Mouse
mouse
Eugenio Piasini
A two-year postdoctoral position in computational neuroscience and neural coding is open to investigate the role of hippocampal-dependent memory function in visual perceptual learning. The postdoc will work in Eugenio Piasini's group at the International School for Advanced Studies (SISSA), in close collaboration with Manuela Allegra at the Italian National Research Council (CNR).
Max Planck Institute Nijmegen
A 3-year postdoctoral position in functional neurogenetics is available within the Language & Genetics Department at the Max Planck Institute, Nijmegen, the Netherlands. Within this Department, the Imaging Genomics group performs large-scale studies to identify genes involved in left-right asymmetry of the human brain – a trait which can be altered in various neurodevelopmental disorders. A challenge then remains to understand the roles of the implicated genes in brain development and function. Mice show evidence for functional and neurophysiological asymmetries in their brains, and are therefore a promising model for investigating the functions of genes implicated through our studies in humans. Your role will be to investigate asymmetry in developing and adult mouse brain tissue using transcriptomics, immunohistochemistry and histology. This research will be carried out within a dedicated molecular biology laboratory at the Max Planck Institute, and in partnership with labs and facilities of the Radboud University Medical Center, Nijmegen. You will also be keen to learn and involve yourself in the ongoing research of the department more generally, which is focused on genetics of the neuron, brain, behaviour and cognition.
Max Planck Institute, Nijmegen
Job description A 3-year postdoctoral position in functional neurogenetics is available within the Language & Genetics Department at the Max Planck Institute, Nijmegen, the Netherlands. Within this Department, the Imaging Genomics group performs large-scale studies to identify genes involved in left-right asymmetry of the human brain – a trait which can be altered in various neurodevelopmental disorders. A challenge then remains to understand the roles of the implicated genes in brain development and function. Mice show evidence for functional and neurophysiological asymmetries in their brains, and are therefore a promising model for investigating the functions of genes implicated through our studies in humans. Your role will be to investigate asymmetry in developing and adult mouse brain tissue using transcriptomics, immunohistochemistry and histology. This research will be carried out within a dedicated molecular biology laboratory at the Max Planck Institute, and in partnership with labs and facilities of the Radboud University Medical Center, Nijmegen. You will also be keen to learn and involve yourself in the ongoing research of the department more generally, which is focused on genetics of the neuron, brain, behaviour and cognition.
Guillermina Lopez Bendito
We are seeking for highly motivated postdoctoral neuroscientists with a strong background in neuroscience to study the functional development of sensory circuits and spontaneous activity programs in mice using in vivo meso-scale and two-photon calcium imaging, and in vivo electrophysiology.
Anne Urai
Full listing: https://www.medewerkers.universiteitleiden.nl/vacatures/2022/kwartaal-2/22-25911465postdoc-in-cognitive-and-computational-neuroscience The way that neural computations give rise to behavior is shaped by ever-fluctuating internal states. These states (such as arousal, fear, stress, hunger, motivation, engagement, or drowsiness) are characterized by spontaneous neural dynamics that arise independent of task demands. Across subfields of neuroscience, internal states have been quantified using a variety of measurements and markers (based on physiology, brain activity or behavioral motifs), but these are rarely explicitly compared or integrated. It is thus unclear if such different state markers quantify the same, or even related underlying processes. Instead, the simplified concept of internal states likely obscures a multi-dimensional set of biologically relevant processes, which may affect behavior in distinct ways. In this project, we will take an integrative approach to quantify the structure and dimensionality of internal states and their effects on decision-making behavior. We will apply several state-of-the-art methods to extract different markers of internal states from facial video data, pupillometry, and high-density neural recordings. We will then quantify the unique and shared dimensionality of internal states, and their relevance for predicting choice behavior. By combining existing, publicly available datasets in mice with additional experiments in humans, we will directly test the cross-species relevance of our findings. Lastly, we will investigate how internal states change over a range of timescales: from sub-second fluctuations relevant for choice behavior to the very slow changes that take place with aging. This project is a collaboration between the Cognitive, Computational and Systems Neuroscience lab led by Dr. Anne Urai (daily supervisor) and the Temporal Attention Lab led by Prof. Sander Nieuwenhuis. We are based in Leiden University’s Cognitive Psychology Unit, and we participate in the Leiden Institute for Brain and Cognition (LIBC), an interfaculty center for interdisciplinary research on brain and cognition ( https://www.libc-leiden.nl ). There are further options for collaborating with the International Brain Laboratory ( https://www.internationalbrainlab.com ). Leiden is a small, friendly town near the beach, with great public transport connections to larger cities nearby. The Netherlands has excellent support for families. The working language at the university is English, and you can comfortably get by with only minimal knowledge of Dutch. Our team is small, and we value a collegial and supportive environment. Open science is a core value in our work, and we actively pursue ways to make academia a better place. We support postdocs in developing their own ideas and research line, and we offer opportunities to gain small-scale teaching and grant writing experience. More information on our groups’ research interests, scientific vision and working environment can be found at https://anneurai.net, https://anne-urai.github.io/lab_wiki/Vision.html and https://www.temporalattentionlab.com If you like asking hard questions, making things work, and pursuing creative ideas in a collaborative team, then this position may be for you. Please do not be discouraged from applying if your current CV is not a ‘perfect fit’. This job could suit someone from a range of different career backgrounds, and there is great scope for the right applicant to develop the role and make it their own.
Anne Urai
The way that neural computations give rise to behavior is shaped by ever-fluctuating internal states. These states (such as arousal, fear, stress, hunger, motivation, engagement, or drowsiness) are characterized by spontaneous neural dynamics that arise independent of task demands. Across subfields of neuroscience, internal states have been quantified using a variety of measurements and markers (based on physiology, brain activity or behavioral motifs), but these are rarely explicitly compared or integrated. It is thus unclear if such different state markers quantify the same, or even related underlying processes. Instead, the simplified concept of internal states likely obscures a multi-dimensional set of biologically relevant processes, which may affect behavior in distinct ways. In this project, we will take an integrative approach to quantify the structure and dimensionality of internal states and their effects on decision-making behavior. We will apply several state-of-the-art methods to extract different markers of internal states from facial video data, pupillometry, and high-density neural recordings. We will then quantify the unique and shared dimensionality of internal states, and their relevance for predicting choice behavior. By combining existing, publicly available datasets in mice with additional experiments in humans, we will directly test the cross-species relevance of our findings. Lastly, we will investigate how internal states change over a range of timescales: from sub-second fluctuations relevant for choice behavior to the very slow changes that take place with aging. This project is a collaboration between the Cognitive, Computational and Systems Neuroscience lab led by Dr. Anne Urai (daily supervisor) and the Temporal Attention Lab led by Prof. Sander Nieuwenhuis. We are based in Leiden University’s Cognitive Psychology Unit, and we participate in the Leiden Institute for Brain and Cognition (LIBC), an interfaculty center for interdisciplinary research on brain and cognition ( https://www.libc-leiden.nl ). There are further options for collaborating with the International Brain Laboratory ( https://www.internationalbrainlab.com ). Leiden is a small, friendly town near the beach, with great public transport connections to larger cities nearby. The Netherlands has excellent support for families. The working language at the university is English, and you can comfortably get by with only minimal knowledge of Dutch. Our team is small, and we value a collegial and supportive environment. Open science is a core value in our work, and we actively pursue ways to make academia a better place. We support postdocs in developing their own ideas and research line, and we offer opportunities to gain small-scale teaching and grant writing experience. More information on our groups’ research interests, scientific vision and working environment can be found at https://anneurai.net, https://anne-urai.github.io/lab_wiki/Vision.html and https://www.temporalattentionlab.com If you like asking hard questions, making things work, and pursuing creative ideas in a collaborative team, then this position may be for you. Please do not be discouraged from applying if your current CV is not a ‘perfect fit’. This job could suit someone from a range of different career backgrounds, and there is great scope for the right applicant to develop the role and make it their own. See the full listing and apply at: https://www.medewerkers.universiteitleiden.nl/vacatures/2022/kwartaal-2/22-25911465postdoc-in-cognitive-and-computational-neuroscience
Prof Noelle Dwyer
The Dwyer Lab in the Department of Cell Biology at the University of Virginia seeks one or two Postdoctoral Research Associates to work on exciting new projects about the genes and mechanisms underlying normal and abnormal brain development. We have been studying the cell biology of neural development for several years, with a recent emphasis on cell division and cytoskeleton. Newly funded projects focus on 1) new mouse mutants with novel brain development phenotypes, and 2) how cytokinesis regulation in neural stem cells affect cell fate, cilia, and signaling pathways. Approaches include genetics and genomics, cell and tissue culture, lineage tracing, multiple types of microscopy, molecular biology, biochemistry, and whatever skills you may bring to the lab. Postdoctoral research associates will manage their own projects, interact with other lab members and collaborators, present their work at lab meetings and conferences, and contribute to grant applications and manuscripts for publication. Candidates will be expected to learn new techniques as a part of their training requirement. This position also includes opportunities to help mentor and teach students. The Dwyer Lab is located in renovated open lab space with a strong, collegial group of neighboring labs studying cell and developmental biology. The lab is committed to a diverse, equitable, and inclusive environment, and encourages applications from women and underrepresented groups. The position is available immediately and is supported by NIH funding. The Cell Biology Department at UVA is an excellent training environment for curious, highly motivated scientists. The University provides professional development workshops, and there are support communities on campus including the UVA Postdoc Association, and UVA Women in Medical Sciences (WIMS).
