSC cortical tubers including the abnormalities of the white matter. Hypomyelination with lack of myelin-producing cells, the oligodendrocytes, within the lesional area is a striking phenomenon. Impairment of the complex myelination process can have a major impact on brain function. In the worst case leading to distorted or interrupted neurotransmissions. It is still unclear whether the observed myelin pathology in epilepsy surgical specimens is primarily related to the underlying malformation process or is just a secondary phenomenon of recurrent epileptic seizures creating a toxic micro-environment which hampers myelin formation. Interestingly, mTORC1 has been implicated as key signal for myelination, thus, promoting the maturation of oligodendrocytes . These results, however, remain controversial. Regardless of the underlying pathophysiologic mechanism, alterations of myelin dynamics, depending on their severity, are known to be linked to various kinds of developmental disorders or neuropsychiatric manifestations.

SeminarNeuroscience

Role of ASD risk genes on maturation of frontal-sensory cognitive control circuit

Hiro Morishita
Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
Jul 26, 2022
SeminarNeuroscience

Directing the timing of maturation in human pluripotent stem cell-derived neurons

Gabriele Ciceri
Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, USA
Feb 17, 2022
SeminarNeuroscience

Stress deceleration theory: chronic adolescent stress exposure results in decelerated neurobehavioral maturation

Kshitij Jadhav
University of Cambridge
Jan 18, 2022

Normative development in adolescence indicates that the prefrontal cortex is still under development thereby unable to exert efficient top-down inhibitory control on subcortical regions such as the basolateral amygdala and the nucleus accumbens. This imbalance in the developmental trajectory between cortical and subcortical regions is implicated in expression of the prototypical impulsive, compulsive, reward seeking and risk-taking adolescent behavior. Here we demonstrate that a chronic mild unpredictable stress procedure during adolescence in male Wistar rats arrests the normal behavioral maturation such that they continue to express adolescent-like impulsive, hyperactive, and compulsive behaviors into late adulthood. This arrest in behavioral maturation is associated with the hypoexcitability of prelimbic cortex (PLC) pyramidal neurons and reduced PLC-mediated synaptic glutamatergic control of BLA and nucleus accumbens core (NAcC) neurons that lasts late into adulthood. At the same time stress exposure in adolescence results in the hyperexcitability of the BLA pyramidal neurons sending stronger glutamatergic projections to the NAcC. Chemogenetic reversal of the PLC hypoexcitability decreased compulsivity and improved the expression of goal-directed behavior in rats exposed to stress during adolescence, suggesting a causal role for PLC hypoexcitability in this stress-induced arrested behavioral development. (https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2021.11.21.469381v1.abstract)

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

The GluN2A Subunit of the NMDA Receptor and Parvalbumin Interneurons: A Possible Role in Interneuron Development

Steve Traynelis & Chad Camp
Emory University School of Medicine
Jan 18, 2022

N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors (NMDARs) are excitatory glutamate-gated ion channels that are expressed throughout the central nervous system. NMDARs mediate calcium entry into cells, and are involved in a host of neurological functions. The GluN2A subunit, encoded by the GRIN2A gene, is expressed by both excitatory and inhibitory neurons, with well described roles in pyramidal cells. By using Grin2a knockout mice, we show that the loss of GluN2A signaling impacts parvalbumin-positive (PV) GABAergic interneuron function in hippocampus. Grin2a knockout mice have 33% more PV cells in CA1 compared to wild type but similar cholecystokinin-positive cell density. Immunohistochemistry and electrophysiological recordings show that excess PV cells do eventually incorporate into the hippocampal network and participate in phasic inhibition. Although the morphology of Grin2a knockout PV cells is unaffected, excitability and action-potential firing properties show age-dependent alterations. Preadolescent (P20-25) PV cells have an increased input resistance, longer membrane time constant, longer action-potential half-width, a lower current threshold for depolarization-induced block of action-potential firing, and a decrease in peak action-potential firing rate. Each of these measures are corrected in adulthood, reaching wild type levels, suggesting a potential delay of electrophysiological maturation. The circuit and behavioral implications of this age-dependent PV interneuron malfunction are unknown. However, neonatal Grin2a knockout mice are more susceptible to lipopolysaccharide and febrile-induced seizures, consistent with a critical role for early GluN2A signaling in development and maintenance of excitatory-inhibitory balance. These results could provide insights into how loss-of-function GRIN2A human variants generate an epileptic phenotypes.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

What happens to our ability to perceive multisensory information as we age?

