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Student Seminars

Upcoming20242023202220212020

Characterizing the Neuronal Dynamics in Prefrontal Cortex which Governs Top-Down Modulation of Visual Processing - PhD Thesis Proposal

Jay Gonzalez-Amoretti - PhD Candidate, Advisor: Adam Snyder

The prefrontal cortex (PFC) is widely reported to play a role in visual attention, employed through modulation of neuronal activity in visual processing regions, such as V4 and MT. Sub-regions within the PFC of monkeys, such as the frontal eye fields (FEF) and the ventral prearcuate region (VPA), are reported to govern spatial and feature-based attentional modulation of visual responses, respectively. However, the cellular-level circuitry and neurocomputational mechanisms involved in the modulatory control of visual processing remain unclear. While VPA shares reciprocal projections with FEF, it lacks direct projections to visual processing regions. Thus, FEF likely mediates any modulation of feature-selective responses in visual processing regions originating in VPA. Inactivation of VPA reduces feature-selectivity in FEF and V4, suggesting that FEF may integrate signals arising in VPA to modulate neuronal activity in visual processing regions. Given the contrasting physiological properties between FEF and VPA, it is possible that signals integrated at FEF are also transformed to facilitate shifts from feature-dependent covert attention to overt selection.

The purpose of my project is to determine the neuronal dynamics within sub-regions in PFC that govern top-down modulation of visual processing.

We plan to:

  1. Characterize the functional properties of FEF to understand how integration and transformation of attentional signals may be implemented
  2. Establish the temporal dynamics between FEF and VPA to reveal the nature of neuronal communication between both regions
  3. Determine the causal role of VPA as the source of feature-based attentional modulation of visual processing via reversible pharmacologic inactivation.

 Dec 15, 2022 @ 1:00 p.m.

 Medical Center | 1-7619 Lower Adolph Auditorium

NSC 503 Seminars

Daulton Myers; Mariah Marrero - PhD Candidate, Neuroscience Graduate Program

Titles:  "Modeling predictive speech perception of vocoded speech using multivariate temporal response functions" - Marrero
"Can melatonin regulate glymphatic function?" - Myers

Faculty Evaluators:  Liz Romanski & Krystel Huxlin

 Dec 12, 2022 @ 4:00 p.m.

 Medical Center | K-207 (2-6408)

NSC 503 Seminars

Erin Murray; Michael Lim; Tanique McDonald - PhD Candidate , Neuroscience Graduate Program; PhD Candidate, Neuroscience Graduate Program

Titles:  Investigating the effects of cross-callosal M2 prjection activation on coordinated locaomation in mice - Lim
in Vivo assessment of ocular stem cell therapy in non-human primates - McDonald
Influence of a mixture of endocrine disrupting chemicals on the maternal brain - Murray

Faculty Evaluators: Rick Libby & Laurel Carney

 Dec 05, 2022 @ 4:00 p.m.

Age-related Neuropathological and Neurophysiological Changes of Auditory Processing in a Knockout Mouse Model of Juvenile Neuronal Ceroid Lipofuscinosis

Yanya Ding - PhD Candidate, Advisors: Edward Freedman, PhD, John Foxe, PhD, and Kuan Hong Wang, PhD

CLN3 disease is one of the most prevalent forms of Neuronal Ceroid Lipofuscinosis (NCL), resulting from homozygous mutations in the human CLN3 gene. It is characterized by abnormal accumulation of ceroid lipofuscin in the lysosomes of multiple cell types, with neurons most severely affected. Individuals with CLN3 disease have early onset of blindness, motor deficits, and progressive declines in cognitive functioning and verbal intellectual abilities starting from juvenile age. However, effects of CLN3 mutations on auditory processing remain unknown. Although concurrent CLN3 mouse models successfully recapitulate ceroid lipofuscin accumulation and visual and motor deficits in humans, less is known about the link between cellular pathology and progression of disease phenotypes. Objective cross-species neurologic markers are also not well established. To fill these knowledge gaps, we will examine the effects of CLN3 mutations on auditory processing in terms of both ceroid lipofuscin accumulation and neurophysiological changes.