Thomas Euler
Two PhD positions as part of interdisciplinary collaborations are available in Laura Busse’s lab at the Faculty of Biology of the LMU Munich and Thomas Euler’s lab at the Center for Integrative Neuroscience in Tübingen. The fully funded positions are part of the DFG-funded Collaborative Research Center Robust vision: Inference Principles and neural mechanisms. In the project, we will explore the visual input received by the mouse visual system under natural conditions and study how such input is processed along key stages of the early visual system. The project continues from Qiu et al. (2020) and will include opportunities for performing recordings of the visual input encountered by freely behaving mice under naturalistic conditions, statistical analysis of the recorded video material, quantitative assessment of behavior, and measurements (2P calcium imaging / electrophysiology) of neural responses from mouse retina, visual thalamus and primary visual cortex in response to naturalistic movies. The project requires a combination of experimental skills and interest in engineering and programming. Since the project will be conducted in a collaborative, interdisciplinary setting and within a geographically distributed team, the candidate show have good capacity and value for teamwork and communication skills. One of the positions will be place in Thomas Euler’s lab (U Tuebingen) with a focus on retinal aspects of the project. A complementary PhD position in Laura Busse’s lab (LMU Munich), with a focus on central vision aspects, will closely collaborate on the development of the recording hardware and the software framework for data analysis and modelling. Both positions offer a thriving scientific environment, structured PhD programs and numerous opportunities for networking and exchange. Interested candidates are welcome to establish contact via email to thomas.euler@cin.uni-tuebingen.de and busse@bio.lmu.de. More information about the labs can be found here https://eulerlab.de/ and https://visioncircuitslab.org/ For applications to Thomas Euler’s position within the project, see further instructions on the lab’s webpage (https://eulerlab.de/positions/). For applications to Laura Busse’s position within the project, please visit the LMU Graduate School of Systemic Neuroscience (GSN, http://www.gsn.uni-muenchen.de/index.html).
Dr. Sheena Josselyn
My lab studies how memories are formed, stored and used in the brain, particularly at the level of neural ensemble (engram). We use a variety of tools, from molecular and cellular manipulations to optogenetics and in vivo calcium imaging to better understand this fundamental question. Interested? contact me
Dr. Jorge Mejias
The Cognitive and Systems Neuroscience Group is seeking a highly qualified and motivated candidate for a doctoral position in computational neuroscience, under the recently acquired NWA-ORC Consortium grant. The aim of this Consortium is to understand the fundamental principles used by our brains to integrate information in noisy environments and uncertain conditions, and then implement those principles in next-generation algorithms for safe autonomous mobility. Within the Consortium, the main objective of the present PhD project is to develop a biologically realistic computational model of multi-area brain circuits involved in multisensory perception under uncertainty. The model will be constrained by state-of-the-art neuroanatomical data (such as realistic brain connectivity and multiple cell types), and we will identify and study biological aspects of the model which contribute to an optimal integration of sensory information (following Bayesian and other principles). Model predictions will then be compared to experimental data from collaborators. The project will be supervised by Dr. Jorge Mejias, head of the Computational Neuroscience Lab, and Prof. Dr. Cyriel Pennartz, head of the Cognitive & Systems Neuroscience group. The candidate will also closely collaborate with other computational neuroscientists, experimental neuroscientists, theoreticians and machine learning experts. You are expected: -to perform research of multisensory integration and perception using computational neuroscience methods; -to review relevant literature and acquire knowledge on neurobiology, perception and computational neuroscience; -to build biologically realistic multi-area computer models of cortical circuits for multisensory perception, and compare their predictions with experimental findings; -to collaborate with other groups in the Consortium; -to take part in the teaching effort of the group, including supervision of bachelor and master students; -to write scientific manuscripts and a PhD thesis. Our offer: A temporary contract for 38 hours per week for the duration of four years (the initial contract will be for a period of 18 months and after satisfactory evaluation it will be extended to a total duration of four years). This should lead to a dissertation (PhD thesis). We will draft an educational plan that includes attendance of courses and (international) meetings. We also expect you to assist in teaching undergraduates and master students. Based on a full-time appointment (38 hours per week) the gross monthly salary will range from €2,434 in the first year to €3,111 (scale P) in the last year. This is exclusive 8% holiday allowance and 8.3% end-of-year bonus. A favourable tax agreement, the ‘30% ruling’, may apply to non-Dutch applicants. The Collective Labour Agreement of Dutch Universities is applicable.
Dr Sylvia Schröder
“Integration of visual and behavioural signals in the early visual system” In this project, you will discover how retinal, cortical and neuromodulatory inputs shape the responses of visual neurons in the superior colliculus. The goal of your Phd project is to understand the mechanisms of signal integration, i.e. which inputs to the superior colliculus shape its neural activity, and the advantages of this integration for visual processing. You will use two-photon imaging in awake mice to simultaneously record activity of neurons in the superior colliculus as well as of axons originating in the retina, visual cortex, or brainstem nuclei such as the dorsal raphe (serotonin). You will compare the responses of the axonal inputs to those in the neurons, and you will observe how these signals change depending on the visual input and the behaviour of the animal. In the beginning of your project, you will develop an advanced imaging technique in collaboration with our industrial partner, Scientifica. You will adapt the existing two-photon microscope to image two separate fields of view simultaneously. This technique, termed multi-region imaging, will enable you to record inputs and outputs of superior colliculus at sufficient detail, speed, and quantity.
MRI investigation of orientation-dependent changes in microstructure and function in a mouse model of mild traumatic brain injury
Spike train structure of cortical transcriptomic populations in vivo
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.
Memory Decoding Journal Club: Functional connectomics reveals general wiring rule in mouse visual cortex
Functional connectomics reveals general wiring rule in mouse visual cortex
Astrocytes: From Metabolism to Cognition
Different brain cell types exhibit distinct metabolic signatures that link energy economy to cellular function. Astrocytes and neurons, for instance, diverge dramatically in their reliance on glycolysis versus oxidative phosphorylation, underscoring that metabolic fuel efficiency is not uniform across cell types. A key factor shaping this divergence is the structural organization of the mitochondrial respiratory chain into supercomplexes. Specifically, complexes I (CI) and III (CIII) form a CI–CIII supercomplex, but the degree of this assembly varies by cell type. In neurons, CI is predominantly integrated into supercomplexes, resulting in highly efficient mitochondrial respiration and minimal reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation. Conversely, in astrocytes, a larger fraction of CI remains unassembled, freely existing apart from CIII, leading to reduced respiratory efficiency and elevated mitochondrial ROS production. Despite this apparent inefficiency, astrocytes boast a highly adaptable metabolism capable of responding to diverse stressors. Their looser CI–CIII organization allows for flexible ROS signaling, which activates antioxidant programs via transcription factors like Nrf2. This modular architecture enables astrocytes not only to balance energy production but also to support neuronal health and influence complex organismal behaviors.