Fiona Newell
Trinity Collge Dublin
Jan 12, 2022

Our ability to perceive the world around us can be affected by a number of factors including the nature of the external information, prior experience of the environment, and the integrity of the underlying perceptual system. A particular challenge for the brain is to maintain a coherent perception from information encoded by the peripheral sensory organs whose function is affected by typical, developmental changes across the lifespan. Yet, how the brain adapts to the maturation of the senses, as well as experiential changes in the multisensory environment, is poorly understood. Over the past few years, we have used a range of multisensory tasks to investigate the role of ageing on the brain’s ability to merge sensory inputs. In particular, we have embedded an audio-visual task based on the sound-induced flash illusion (SIFI) into a large-scale, longitudinal study of ageing. Our findings support the idea that the temporal binding window (TBW) is modulated by age and reveal important individual differences in this TBW that may have clinical implications. However, our investigations also suggest the TWB is experience-dependent with evidence for both long and short term behavioural plasticity. An overview of these findings, including recent evidence on how multisensory integration may be associated with higher order functions, will be discussed.

SeminarNeuroscience

Wiring & Rewiring: Experience-Dependent Circuit Development and Plasticity in Sensory Cortices

Jennifer Sun
University College London
Nov 21, 2021

To build an appropriate representation of the sensory stimuli around the world, neural circuits are wired according to both intrinsic factors and external sensory stimuli. Moreover, the brain circuits have the capacity to rewire in response to altered environment, both during early development and throughout life. In this talk, I will give an overview about my past research in studying the dynamic processes underlying functional maturation and plasticity in rodent sensory cortices. I will also present data about the current and future research in my lab – that is, the synaptic and circuit mechanisms by which the mature brain circuits employ to regulate the balance between stability and plasticity. By applying chronic 2-photon calcium and close-loop visual exposure, we studied the circuit changes at single-neuron resolution to show that concurrent running with visual stimulus is required to drive neuroplasticity in the adult brain.

SeminarNeuroscience

Integration of „environmental“ information in the neuronal epigenome

Geraldine Zimmer-Bensch
Functional Epigenetics in the Animal Model, Institute of Biology II, RWTH Aachen, Aachen, Germany
Aug 24, 2021

The inhibitory actions of the heterogeneous collection of GABAergic interneurons tremendously influence cortical information processing, which is reflected by diseases like autism, epilepsy and schizophrenia that involve defects in cortical inhibition. Apart from the regulation of physiological processes like synaptic transmission, proper interneuron function also relies on their correct development. Hence, decrypting regulatory networks that direct proper cortical interneuron development as well as adult functionality is of great interest, as this helps to identify critical events implicated in the etiology of the aforementioned diseases. Thereby, extrinsic factors modulate these processes and act on cell- and stage-specific transcriptional programs. Herein, epigenetic mechanisms of gene regulation, like DNA methylation executed by DNA methyltransferases (DNMTs), histone modifications and non-coding RNAs, call increasing attention in integrating “environmental information” in our genome and sculpting physiological processes in the brain relevant for human mental health. Several studies associate altered expression levels and function of the DNA methyltransferase 1 (DNMT1) in subsets of embryonic and adult cortical interneurons in patients diagnosed with schizophrenia. Although accumulating evidence supports the relevance of epigenetic signatures for instructing cell type-specific development, only very little is known about their functional implications in discrete developmental processes and in subtype-specific maturation of cortical interneurons. Similarly, little is known about the role of DNMT1 in regulating adult interneurons functionality. This talk will provide an overview about newly identified and roles DNMT1 has in orchestrating cortical interneuron development and adult function. Further, this talk will report about the implications of lncRNAs in mediating site-specific DNA methylation in response to discrete external stimuli.

SeminarNeuroscience

Brain-body interactions in the metabolic/nutritional control of puberty: Neuropeptide pathways and central energy sensors