We hypothesize that CLN3 mutations induce cell type specific accumulation of ceroid lipofuscin and predispose neurons for neurophysiological changes and auditory processing deficits. In aim 1, we will determine whether ceroid lipofuscin preferentially accumulates in specific cell types in the CLN3 -/- mouse model. We will utilize confocal microscopy imaging of Subunit C of mitochondrial ATP Synthase (SCMAS), a common immunofluorescence marker for ceroid lipofuscin, to access accumulation of ceroid lipofuscin in different auditory processing brain regions across multiple time points. We will also test co-localization of SCMAS with parvalbumin (PV) to determine whether ceroid lipofuscin preferentially accumulates in PV + interneurons. Aim 2 will examine whether ceroid lipofuscin accumulation is associated with auditory electroencephalography (EEG) changes in the CLN3 -/- mouse model. We will conduct auditory duration mismatch negativity (MMN) to measure age-related neurophysiological changes. In aim 3, we will test whether CLN3 mutations disrupt the balance of excitatory and inhibitory neural activities in auditory processing. Fiber photometry Ca2+ imaging will be used to measure neural activity changes in PV-Cre CLN3 animals after viral injection of GCaMP6 reporter.

Overall, this project will provide a foundation to uncover longitudinal neuropathology of auditory processing in CLN3 disease and bridge the gap between current pathological and neurophysiological measurements. It will also help to develop auditory MMN as a clinically relevant biomarker and establish cross-species endophenotype.

 Nov 30, 2022 @ 1:00 p.m.

 Medical Center | Ryan Case Method Room (1-9576)

NSC 503 Seminars

Abigail Alpers; Andrea Campbell; Dominic Bunn - PhD Candidate, Neuroscience Graduate Program

Titles:
Distractor suppression in a tactile discrimination task - Alpers
Rotation 1:  Investigating the link between AD and hearing dysfunction - Bunn
FOXO3 protects and promotes recovery from noise-induced hearing loss - Campbell

Faculty Evaluators:  Ania Majewska & John Olschowka

 Nov 28, 2022 @ 4:00 p.m.

NSC 503 Seminars

Johanna Fritzinger - PhD Candidate, Neuroscience Graduate Program

Title:  Investigating Mechanisms that Influence Sound Encoding in the Inferior Colliculus

Faculty Evaluators: DAve MacLean & Adam Snyder

 Nov 21, 2022 @ 4:00 p.m.

 Medical Center | K-207 (2-6408)

POSTPONED Thesis Proposal: Determining the role of pericapillary spaces in the glymphatic system

Michael Giannetto - PhD Candidate, Advisor: Maiken Nedergaard, MD, DMSc

The brain is the most metabolically active organ in the body, yet it lacks a traditional lymphatic system for waste clearance. Instead, the brain utilizes the glymphatic system, a network of fluid filled spaces surrounding blood vessels, termed perivascular spaces (PVSs), which facilitates movement of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) into the brain along arteries and waste clearance out of the brain along veins. Astrocytic endfeet comprise the outer boundary of the PVS and serve as a point of regulation for CSF flow into the brain. CSF flow in pial artery PVSs is well characterized to follow the same direction as blood flow driven by cardiac pulsations, and CSF flow is increased by large arterial dilations associated with neuronal activity. However, the function, and even existence, of the PVS along capillaries remains unclear. Additionally, the physiological function of pericytes, mural cells that cover capillaries, remains controversial. Some groups claim pericytes are important in blood flow regulation while others have demonstrated they are irrelevant to blood flow, but instead could maintain the extracellular matrix and phagocytose waste. Capillaries make up the bulk of vasculature surface area in the brain, with no brain tissue further than 30 micrometers away from a capillary, and capillaries are continuously covered by pericytes. Thus, capillary PVSs and pericytes are well positioned to clear waste but remain understudied. In this proposal, I will determine if there is directional fluid flow in capillary PVSs, test if pericytes contribute to capillary PVS function, and finally test pericyte and capillary PVS function in aging.