Neural mechanisms of optimal performance
When we attend a demanding task, our performance is poor at low arousal (when drowsy) or high arousal (when anxious), but we achieve optimal performance at intermediate arousal. This celebrated Yerkes-Dodson inverted-U law relating performance and arousal is colloquially referred to as being "in the zone." In this talk, I will elucidate the behavioral and neural mechanisms linking arousal and performance under the Yerkes-Dodson law in a mouse model. During decision-making tasks, mice express an array of discrete strategies, whereby the optimal strategy occurs at intermediate arousal, measured by pupil, consistent with the inverted-U law. Population recordings from the auditory cortex (A1) further revealed that sound encoding is optimal at intermediate arousal. To explain the computational principle underlying this inverted-U law, we modeled the A1 circuit as a spiking network with excitatory/inhibitory clusters, based on the observed functional clusters in A1. Arousal induced a transition from a multi-attractor (low arousal) to a single attractor phase (high arousal), and performance is optimized at the transition point. The model also predicts stimulus- and arousal-induced modulations of neural variability, which we confirmed in the data. Our theory suggests that a single unifying dynamical principle, phase transitions in metastable dynamics, underlies both the inverted-U law of optimal performance and state-dependent modulations of neural variability.
Memory Decoding Journal Club: "Synaptic architecture of a memory engram in the mouse hippocampus
Synaptic architecture of a memory engram in the mouse hippocampus
Retinal input integration in excitatory and inhibitory neurons in the mouse superior colliculus in vivo
Analyzing Network-Level Brain Processing and Plasticity Using Molecular Neuroimaging
Behavior and cognition depend on the integrated action of neural structures and populations distributed throughout the brain. We recently developed a set of molecular imaging tools that enable multiregional processing and plasticity in neural networks to be studied at a brain-wide scale in rodents and nonhuman primates. Here we will describe how a novel genetically encoded activity reporter enables information flow in virally labeled neural circuitry to be monitored by fMRI. Using the reporter to perform functional imaging of synaptically defined neural populations in the rat somatosensory system, we show how activity is transformed within brain regions to yield characteristics specific to distinct output projections. We also show how this approach enables regional activity to be modeled in terms of inputs, in a paradigm that we are extending to address circuit-level origins of functional specialization in marmoset brains. In the second part of the talk, we will discuss how another genetic tool for MRI enables systematic studies of the relationship between anatomical and functional connectivity in the mouse brain. We show that variations in physical and functional connectivity can be dissociated both across individual subjects and over experience. We also use the tool to examine brain-wide relationships between plasticity and activity during an opioid treatment. This work demonstrates the possibility of studying diverse brain-wide processing phenomena using molecular neuroimaging.
Mouse Motor Cortex Circuits and Roles in Oromanual Behavior
I’m interested in structure-function relationships in neural circuits and behavior, with a focus on motor and somatosensory areas of the mouse’s cortex involved in controlling forelimb movements. In one line of investigation, we take a bottom-up, cellularly oriented approach and use optogenetics, electrophysiology, and related slice-based methods to dissect cell-type-specific circuits of corticospinal and other neurons in forelimb motor cortex. In another, we take a top-down ethologically oriented approach and analyze the kinematics and cortical correlates of “oromanual” dexterity as mice handle food. I'll discuss recent progress on both fronts.
Understanding the complex behaviors of the ‘simple’ cerebellar circuit
Every movement we make requires us to precisely coordinate muscle activity across our body in space and time. In this talk I will describe our efforts to understand how the brain generates flexible, coordinated movement. We have taken a behavior-centric approach to this problem, starting with the development of quantitative frameworks for mouse locomotion (LocoMouse; Machado et al., eLife 2015, 2020) and locomotor learning, in which mice adapt their locomotor symmetry in response to environmental perturbations (Darmohray et al., Neuron 2019). Combined with genetic circuit dissection, these studies reveal specific, cerebellum-dependent features of these complex, whole-body behaviors. This provides a key entry point for understanding how neural computations within the highly stereotyped cerebellar circuit support the precise coordination of muscle activity in space and time. Finally, I will present recent unpublished data that provide surprising insights into how cerebellar circuits flexibly coordinate whole-body movements in dynamic environments.
Influence of the context of administration in the antidepressant-like effects of the psychedelic 5-MeO-DMT
Psychedelics like psilocybin have shown rapid and long-lasting efficacy on depressive and anxiety symptoms. Other psychedelics with shorter half-lives, such as DMT and 5-MeO-DMT, have also shown promising preliminary outcomes in major depression, making them interesting candidates for clinical practice. Despite several promising clinical studies, the influence of the context on therapeutic responses or adverse effects remains poorly documented. To address this, we conducted preclinical studies evaluating the psychopharmacological profile of 5-MeO-DMT in contexts previously validated in mice as either pleasant (positive setting) or aversive (negative setting). Healthy C57BL/6J male mice received a single intraperitoneal (i.p.) injection of 5-MeO-DMT at doses of 0.5, 5, and 10 mg/kg, with assessments at 2 hours, 24 hours, and one week post-administration. In a corticosterone (CORT) mouse model of depression, 5-MeO-DMT was administered in different settings, and behavioral tests mimicking core symptoms of depression and anxiety were conducted. In CORT-exposed mice, an acute dose of 0.5 mg/kg administered in a neutral setting produced antidepressant-like effects at 24 hours, as observed by reduced immobility time in the Tail Suspension Test (TST). In a positive setting, the drug also reduced latency to first immobility and total immobility time in the TST. However, these beneficial effects were negated in a negative setting, where 5-MeO-DMT failed to produce antidepressant-like effects and instead elicited an anxiogenic response in the Elevated Plus Maze (EPM).Our results indicate a strong influence of setting on the psychopharmacological profile of 5-MeO-DMT. Future experiments will examine cortical markers of pre- and post-synaptic density to correlate neuroplasticity changes with the behavioral effects of 5-MeO-DMT in different settings.
Investigating dynamiCa++l mechanisms underlying cortical development and disease
Modeling human brain development and disease: the role of primary cilia
Neurodevelopmental disorders (NDDs) impose a global burden, affecting an increasing number of individuals. While some causative genes have been identified, understanding the human-specific mechanisms involved in these disorders remains limited. Traditional gene-driven approaches for modeling brain diseases have failed to capture the diverse and convergent mechanisms at play. Centrosomes and cilia act as intermediaries between environmental and intrinsic signals, regulating cellular behavior. Mutations or dosage variations disrupting their function have been linked to brain formation deficits, highlighting their importance, yet their precise contributions remain largely unknown. Hence, we aim to investigate whether the centrosome/cilia axis is crucial for brain development and serves as a hub for human-specific mechanisms disrupted in NDDs. Towards this direction, we first demonstrated species-specific and cell-type-specific differences in the cilia-genes expression during mouse and human corticogenesis. Then, to dissect their role, we provoked their ectopic overexpression or silencing in the developing mouse cortex or in human brain organoids. Our findings suggest that cilia genes manipulation alters both the numbers and the position of NPCs and neurons in the developing cortex. Interestingly, primary cilium morphology is disrupted, as we find changes in their length, orientation and number that lead to disruption of the apical belt and altered delamination profiles during development. Our results give insight into the role of primary cilia in human cortical development and address fundamental questions regarding the diversity and convergence of gene function in development and disease manifestation. It has the potential to uncover novel pharmacological targets, facilitate personalized medicine, and improve the lives of individuals affected by NDDs through targeted cilia-based therapies.