Manuel Tena-Sempere
IMIBIC Cordoba
May 30, 2021

Puberty is a brain-driven phenomenon, which is under the control of sophisticated regulatory networks that integrate a large number of endogenous and environmental signals, including metabolic and nutritional cues. Puberty onset is tightly bound to the state of body energy reserves, and deregulation of energy/metabolic homeostasis is often associated with alterations in the timing of puberty. However, despite recent progress in the field, our knowledge of the specific molecular mechanisms and pathways whereby our brain decode metabolic information to modulate puberty onset remains fragmentary and incomplete. Compelling evidence, gathered over the last fifteen years, supports an essential role of hypothalamic neurons producing kisspeptins, encoded by Kiss1, in the neuroendocrine control of puberty. Kiss1 neurons are major components of the hypothalamic GnRH pulse generator, whose full activation is mandatory pubertal onset. Kiss1 neurons seemingly participate in transmitting the regulatory actions of metabolic cues on pubertal maturation. However, the modulatory influence of metabolic signals (e.g., leptin) on Kiss1 neurons might be predominantly indirect and likely involves also the interaction with other transmitters and neuronal populations. In my presentation, I will review herein recent work of our group, using preclinical models, addressing the molecular mechanisms whereby Kiss1 neurons are modulated by metabolic signals, and thereby contribute to the nutritional control of puberty. In this context, the putative roles of the energy/metabolic sensors, AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) and SIRT1, in the metabolic control of Kiss1 neurons and puberty will be discussed. In addition, I will summarize recent findings from our team pointing out a role of central de novo ceramide signaling in mediating the impact of obesity of (earlier) puberty onset, via non-canonical, kisspeptin-related pathways. These findings are posed of translational interest, as perturbations of these molecular pathways could contribute to the alterations of pubertal timing linked to conditions of metabolic stress in humans, ranging from malnutrition to obesity, and might become druggable targets for better management of pubertal disorders.

SeminarNeuroscience

How the immune system shapes synaptic functions

Michela Matteoli
Humanitas Research Hospital and CNR Institute of Neuroscience, Milano, Italy
Mar 15, 2021

The synapse is the core component of the nervous system and synapse formation is the critical step in the assembly of neuronal circuits. The assembly and maturation of synapses requires the contribution of secreted and membrane-associated proteins, with neuronal activity playing crucial roles in regulating synaptic strength, neuronal membrane properties, and neural circuit refinement. The molecular mechanisms of synapse assembly and refinement have been so far largely examined on a gene-by-gene basis and with a perspective fully centered on neuronal cells. However, in the last years, the involvement of non-neuronal cells has emerged. Among these, microglia, the resident immune cells of the central nervous system, have been shown to play a key role in synapse formation and elimination. Contacts of microglia with dendrites in the somatosensory cortex were found to induce filopodia and dendritic spines via Ca2+ and actin-dependent processes, while microglia-derived BDNF was shown to promote learning-dependent synapse formation. Microglia is also recognized to have a central role in the widespread elimination (or pruning) of exuberant synaptic connections during development. Clarifying the processes by which microglia control synapse homeostasis is essential to advance our current understanding of brain functions. Clear answers to these questions will have important implications for our understanding of brain diseases, as the fact that many psychiatric and neurological disorders are synaptopathies (i.e. diseases of the synapse) is now widely recognized. In the last years, my group has identified TREM2, an innate immune receptor with phagocytic and antiinflammatory properties expressed in brain exclusively by microglia, as essential for microglia-mediated synaptic refinement during the early stages of brain development. The talk will describe the role of TREM2 in synapse elimination and introduce the molecular actors involved. I will also describe additional pathways by which the immune system may affect the formation and homeostasis of synaptic contacts.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Nature, nurture and synaptic adhesion in between

Adema Ribic
Department of Psychology, University of Virginia
Jan 24, 2021

Exposure to proper environment during early development is essential for brain maturation. Impaired sensory input or abnormal experiences can have long-term negative consequences on brain health. We seek to define the precise synaptic aberrations caused by abnormal visual experiences early in life, and how these can be remedied through viral, genetic and environmental approaches. Resulting knowledge will contribute to the development of new approaches to mitigate nervous system damage caused by abnormal early life experience.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Developmental regulation of H3K27me3 drives synapse maturation and social behavior

Urann Chan
Duke
Jan 12, 2021
SeminarNeuroscience

Local sleep regulation and its implications for cognition and brain plasticity

Giulio Bernardi
IMT School for Advanced Studies Lucca, Italy
Dec 6, 2020

Sleep has been classically described as an all-or-nothing global phenomenon. However, a growing body of evidence indicates that typical sleep hallmarks, such as slow waves and spindles, occur and are regulated locally. I will present here evidence indicating that slow waves, in particular, may be related with, and offer a read-out of, local and long-range brain connectivity. In fact, slow waves do not only track changes related to both experience-dependent plasticity and brain maturation during development, but also appear to be actively involved in the fine regulation of brain plasticity and in the removal of metabolic wastes. I will also show that, consistent with a local regulation of sleep, slow waves can often occur locally during wakefulness, with an incidence that varies as a function of time spent awake and of previous rest. These waking slow waves are associated with impaired performance during cognitive tasks and may contribute to explain attention lapses and errors commonly associated with insufficient sleep.