In Aim1, I will test the hypothesis that fluid flow in the capillary PVS is directional, following the same direction of blood flow, similar to CSF flow in arterial PVSs. I will utilize in vivo 2-photon imaging of secreted fluorescent protein to label capillary PVSs and measure fluorescent recovery after photobleaching. Aim 2 will test whether pericytes play a role in clearing waste or maintaining the structure of the capillary PVS. I will use approaches developed in Aim 1 combined with inducible genetic manipulations of pericytes to ablate them or impair their phagocytic and cell matrix maintaining functions, then measure capillary PVSs and glymphatic flow. In Aim3, I will test the hypothesis that capillary PVSs and pericyte dysfunction contribute to glymphatic impairment. I will use the same methods to label capillary PVSs to determine if functional fluid flow decreases, the structure of capillary PVSs changes, or pericyte functions decrease in a cohort of aged mice. I will then attempt to rescue pericyte function in aged mice using PDGF-beta supplementation to improve glymphatic function.

Ultimately this project will answer longstanding questions concerning function of pericapillary PVSs and pericytes, and determine their effect on the glymphatic system in normal aging.

 Nov 18, 2022 @ 1:00 p.m.

 Medical Center | Lower Adolph Auditorium (1-7619)

NSC 503 Seminars

MaKenna Cealie; Michael Duhain - PhD Candidate, Neuroscience Graduate Program

Titles:  Tactile feature representation in somatosensory networks - Duhain
Effects of developmental ethanol exposure on cerebellar microglia and purkinje cells - Cealie

Faculty Evaluators:  M. Kerry O'Banion & Jon Mink

 Nov 07, 2022 @ 4:00 p.m.

The Elizabeth Doty Lecture: How Nature and Nurture Conspire to Control Brain Development, Function, and Plasticity

Michael Eldon Greenberg, PhD - Nathan Marsh Pusey Professor, Department of Neurobiology, Harvard Medical School

Sensory experience plays a critical role in shaping the connectivity and function of the central nervous system. These processes are mediated in part by the action of a program of neuronal activity-driven gene expression. Our investigation of these gene expression programs has uncovered important roles in dendritic growth, the development of excitatory and inhibitory synapses, the composition of protein complexes at pre-and post-synaptic sites, and the production of neuropeptides that control neural circuit development and plasticity. Moreover, defects in the activity-dependent gene program contribute to disorders of human cognition. Thus, our study of this transcriptional response promises new insights into neuronal plasticity and disease.

Lecture Flyer - Nov. 2022

 Nov 03, 2022 @ 4:00 p.m.

 Medical Center | Case Method Rm (1-9576)

Host: The Department of Neuroscience and the Del Monte Institute for Neuroscience

PhD Thesis Proposal: A Longitudinal Study of the Impacts of Repetitive Mild Traumatic Brain Injury and Anosmia on Neuroinflammation, Neurodegeneration, and Social Behavior

Bryan Crum - PhD Candidate, Advisor: Julian Meeks, PhD

Of the over 2.5 million estimated annual traumatic brain injuries (TBI) in the United States, approximately 75% fall into the mild TBI (mTBI) category. Of these individuals, one of the highest at-risk populations is adolescents and young adults. Individuals in this population are also at greater risk for sustaining multiple mTBI over his or her lifetime. The occurrence of repetitive mild TBI (rmTBI) has been shown to greatly increase the risk of behavioral and sensory dysfunction. When considering post-TBI sensory dysfunctions, olfactory dysfunction (OD) is one of the most common and can be found in approximately 30% of cases. Prior studies have shown the presence of OD alone in subjects has also been linked to increases in behavioral dysfunctions such as anhedonia, depression, and anxiety. Thus, while previous studies have looked at either rmTBI alone or anosmia alone and focused on either depression alone or anxiety, to my knowledge there has not been a study looking at combined rmTBI with anosmia and the wide array of behavioral dysfunction correlated with each. Based on these findings, I propose anosmia and the subsequent neurodegeneration of the olfactory system play a much larger role in overall neurodegeneration and can be used as an early indicator for behavioral dysfunction. The olfactory system has been shown to be one of the earliest impacted systems in neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s. Thus, as rmTBI has been suggested as a significant risk factor for neurodegenerative disease and dementia, the olfactory system makes logical sense for investigation into the risks posed by rmTBI and anosmia.