Cell-type-specific plasticity shapes neocortical dynamics for motor learning
How do cortical circuits acquire new dynamics that drive learned movements? This webinar will focus on mouse premotor cortex in relation to learned lick-timing and explore high-density electrophysiology using our silicon neural probes alongside region and cell-type-specific acute genetic manipulations of proteins required for synaptic plasticity.
Mitochondrial diversity in the mouse and human brain
The basis of the mind, of mental states, and complex behaviors is the flow of energy through microscopic and macroscopic brain structures. Energy flow through brain circuits is powered by thousands of mitochondria populating the inside of every neuron, glial, and other nucleated cell across the brain-body unit. This seminar will cover emerging approaches to study the mind-mitochondria connection and present early attempts to map the distribution and diversity of mitochondria across brain tissue. In rodents, I will present convergent multimodal evidence anchored in enzyme activities, gene expression, and animal behavior that distinct behaviorally-relevant mitochondrial phenotypes exist across large-scale mouse brain networks. Extending these findings to the human brain, I will present a developing systematic biochemical and molecular map of mitochondrial variation across cortical and subcortical brain structures, representing a foundation to understand the origin of complex energy patterns that give rise to the human mind.
Investigating activity-dependent processes during cortical neuronal assembly in development and disease
Cellular and genetic mechanisms of cerebral cortex folding
One of the most prominent features of the human brain is the fabulous size of the cerebral cortex and its intricate folding, both of which emerge during development. Over the last few years, work from my lab has shown that specific cellular and genetic mechanisms play central roles in cortex folding, particularly linked to neural stem and progenitor cells. Key mechanisms include high rates of neurogenesis, high abundance of basal Radial Glia Cells (bRGCs), and neuron migration, all of which are intertwined during development. We have also shown that primary cortical folds follow highly stereotyped patterns, defined by a spatial-temporal protomap of gene expression within germinal layers of the developing cortex. I will present recent findings from my laboratory revealing novel cellular and genetic mechanisms that regulate cortex expansion and folding. We have uncovered the contribution of epigenetic regulation to the establishment of the cortex folding protomap, modulating the expression levels of key transcription factors that control progenitor cell proliferation and cortex folding. At the single cell level, we have identified an unprecedented diversity of cortical progenitor cell classes in the ferret and human embryonic cortex. These are differentially enriched in gyrus versus sulcus regions and establish parallel cell lineages, not observed in mouse. Our findings show that genetic and epigenetic mechanisms in gyrencephalic species diversify cortical progenitor cell types and implement parallel cell linages, driving the expansion of neurogenesis and patterning cerebral cortex folds.
Astrocyte reprogramming / activation and brain homeostasis
Astrocytes are multifunctional glial cells, implicated in neurogenesis and synaptogenesis, supporting and fine-tuning neuronal activity and maintaining brain homeostasis by controlling blood-brain barrier permeability. During the last years a number of studies have shown that astrocytes can also be converted into neurons if they force-express neurogenic transcription factors or miRNAs. Direct astrocytic reprogramming to induced-neurons (iNs) is a powerful approach for manipulating cell fate, as it takes advantage of the intrinsic neural stem cell (NSC) potential of brain resident reactive astrocytes. To this end, astrocytic cell fate conversion to iNs has been well-established in vitro and in vivo using combinations of transcription factors (TFs) or chemical cocktails. Challenging the expression of lineage-specific TFs is accompanied by changes in the expression of miRNAs, that post-transcriptionally modulate high numbers of neurogenesis-promoting factors and have therefore been introduced, supplementary or alternatively to TFs, to instruct direct neuronal reprogramming. The neurogenic miRNA miR-124 has been employed in direct reprogramming protocols supplementary to neurogenic TFs and other miRNAs to enhance direct neurogenic conversion by suppressing multiple non-neuronal targets. In our group we aimed to investigate whether miR-124 is sufficient to drive direct reprogramming of astrocytes to induced-neurons (iNs) on its own both in vitro and in vivo and elucidate its independent mechanism of reprogramming action. Our in vitro data indicate that miR-124 is a potent driver of the reprogramming switch of astrocytes towards an immature neuronal fate. Elucidation of the molecular pathways being triggered by miR-124 by RNA-seq analysis revealed that miR-124 is sufficient to instruct reprogramming of cortical astrocytes to immature induced-neurons (iNs) in vitro by down-regulating genes with important regulatory roles in astrocytic function. Among these, the RNA binding protein Zfp36l1, implicated in ARE-mediated mRNA decay, was found to be a direct target of miR-124, that be its turn targets neuronal-specific proteins participating in cortical development, which get de-repressed in miR-124-iNs. Furthermore, miR-124 is potent to guide direct neuronal reprogramming of reactive astrocytes to iNs of cortical identity following cortical trauma, a novel finding confirming its robust reprogramming action within the cortical microenvironment under neuroinflammatory conditions. In parallel to their reprogramming properties, astrocytes also participate in the maintenance of blood-brain barrier integrity, which ensures the physiological functioning of the central nervous system and gets affected contributing to the pathology of several neurodegenerative diseases. To study in real time the dynamic physical interactions of astrocytes with brain vasculature under homeostatic and pathological conditions, we performed 2-photon brain intravital imaging in a mouse model of systemic neuroinflammation, known to trigger astrogliosis and microgliosis and to evoke changes in astrocytic contact with brain vasculature. Our in vivo findings indicate that following neuroinflammation the endfeet of activated perivascular astrocytes lose their close proximity and physiological cross-talk with vasculature, however this event is at compensated by the cross-talk of astrocytes with activated microglia, safeguarding blood vessel coverage and maintenance of blood-brain integrity.
Bio-realistic multiscale modeling of cortical circuits
A central question in neuroscience is how the structure of brain circuits determines their activity and function. To explore this systematically, we developed a 230,000-neuron model of mouse primary visual cortex (area V1). The model integrates a broad array of experimental data:Distribution and morpho-electric properties of different neuron types in V1.
Circadian modulation by time-restricted feeding rescues brain pathology and improves memory in mouse models of Alzheimer’s disease
Effect of nutrient sensing by microglia on mouse behavior
Microglia are the brain macrophages, eliciting multifaceted functions to maintain brain homeostasis across lifetime. To achieve this, microglia are able to sense a plethora of signals in their close environment. In the lab, we investigate the effect of nutrients on microglia function for several reasons: 1) Microglia express all the cellular machinery required to sense nutrients; 2) Eating habits have changed considerably over the last century, towards diets rich in fats and sugars; 3) This so-called "Western diet" is accompanied by an increase in the occurrence of neuropathologies, in which microglia are known to play a role. In my talk, I will present data showing how variations in nutrient intake alter microglia function, including exacerbation of synaptic pruning, with profound consequences for neuronal activity and behavior. I will also show unpublished data on the mechanisms underlying the effects of nutrients on microglia, notably through the regulation of their metabolic activity.
X-linked mosaicism and behavioral heterogeneity in Rett syndrome
The melanopsin mosaic: exploring the diversity of non-image forming retinal ganglion cells
In this talk, I will focus on recent work that has uncovered the diversity of intrinsically photosensitive retinal ganglion cells (ipRGCs). These are a unique type of retinal ganglion cell that contains the photopigment melanopsin. ipRGCs are the retinal neurons responsible for driving non-imaging forming behaviors and reflexes, such as circadian entrainment and pupil constriction, amongst many others. My lab has recently focused on uncovering the diversity of ipRGCs, their distribution throughout the mammalian retina, and their axon projections in the brain.
