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Synaptic Functions

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synaptic functions

Discover seminars, jobs, and research tagged with synaptic functions across World Wide.
4 curated items2 Seminars2 ePosters
Updated 10 months ago
4 items · synaptic functions
4 results
SeminarNeuroscience

The synaptic functions of Alpha Synuclein and Lrrk2

Subhojit Roy, MD, PhD
University of Wisconsin-Madison
Feb 17, 2025

Alpha synuclein and Lrrk2 are key players in Parkinson's disease and related disorders, but their normal role has been confusing and controversial. Data from acute gene-editing based knockdown, followed by functional assays, will be presented.

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.

ePoster

A biallelic mutation in CACNA2D2 associated with epileptic encephalopathy affects calcium channel-dependent as well as synaptic functions of α2δ-2

Sabrin Haddad, Cornelia Ablinger, Ruslan Stanika, Manuel Hessenberger, Marta Campiglio, Nadine J. Ortner, Petronel Tuluc, Gerald J. Obermair

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