SeminarNeuroscience

The Role of Hippocampal Replay in Memory Consolidation

Freyja Ólafsdóttir
Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour
Nov 24, 2020

The hippocampus lies at the centre of a network of brain regions thought to support spatial and episodic memory. Place cells - the principal cell of the hippocampus, represent information about an animal’s spatial location. Yet, during rest and awake quiescence place cells spontaneously recapitulate past trajectories (‘replay’). Replay has been hypothesised to support systems consolidation – the stabilisation of new memories via maturation of complementary cortical memory traces. Indeed, in recent work we found place and grid cells, from the deep medial entorhinal cortex (dMEC, the principal cortical output region of the hippocampus), replayed coherently during rest periods. Importantly, dMEC grid cells lagged place cells by ~11ms; suggesting the coordination may reflect consolidation. Moreover, preliminary data shows that the dMEC-hippocampal coordination strengthens as an animal becomes familiar with a task and that it may be led by directionally modulated cells. Finally, on-going work, in my recently established lab, shows replay may represent the mechanism underlying the maturation of episodic/spatial memory in pre-weanling pups. Together, these results indicate replay may play a central role in ensuring the permanency of memories.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Connectomes across development reveal principles of brain maturation in C. elegans

Daniel Witvliet
Harvard
Nov 10, 2020
SeminarNeuroscience

Physiological importance of phase separation: a case study in synapse formation

Kang Shen
HHMI, Stanford University
Sep 16, 2020

Synapse formation during neuronal development is critical to establish neural circuits and a nervous system1. Every presynapse builds a core active zone structure where ion channels are clustered and synaptic vesicles are released2. While the composition of active zones is well characterized2,3, how active zone proteins assemble together and recruit synaptic release machinery during development is not clear. Here, we find core active zone scaffold proteins SYD-2/Liprin-α and ELKS-1 phase separate during an early stage of synapse development, and later mature into a solid structure. We directly test the in vivo function of phase separation with mutants specifically lacking this activity. These mutant SYD-2 and ELKS-1 proteins remain enriched at synapses, but are defective in active zone assembly and synapse function. The defects are rescued with the introduction of a phase separation motif from an unrelated protein. In vitro, we reconstitute the SYD-2 and ELKS-1 liquid phase scaffold and find it is competent to bind and incorporate downstream active zone components. The fluidity of SYD-2 and ELKS-1 condensates is critical for efficient mixing and incorporation of active zone components. These data reveal that a developmental liquid phase of scaffold molecules is essential for synaptic active zone assembly before maturation into a stable final structure.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Species-specific mechanisms of the timing of human cortical development

Pierre Vanderhaeghen
VIB KULeuven Center for Brain & Disease Research
Jun 3, 2020

The human brain, in particular the cerebral cortex, has undergone rapid expansion and increased complexity during recent evolution. One striking feature of human corticogenesis is that it is highly protracted in time, from prenatal stages of neurogenesis (taking months instead of days in the mouse), to postnatal stages of neuronal maturation and circuit formation (taking years instead of weeks in the mouse). This prolonged development is thought to contribute in an important fashion to increased cortical size, but also enhanced circuit complexity and plasticity. Here we will discuss how the species-specific temporal patterning of corticogenesis is largely intrinsic to cortical progenitors and neurons, and involves human-specific genes and cell properties that underlie human brain evolution, as well as our selective sensitivity to certain brain diseases.

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

ePoster

Adolescent maturation of cortical excitation-inhibition balance based on individualized biophysical network modeling

Amin Saberi, Kevin Wischnewski, Kyesam Jung, Leon Lotter, H. Schaare, Tobias Banaschweski, Gareth Barker, Arun Bokde, Sylvane Desrivières, Herta Flor, Antoine Grigis, Hugh Garavan, Penny Gowland, Andreas Heinz, Rüdiger Brühl, Jean-Luc Martinot, Marie-Laure Paillère Martinot, Eric Artiges, Frauke Nees, Dimitri Papadopoulos Orfanos, Herve Lemaitre, Luise Poustka, Sarah Hohmann, Nathalie Holz, Christian Baeuchl, Michael Smolka, Nilakshi Vaidya, Henrik Walter, Robert Whelan, Gunther Schumann, Tomas Paus, Juergen Dukart, Boris Bernhardt, Oleksandr Popovych, Simon Eickhoff, Sofie Valk

Bernstein Conference 2024

ePoster

Altered dendritic excitability and cell maturation of CA3 pyramidal neurons during development in the Scn2aA263V genetic epilepsy model

Michela Barboni

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Bulk RNA sequencing analysis to follow the neuronal maturation of AHDS organoids

Eros Rossi, Francesca Ciarpella, Giulia Pedrotti, Chiara Santanatoglia, Benedetta Lucidi, Elisa De Tomi, Raluca Zamfir, Giovanni Malerba, Giorgio Malpeli, Ilaria Decimo