Spatial and Single Cell Genomics for Next Generation Neuroscience
The advent of next generation sequencing ushered in a ten-year period of exuberant technology development, enabling the quantification of gene expression and epigenetic features within individual cells, and within intact tissue sections. In this seminar, I will outline our technological contributions, beginning with the development of Drop-seq, a method for high-throughput single cell analysis, followed by the development of Slide-seq, a technique for measuring genome-wide expression at 10 micron spatial resolution. Using a combination of these techniques, we recently constructed a comprehensive cell type atlas of the adult mouse brain, positioning cell types within individual brain structures. I will discuss the major findings from this dataset, including emerging principles of neurotransmission, and the localization of disease gene signatures to specific cell types. Finally, I will introduce a new spatial technology, Slide-tags, that unifies single cell and spatial genomics into a single, highly scalable assay.
Cellular crosstalk in Neurodevelopmental Disorders
Cellular crosstalk is an essential process during brain development and it is influenced by numerous factors, including the morphology of the cells, their adhesion molecules, the local extracellular matrix and the secreted vesicles. Inspired by mutations associated with neurodevelopmental disorders, we focus on understanding the role of extracellular mechanisms essential for the correct development of the human brain. Hence, we combine the in vivo mouse model and the in vitro human-derived neurons, cerebral organoids, and dorso-ventral assembloids in order to better comprehend the molecular and cellular mechanisms involved in ventral progenitors’ proliferation and fate as well as migration and maturation of inhibitory neurons during human brain development and tackle the causes of neurodevelopmental disorders. We particularly focus on mutations in genes influencing cell-cell contacts, extracellular matrix, and secretion of vesicles and therefore study intrinsic and extrinsic mechanisms contributing to the formation of the brain. Our data reveal an important contribution of cell non-autonomous mechanisms in the development of neurodevelopmental disorders.
Computational and mathematical approaches to myopigenesis
Myopia is predicted to affect 50% of all people worldwide by 2050, and is a risk factor for significant, potentially blinding ocular pathologies, such as retinal detachment and glaucoma. Thus, there is significant motivation to better understand the process of myopigenesis and to develop effective anti-myopigenic treatments. In nearly all cases of human myopia, scleral remodeling is an obligate step in the axial elongation that characterizes the condition. Here I will describe the development of a biomechanical assay based on transient unconfined compression of scleral samples. By treating the scleral as a poroelastic material, one can determine scleral biomechanical properties from extremely small samples, such as obtained from the mouse eye. These properties provide proxy measures of scleral remodeling, and have allowed us to identify all-trans retinoic acid (atRA) as a myopigenic stimulus in mice. I will also describe nascent collaborative work on modeling the transport of atRA in the eye.
Comparative transcriptomics of retinal cell types
In vivo direct imaging of neuronal activity at high temporospatial resolution
Advanced noninvasive neuroimaging methods provide valuable information on the brain function, but they have obvious pros and cons in terms of temporal and spatial resolution. Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) using blood-oxygenation-level-dependent (BOLD) effect provides good spatial resolution in the order of millimeters, but has a poor temporal resolution in the order of seconds due to slow hemodynamic responses to neuronal activation, providing indirect information on neuronal activity. In contrast, electroencephalography (EEG) and magnetoencephalography (MEG) provide excellent temporal resolution in the millisecond range, but spatial information is limited to centimeter scales. Therefore, there has been a longstanding demand for noninvasive brain imaging methods capable of detecting neuronal activity at both high temporal and spatial resolution. In this talk, I will introduce a novel approach that enables Direct Imaging of Neuronal Activity (DIANA) using MRI that can dynamically image neuronal spiking activity in milliseconds precision, achieved by data acquisition scheme of rapid 2D line scan synchronized with periodically applied functional stimuli. DIANA was demonstrated through in vivo mouse brain imaging on a 9.4T animal scanner during electrical whisker-pad stimulation. DIANA with milliseconds temporal resolution had high correlations with neuronal spike activities, which could also be applied in capturing the sequential propagation of neuronal activity along the thalamocortical pathway of brain networks. In terms of the contrast mechanism, DIANA was almost unaffected by hemodynamic responses, but was subject to changes in membrane potential-associated tissue relaxation times such as T2 relaxation time. DIANA is expected to break new ground in brain science by providing an in-depth understanding of the hierarchical functional organization of the brain, including the spatiotemporal dynamics of neural networks.
Light-driven dopamine release in the adult and developing retina
NOTE: DUE TO A CYBER ATTACK OUR UNIVERSITY WEB SYSTEM IS SHUT DOWN - TALK WILL BE RESCHEDULED
The size and structure of the dendritic arbor play important roles in determining how synaptic inputs of neurons are converted to action potential output and how neurons are integrated in the surrounding neuronal network. Accordingly, neurons with aberrant morphology have been associated with neurological disorders. Dysmorphic, enlarged neurons are, for example, a hallmark of focal epileptogenic lesions like focal cortical dysplasia (FCDIIb) and gangliogliomas (GG). However, the regulatory mechanisms governing the development of dendrites are insufficiently understood. The evolutionary conserved Ste20/Hippo kinase pathway has been proposed to play an important role in regulating the formation and maintenance of dendritic architecture. A key element of this pathway, Ste20-like kinase (SLK), regulates cytoskeletal dynamics in non-neuronal cells and is strongly expressed throughout neuronal development. Nevertheless, its function in neurons is unknown. We found that during development of mouse cortical neurons, SLK has a surprisingly specific role for proper elaboration of higher, ≥ 3rd, order dendrites both in cultured neurons and living mice. Moreover, SLK is required to maintain excitation-inhibition balance. Specifically, SLK knockdown causes a selective loss of inhibitory synapses and functional inhibition after postnatal day 15, while excitatory neurotransmission is unaffected. This mechanism may be relevant for human disease, as dysmorphic neurons within human cortical malformations exhibit significant loss of SLK expression. To uncover the signaling cascades underlying the action of SLK, we combined phosphoproteomics, protein interaction screens and single cell RNA seq. Overall, our data identifies SLK as a key regulator of both dendritic complexity during development and of inhibitory synapse maintenance.
Neural circuits for vision in the natural world
Circuit mechanisms of attention dysfunction in Scn8a+/- mice: implications for epilepsy and neurodevelopmental disorders
Perivascular cells induce microglial phagocytic states and synaptic engulfment via SPP1 in mouse models of Alzheimer's disease
Epigenetic rewiring in Schinzel-Giedion syndrome
During life, a variety of specialized cells arise to grant the right and timely corrected functions of tissues and organs. Regulation of chromatin in defining specialized genomic regions (e.g. enhancers) plays a key role in developmental transitions from progenitors into cell lineages. These enhancers, properly topologically positioned in 3D space, ultimately guide the transcriptional programs. It is becoming clear that several pathologies converge in differential enhancer usage with respect to physiological situations. However, why some regulatory regions are physiologically preferred, while some others can emerge in certain conditions, including other fate decisions or diseases, remains obscure. Schinzel-Giedion syndrome (SGS) is a rare disease with symptoms such as severe developmental delay, congenital malformations, progressive brain atrophy, intractable seizures, and infantile death. SGS is caused by mutations in the SETBP1 gene that results in its accumulation further leading to the downstream accumulation of SET. The oncoprotein SET has been found as part of the histone chaperone complex INHAT that blocks the activity of histone acetyltransferases suggesting that SGS may (i) represent a natural model of alternative chromatin regulation and (ii) offer chances to study downstream (mal)adaptive mechanisms. I will present our work on the characterization of SGS in appropriate experimental models including iPSC-derived cultures and mouse.
The strongly recurrent regime of cortical networks
Modern electrophysiological recordings simultaneously capture single-unit spiking activities of hundreds of neurons. These neurons exhibit highly complex coordination patterns. Where does this complexity stem from? One candidate is the ubiquitous heterogeneity in connectivity of local neural circuits. Studying neural network dynamics in the linearized regime and using tools from statistical field theory of disordered systems, we derive relations between structure and dynamics that are readily applicable to subsampled recordings of neural circuits: Measuring the statistics of pairwise covariances allows us to infer statistical properties of the underlying connectivity. Applying our results to spontaneous activity of macaque motor cortex, we find that the underlying network operates in a strongly recurrent regime. In this regime, network connectivity is highly heterogeneous, as quantified by a large radius of bulk connectivity eigenvalues. Being close to the point of linear instability, this dynamical regime predicts a rich correlation structure, a large dynamical repertoire, long-range interaction patterns, relatively low dimensionality and a sensitive control of neuronal coordination. These predictions are verified in analyses of spontaneous activity of macaque motor cortex and mouse visual cortex. Finally, we show that even microscopic features of connectivity, such as connection motifs, systematically scale up to determine the global organization of activity in neural circuits.
Visual circuits for threat anticipation
A specialized role for entorhinal attractor dynamics in combining path integration and landmarks during navigation
During navigation, animals estimate their position using path integration and landmarks. In a series of two studies, we used virtual reality and electrophysiology to dissect how these inputs combine to generate the brain’s spatial representations. In the first study (Campbell et al., 2018), we focused on the medial entorhinal cortex (MEC) and its set of navigationally-relevant cell types, including grid cells, border cells, and speed cells. We discovered that attractor dynamics could explain an array of initially puzzling MEC responses to virtual reality manipulations. This theoretical framework successfully predicted both MEC grid cell responses to additional virtual reality manipulations, as well as mouse behavior in a virtual path integration task. In the second study (Campbell*, Attinger* et al., 2021), we asked whether these principles generalize to other navigationally-relevant brain regions. We used Neuropixels probes to record thousands of neurons from MEC, primary visual cortex (V1), and retrosplenial cortex (RSC). In contrast to the prevailing view that “everything is everywhere all at once,” we identified a unique population of MEC neurons, overlapping with grid cells, that became active with striking spatial periodicity while head-fixed mice ran on a treadmill in darkness. These neurons exhibited unique cue-integration properties compared to other MEC, V1, or RSC neurons: they remapped more readily in response to conflicts between path integration and landmarks; they coded position prospectively as opposed to retrospectively; they upweighted path integration relative to landmarks in conditions of low visual contrast; and as a population, they exhibited a lower-dimensional activity structure. Based on these results, our current view is that MEC attractor dynamics play a privileged role in resolving conflicts between path integration and landmarks during navigation. Future work should include carefully designed causal manipulations to rigorously test this idea, and expand the theoretical framework to incorporate notions of uncertainty and optimality.
PIEZO2 in somatosensory neurons coordinates gastrointestinal transit
The transit of food through the gastrointestinal tract is critical for nutrient absorption and survival, and the gastrointestinal tract has the ability to initiate motility reflexes triggered by luminal distention. This complex function depends on the crosstalk between extrinsic and intrinsic neuronal innervation within the intestine, as well as local specialized enteroendocrine cells. However, the molecular mechanisms and the subset of sensory neurons underlying the initiation and regulation of intestinal motility remain largely unknown. Here, we show that humans lacking PIEZO2 exhibit impaired bowel sensation and motility. Piezo2 in mouse dorsal root but not nodose ganglia is required to sense gut content, and this activity slows down food transit rates in the stomach, small intestine, and colon. Indeed, Piezo2 is directly required to detect colon distension in vivo. Our study unveils the mechanosensory mechanisms that regulate the transit of luminal contents throughout the gut, which is a critical process to ensure proper digestion, nutrient absorption, and waste removal. These findings set the foundation of future work to identify the highly regulated interactions between sensory neurons, enteric neurons and non- neuronal cells that control gastrointestinal motility.
Interplay between circuits that mediate spontaneous retinal waves and early light responses during retinal development
Unique features of oxygen delivery to the mammalian retina
Like all neural tissue, the retina has a high metabolic demand, and requires a constant supply of oxygen. Second and third order neurons are supplied by the retinal circulation, whose characteristics are similar to brain circulation. However, the photoreceptor region, which occupies half of the retinal thickness, is avascular, and relies on diffusion of oxygen from the choroidal circulation, whose properties are very different, as well as the retinal circulation. By fitting diffusion models to oxygen measurements made with oxygen microelectrodes, it is possible to understand the relative roles of the two circulations under normal conditions of light and darkness, and what happens if the retina is detached or the retinal circulation is occluded. Most of this work has been done in vivo in rat, cat, and monkey, but recent work in the isolated mouse retina will also be discussed.
Brain mosaicism in epileptogenic cortical malformations
Focal Cortical Dysplasia (FCD) is the most common focal cortical malformation leading to intractable childhood focal epilepsy. In recent years, we and others have shown that FCD type II is caused by mosaic mutations in genes within the PI3K-AKT-mTOR-signaling pathway. Hyperactivation of the mTOR pathway accounts for neuropathological abnormalities and seizure occurrence in FCD. We further showed from human surgical FCDII tissue that epileptiform activity correlates with the density of mutated dysmorphic neurons, supporting their pro-epileptogenic role. The level of mosaicism, as defined by variant allele frequency (VAF) is thought to correlate with the size and regional brain distribution of the lesion such that when a somatic mutation occurs early during the cortical development, the dysplastic area is smaller than if it occurs later. Novel approaches based on the detection of cell-free DNA from the CSF and from trace tissue adherent to SEEG electrodes promise future opportunities for genetic testing during the presurgical evaluation of refractory epilepsy patients or in those that are not eligible for surgery. In utero-based electroporation mouse models allow to express somatic mutation during neurodevelopment and recapitulate most neuropathological and clinical features of FCDII, establishing relevant preclinical mouse models for developing precision medicine strategies.
Programmed axon death: from animal models into human disease
Programmed axon death is a widespread and completely preventable mechanism in injury and disease. Mouse and Drosophila studies define a molecular pathway involving activation of SARM1 NA Dase and its prevention by NAD synthesising enzyme NMNAT2 . Loss of axonal NMNAT2 causes its substrate, NMN , to accumulate and activate SARM1 , driving loss of NAD and changes in ATP , ROS and calcium. Animal models caused by genetic mutation, toxins, viruses or metabolic defects can be alleviated by blocking programmed axon death, for example models of CMT1B , chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy (CIPN), rabies and diabetic peripheral neuropathy (DPN). The perinatal lethality of NMNAT2 null mice is completely rescued, restoring a normal, healthy lifespan. Animal models lack the genetic and environmental diversity present in human populations and this is problematic for modelling gene-environment combinations, for example in CIPN and DPN , and identifying rare, pathogenic mutations. Instead, by testing human gene variants in WGS datasets for loss- and gain-of-function, we identified enrichment of rare SARM1 gain-of-function variants in sporadic ALS , despite previous negative findings in SOD1 transgenic mice. We have shown in mice that heterozygous SARM1 loss-of-function is protective from a range of axonal stresses and that naturally-occurring SARM1 loss-of-function alleles are present in human populations. This enables new approaches to identify disorders where blocking SARM1 may be therapeutically useful, and the existence of two dominant negative human variants in healthy adults is some of the best evidence available that drugs blocking SARM1 are likely to be safe. Further loss- and gain-of-function variants in SARM1 and NMNAT2 are being identified and used to extend and strengthen the evidence of association with neurological disorders. We aim to identify diseases, and specific patients, in whom SARM1 -blocking drugs are most likely to be effective.