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Developmental Cajal-Retzius cell death contributes to the maturation of cortical inhibition and somatosensory processing

Angeliki Damilou, Linbi Cai, Ali Ozgur Argunsah, Shuting Han, Olivia Hanley, Georgios Kanatouris, Maria Karatsoli, Lorenzo Gesuita, Sepp Kollmorgen, Fritjof Helmchen, Theofanis Karayannis

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Dlx5/6 involvement in the postnatal maturation of cortical parvalbumin neurons during critical periods

Lou Belz, Rym Aouci, Amïn Vion, Anastasia Fontaine, Giovanni Levi, Nicolas Narboux-Nême

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Early maturation and hyperexcitability is a shared phenotype of cortical neurons derived from different ASD-associated mutations

Yara Hussein, Utkarsh Tripathi, Ashwani Choudhary, Ritu Nayak, David Peles, Idan Rosh, Tatiana Rabinski, Gad Vatine, Tali Grain-Shkolnik, Shani Stern

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Evaluating the effect of astrocyte-derived cholesterol on oligodendroglial maturation in an in vitro model of hypoxic brain injury

Vadanya Shrivastava, Devanjan Dey, Sagar Tyagi, Archna Singh, Jai Bhagwan Sharma, Jayanth Kumar Palanichamy, Pankaj Seth, Sudip Sen

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Exploring the maturation of the GABA shift as a diverging mechanism in SCN1A-related epilepsy using patient iPSC-derived neurons

Nikki Kolsters, Eline van Hugte, Ka Man Wu, Chantal Bijnagte-Schoenmaker, Nicky Scheefhals, Nael Nadif Kasri

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Label-free functional analysis for the characterization of iPSC-derived neural organoid development and maturation

Timm Schlegel, Johny Pires, Austin Passaro, Ben Streeter, Denise Sullivan, Parker Ellingson, Stacie Chvatal, Daniel Millard

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Locomotor maturation during early development in a small vertebrate

Monica Coraggioso, Leonardo Demarchi, Thomas Panier, Ghislaine Morvan-Dubois, Filippo Del Bene, Volker Bormuth, Georges Debrégeas

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Maturation of abducens motoneurons involved in the angular vestibulo-ocular reflex during larval development

Francois Lambert, Mathilde Pain, Laura Cardoit, Marie-Jeanne Cabirol, Gilles Courtand, Daniel Cattaert

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Are the maturation rates of adult-born hippocampal and cortical neurons different?

Bruno Benedetti, Anna Binder, Maximilian Reisinger, Ariane Benedetti, Dominika Jakubec-Haščák, Sebastien Couillard-Despres

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Maturation of sharp wave ripples subtypes and subsequent cortical dynamics during developmental sleep

Brijesh Modi, Solomiia Korchynska, Charlotte Boccara

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Microglia brainization: Intrinsic and environmental cues controlling developmental microglia maturation

Joel Maldonado-Teixido, Marta Pereira-Iglesias, Ainhoa Plaza-Zabala, Alice Louail, Sol Beccari, Jorge Valero, Fernando Garcia-Moreno, Yasmina Manso, Wiebke Mildenberger, Olga Peñagarikano, Melanie Greter, Eduardo Soriano, Amanda Sierra

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Multifactorial approach is needed to unravel the maturation phases of human neurons derived from induced pluripotent stem cells

Maissa Ben mahmoud, Anikó Rátkai, Krisztina Bauer, Norbert Bencsik, Attila Szücs, Katalin Schlett, Krisztián Tárnok

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

A postnatal molecular switch drives the activity-dependent maturation of cortical parvalbumin interneurons

Monika Moissidis, Leyla Abbavova, Rafael Alis, Clémence Bernard, Yaiza Dominguez, Shenyue Qin, Audrey Kelly, Fazal Oozeer, Laura Modol, Fursham Hamid, Paul Lavender, Nuria Flames, Oscar Marin

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Shaping neocortical networks via maturation of synaptic functions in VIP-positive GABAergic interneurons

Clara Simacek, Sergei Kirischuk, Thomas Mittmann

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Targeting mitochondrial metabolism to restore neuronal maturation in a murine brain organoid model of Allan-Herndon-Dudley syndrome (AHDS)

Benedetta Lucidi, Francesca Ciarpella, Giulia Pedrotti, Chiara Santanatoglia, Eros Rossi, Emanuela Bottani, Ilaria Decimo

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Early olfactory processing is necessary for the maturation of limbic-hippocampal network and recognition

Yu-Nan Chen

Neuromatch 5