Love, death, and oxytocin: the challenges of mouse maternal care
Dynamics of cortical circuits: underlying mechanisms and computational implications
A signature feature of cortical circuits is the irregularity of neuronal firing, which manifests itself in the high temporal variability of spiking and the broad distribution of rates. Theoretical works have shown that this feature emerges dynamically in network models if coupling between cells is strong, i.e. if the mean number of synapses per neuron K is large and synaptic efficacy is of order 1/\sqrt{K}. However, the degree to which these models capture the mechanisms underlying neuronal firing in cortical circuits is not fully understood. Results have been derived using neuron models with current-based synapses, i.e. neglecting the dependence of synaptic current on the membrane potential, and an understanding of how irregular firing emerges in models with conductance-based synapses is still lacking. Moreover, at odds with the nonlinear responses to multiple stimuli observed in cortex, network models with strongly coupled cells respond linearly to inputs. In this talk, I will discuss the emergence of irregular firing and nonlinear response in networks of leaky integrate-and-fire neurons. First, I will show that, when synapses are conductance-based, irregular firing emerges if synaptic efficacy is of order 1/\log(K) and, unlike in current-based models, persists even under the large heterogeneity of connections which has been reported experimentally. I will then describe an analysis of neural responses as a function of coupling strength and show that, while a linear input-output relation is ubiquitous at strong coupling, nonlinear responses are prominent at moderate coupling. I will conclude by discussing experimental evidence of moderate coupling and loose balance in the mouse cortex.
How do Astrocytes Sculpt Synaptic Circuits?
From symptoms to circuits in Fragile X syndrome
Protective microglial signaling in Alzheimer's Disease
Recent studies have begun to reveal critical roles for the brain’s professional phagocytes, microglia, and their receptors in the control of neurotoxic amyloid beta (Aβ) and myelin debris accumulation in neurodegenerative disease. However, the critical intracellular molecules that orchestrate neuroprotective functions of microglia remain poorly understood. In our studies, we find that targeted deletion of SYK in microglia leads to exacerbated Aβ deposition, aggravated neuropathology, and cognitive defects in the 5xFAD mouse model of Alzheimer’s disease (AD). Disruption of SYK signaling in this AD model was further shown to impede the development of disease-associated microglia (DAM), alter AKT/GSK3β-signaling, and restrict Aβ phagocytosis by microglia. Conversely, receptor-mediated activation of SYK limits Aβ load. We also found that SYK critically regulates microglial phagocytosis and DAM acquisition in demyelinating disease. Collectively, these results broaden our understanding of the key innate immune signaling molecules that instruct beneficial microglial functions in response to neurotoxic material." https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2022.09.030
Convex neural codes in recurrent networks and sensory systems
Neural activity in many sensory systems is organized on low-dimensional manifolds by means of convex receptive fields. Neural codes in these areas are constrained by this organization, as not every neural code is compatible with convex receptive fields. The same codes are also constrained by the structure of the underlying neural network. In my talk I will attempt to provide answers to the following natural questions: (i) How do recurrent circuits generate codes that are compatible with the convexity of receptive fields? (ii) How can we utilize the constraints imposed by the convex receptive field to understand the underlying stimulus space. To answer question (i), we describe the combinatorics of the steady states and fixed points of recurrent networks that satisfy the Dale’s law. It turns out the combinatorics of the fixed points are completely determined by two distinct conditions: (a) the connectivity graph of the network and (b) a spectral condition on the synaptic matrix. We give a characterization of exactly which features of connectivity determine the combinatorics of the fixed points. We also find that a generic recurrent network that satisfies Dale's law outputs convex combinatorial codes. To address question (ii), I will describe methods based on ideas from topology and geometry that take advantage of the convex receptive field properties to infer the dimension of (non-linear) neural representations. I will illustrate the first method by inferring basic features of the neural representations in the mouse olfactory bulb.
Versatile treadmill system for measuring locomotion and neural activity in head-fixed mice
Here, we present a protocol for using a versatile treadmill system to measure locomotion and neural activity at high temporal resolution in head-fixed mice. We first describe the assembly of the treadmill system. We then detail surgical implantation of the headplate on the mouse skull, followed by habituation of mice to locomotion on the treadmill system. The system is compact, movable, and simple to synchronize with other data streams, making it ideal for monitoring brain activity in diverse behavioral frameworks. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.xpro.2022.101701
Dysregulated Translation in Fragile X Syndrome
Hypothalamic episode generators underlying the neural control of fertility
The hypothalamus controls diverse homeostatic functions including fertility. Neural episode generators are required to drive the intermittent pulsatile and surge profiles of reproductive hormone secretion that control gonadal function. Studies in genetic mouse models have been fundamental in defining the neural circuits forming these central pattern generators and the full range of in vitro and in vivo optogenetic and chemogenetic methodologies have enabled investigation into their mechanism of action. The seminar will outline studies defining the hypothalamic “GnRH pulse generator network” and current understanding of its operation to drive pulsatile hormone secretion.
Context-dependent selectivity to natural scenes in the retina
Signal in the Noise: models of inter-trial and inter-subject neural variability
The ability to record large neural populations—hundreds to thousands of cells simultaneously—is a defining feature of modern systems neuroscience. Aside from improved experimental efficiency, what do these technologies fundamentally buy us? I'll argue that they provide an exciting opportunity to move beyond studying the "average" neural response. That is, by providing dense neural circuit measurements in individual subjects and moments in time, these recordings enable us to track changes across repeated behavioral trials and across experimental subjects. These two forms of variability are still poorly understood, despite their obvious importance to understanding the fidelity and flexibility of neural computations. Scientific progress on these points has been impeded by the fact that individual neurons are very noisy and unreliable. My group is investigating a number of customized statistical models to overcome this challenge. I will mention several of these models but focus particularly on a new framework for quantifying across-subject similarity in stochastic trial-by-trial neural responses. By applying this method to noisy representations in deep artificial networks and in mouse visual cortex, we reveal that the geometry of neural noise correlations is a meaningful feature of variation, which is neglected by current methods (e.g. representational similarity analysis).
Restructuring cortical feedback circuits
We hardly notice when there is a speck on our glasses, the obstructed visual information seems to be magically filled in. The mechanistic basis for this fundamental perceptual phenomenon has, however, remained obscure. What enables neurons in the visual system to respond to context when the stimulus is not available? While feedforward information drives the activity in cortex, feedback information is thought to provide contextual signals that are merely modulatory. We have made the discovery that mouse primary visual cortical neurons are strongly driven by feedback projections from higher visual areas when their feedforward sensory input from the retina is missing. This drive is so strong that it makes visual cortical neurons fire as much as if they were receiving a direct sensory input. These signals are likely used to predict input from the feedforward pathway. Preliminary results show that these feedback projections are strongly influenced by experience and learning.
Mouse visual cortex as a limited resource system that self-learns an ecologically-general representation
Studies of the mouse visual system have revealed a variety of visual brain areas in a roughly hierarchical arrangement, together with a multitude of behavioral capacities, ranging from stimulus-reward associations, to goal-directed navigation, and object-centric discriminations. However, an overall understanding of the mouse’s visual cortex organization, and how this organization supports visual behaviors, remains unknown. Here, we take a computational approach to help address these questions, providing a high-fidelity quantitative model of mouse visual cortex. By analyzing factors contributing to model fidelity, we identified key principles underlying the organization of mouse visual cortex. Structurally, we find that comparatively low-resolution and shallow structure were both important for model correctness. Functionally, we find that models trained with task-agnostic, unsupervised objective functions, based on the concept of contrastive embeddings were substantially better than models trained with supervised objectives. Finally, the unsupervised objective builds a general-purpose visual representation that enables the system to achieve better transfer on out-of-distribution visual, scene understanding and reward-based navigation tasks. Our results suggest that mouse visual cortex is a low-resolution, shallow network that makes best use of the mouse’s limited resources to create a light-weight, general-purpose visual system – in contrast to the deep, high-resolution, and more task-specific visual system of primates.
Counteracting epigenetic mechanisms in autism spectrum disorders
Internally Organized Abstract Task Maps in the Mouse Medial Frontal Cortex
New tasks are often similar in structure to old ones. Animals that take advantage of such conserved or “abstract” task structures can master new tasks with minimal training. To understand the neural basis of this abstraction, we developed a novel behavioural paradigm for mice: the “ABCD” task, and recorded from their medial frontal neurons as they learned. Animals learned multiple tasks where they had to visit 4 rewarded locations on a spatial maze in sequence, which defined a sequence of four “task states” (ABCD). Tasks shared the same circular transition structure (… ABCDABCD …) but differed in the spatial arrangement of rewards. As well as improving across tasks, mice inferred that A followed D (i.e. completed the loop) on the very first trial of a new task. This “zero-shot inference” is only possible if animals had learned the abstract structure of the task. Across tasks, individual medial Frontal Cortex (mFC) neurons maintained their tuning to the phase of an animal’s trajectory between rewards but not their tuning to task states, even in the absence of spatial tuning. Intriguingly, groups of mFC neurons formed modules of coherently remapping neurons that maintained their tuning relationships across tasks. Such tuning relationships were expressed as replay/preplay during sleep, consistent with an internal organisation of activity into multiple, task-matched ring attractors. Remarkably, these modules were anchored to spatial locations: neurons were tuned to specific task space “distances” from a particular spatial location. These newly discovered “Spatially Anchored Task clocks” (SATs), suggest a novel algorithm for solving abstraction tasks. Using computational modelling, we show that SATs can perform zero-shot inference on new tasks in the absence of plasticity and guide optimal policy in the absence of continual planning. These findings provide novel insights into the Frontal mechanisms mediating abstraction and flexible behaviour.
SCN8A (Nav1.6) and DEE: mouse models and pre-clinical therapies
SCN8A encodes a major voltage-gated sodium channel expressed in CNS and PNS neurons. Gain-of-function and loss-of-function mutations contribute to human disorders, most notably Developmental and Epileptic Encephalophy (DEE). More than 600 affected individuals have been reported, with the most common mechanism of de novo, gain-of-function mutations. We have developed constitutive and conditional models of gain- and loss- of function mutations in the mouse and characterized the effects of on neuronal firing and neurological phenotypes. Using CRE lines with cellular and developmental specificity, we have probed the effects of activating mutant alleles in various classes of neurons in the developing and adult mouse. Most recently, we are testing genetic therapies that reduce the expression of gain-of-function mutant alleles. We are comparing the effectiveness of allele specific oligos (ASOs), viral delivery of shRNAs, and allele-specific targeting of mutant alleles using Crispr/Cas9 in mouse models of DEE.
Epigenome regulation in neocortex expansion and generation of neuronal subtypes
Evolutionarily, the expansion of the human neocortex accounts for many of the unique cognitive abilities of humans. This expansion appears to reflect the increased proliferative potential of basal progenitors (BPs) in mammalian evolution. Further cortical progenitors generate both glutamatergic excitatory neurons (ENs) and GABAergic inhibitory interneurons (INs) in human cortex, whereas they produce exclusively ENs in rodents. The increased proliferative capacity and neuronal subtype generation of cortical progenitors in mammalian evolution may have evolved through epigenetic alterations. However, whether or how the epigenome in cortical progenitors differs between humans and other species is unknown. Here, we report that histone H3 acetylation is a key epigenetic regulation in BP profiling of sorted BPs, we show that H3K9 acetylation is low in murine BPs and high in amplification, neuronal subtype generation and cortical expansion. Through epigenetic profiling of sorted BPs, we show that H3K9 acetylation is low in murine BPs and high in human BPs. Elevated H3K9ac preferentially increases BP proliferation, increasing the size and folding of the normally smooth mouse neocortex. Furthermore, we found that the elevated H3 acetylation activates expression of IN genes in in developing mouse cortex and promote proliferation of IN progenitor-like cells in cortex of Pax6 mutant mouse models. Mechanistically, H3K9ac drives the BP amplification and proliferation of these IN progenitor-like cells by increasing expression of the evolutionarily regulated gene, TRNP1. Our findings demonstrate a previously unknown mechanism that controls neocortex expansion and generation of neuronal subtypes. Keywords: Cortical development, neurogenesis, basal progenitors, cortical size, gyrification, excitatory neuron, inhibitory interneuron, epigenetic profiling, epigenetic regulation, H3 acetylation, H3K9ac, TRNP1, PAX6
Role of ASD risk genes on maturation of frontal-sensory cognitive control circuit
A census of neural timescales across the mouse brain
Bernstein Conference 2024
Exploring the neuroprotective effect of auditory enhanced slow-wave sleep in a mouse model of Alzheimer’s disease
FENS Forum 2024
Reconciling Diverse Experimental Findings on Inhibitory Tuning in the Mouse Visual Cortex
Bernstein Conference 2024
Spatial scale and coordinates of motion representation in the mouse Nucleus of the Optic Tract
Bernstein Conference 2024
Toward a biophysically-detailed, fully-differentiable model of the mouse retina
Bernstein Conference 2024
Coarse-to-fine processing drives the efficient coding of natural scenes in mouse visual cortex
COSYNE 2022
Disentangling Fast Representational Drift in Mouse Visual Cortex
COSYNE 2022
Distinct aversive states in the mouse medial prefrontal cortex.
COSYNE 2022
The dynamical regime of mouse visual cortex shifts from cooperation to competition with increasing visual input
COSYNE 2022
Emergence of an orientation map in the mouse superior colliculus from stage III retinal waves
COSYNE 2022
Inception loops reveal novel spatially-localized phase invariance in mouse primary visual cortex
COSYNE 2022
Inception loops reveal novel spatially-localized phase invariance in mouse primary visual cortex
COSYNE 2022
Input-specific regulation of locus coeruleus activity for mouse maternal behavior
COSYNE 2022
Input-specific regulation of locus coeruleus activity for mouse maternal behavior
COSYNE 2022
Internally Organized Abstract Task Maps in the Mouse Medial Frontal Cortex
COSYNE 2022
An interpretable spline-LNP model to characterize feedforward and feedback processing in mouse dLGN
COSYNE 2022
Internally Organized Abstract Task Maps in the Mouse Medial Frontal Cortex
COSYNE 2022
Isolated correlates of somatosensory perception in the posterior mouse cortex
COSYNE 2022
An interpretable spline-LNP model to characterize feedforward and feedback processing in mouse dLGN
COSYNE 2022
Isolated correlates of somatosensory perception in the posterior mouse cortex
COSYNE 2022
Predictability in the spiking activity of mouse visual cortex decreases along the processing hierarchy
COSYNE 2022
Predictability in the spiking activity of mouse visual cortex decreases along the processing hierarchy
COSYNE 2022
Predictive coding of global sequence violation in the mouse auditory cortex
COSYNE 2022
Predictive coding of global sequence violation in the mouse auditory cortex
COSYNE 2022
Processing of visual textures in the mouse visual cortex
COSYNE 2022
Processing of visual textures in the mouse visual cortex
COSYNE 2022
Reward modulates visual responses in mouse superior colliculus independently of arousal
COSYNE 2022
Reward modulates visual responses in mouse superior colliculus independently of arousal
COSYNE 2022
Self-assembly of the mammalian neocortex, from mouse to macaque
COSYNE 2022
Self-assembly of the mammalian neocortex, from mouse to macaque
COSYNE 2022
Circuit-based framework for fine spatial scale clustering of orientation tuning in mouse V1
COSYNE 2023
The desire to know: representations of information value in mouse orbitofrontal cortex during information seeking
COSYNE 2023
Directly comparing fly and mouse visual systems reveals algorithmic similarities for motion detection
COSYNE 2023
Distinct brain states modulate visual cortical processing in mouse
COSYNE 2023
Locomotion is associated with straighter neural trajectories for natural movies in mouse visual cortex
COSYNE 2023
Mouse visual cortex as a limited-resource system that self-learns a task-general representation
COSYNE 2023
Myelin loss disrupts neural synchrony directing skilled motor behavior in mouse primary motor cortex
COSYNE 2023
The neural representation of perceptual uncertainty in mouse visual cortex
COSYNE 2023
Representational Drift Across Short Timescales in the Mouse Visual Cortex
COSYNE 2023
Analysis of burst sequences in mouse prefrontal cortex during learning
Bernstein Conference 2024