I hypothesize that the combined insults of rmTBI and anosmia will produce a significant increase in behavioral deficits and significantly increase levels of neuroinflammation and neurodegeneration. In aim 1, I test the combined effects of rmTBI and anosmia on histological and behavioral outcomes in wild-type mice. In aim 2, I examine how the introduction of pathological tau affects the propagation of neurodegeneration following rmTBI and anosmia and the subsequent effects on histology and behavior in a triple transgenic mouse model. These aims will be accomplished by utilizing a series of behavioral tasks aimed at assessing aggression, depression, anxiety, anhedonia, anosmia, motor function, and spatial memory, a modified weight-drop TBI model for closed skull impact, and novel whole brain imaging. Primarily, this project is designed to elucidate the significant role olfaction plays in overall neuronal health and behavioral outcomes.

 Nov 01, 2022 @ 1:00 p.m.

 Medical Center | Whipple Aud. (2-6424)

NSC 503 Seminars

Dennis Jung; Silei Zhu - PhD Candidate, Neuroscience Graduate Program

Titles:  Head direction analysis and  neural manipulation of corticogeniculate feedback in ferret freely moving visual behaviors - Zhu
Memory-dependent EEG responses in anticipaton of visual distractors in non-human primates - Jung

Faculty Evaluators:  J. Chris Holt & Hphui Xia

 Oct 31, 2022 @ 4:00 p.m.

Neuroscience Young Investigator Extramural Seminar Series: The impacts of environmental inference on human decision-making

Eissa Tahra, PhD - Postdoctoral research associate in Computational Neuroscience, University of Colorado Boulder

 Oct 27, 2022 @ 4:00 p.m.

 Meliora Hall | Room 366

https://events.rochester.edu/event/neuro_yes_-_neuroscience_young_investigator_extramural_seminar_series

Host: Neuroscience Diversity Commission, Center for Visual Science, and Brain and Cognitive Sciences Department

PhD Thesis Proposal: Characterizing the Influence of Trisomy 21 & a History of Traumatic Brain Injury on Cognitive-Motor Interference in Children and Young Adults

Paige Nicklas - PhD Candidate, Advisors: John Foxe, PhD and Ed Freedman, PhD

 Oct 25, 2022 @ 3:00 p.m.

 Medical Center | K-207 (2-6408)

PhD Thesis Proposal: Functional role of extracellular glucose in supporting glymphatic activity

Evan Newbold - PhD Candidate, Advisor: Maiken Nedergaard, MD, DMSc

 Oct 24, 2022 @ 2:30 p.m.

 Medical Center | K-207 (2-6408)

NSC 503 Seminars - Guest Speaker: Diverse regulation and functions of astrocyte reactivity

Michael V. Sofroniew, MD, PhD - Distinguished Professor, University of California at Los Angeles

Astrocytes respond to all forms of central nervous system (CNS) injury and disease with pleiotropic changes referred to as astrocyte reactivity. Although functionally ignored for much of the 20th century, astrocyte reactivity is being revealed as a functionally powerful component of mammalian CNS innate immunity that can influence neurological outcomes in many disorders. Long regarded as a fixed set of homogenous responses, astrocyte reactivity is now emerging as molecularly, structurally and functionally diverse and context dependent. How these diverse responses are regulated in different disorders contexts is not well understood. This seminar will explore the questions of (i) What is astrocyte reactivity and how does it differ in different disorders and contexts? (ii) How are differences transcriptionally regulated? and (iii) What do we know about functions and effects? Evidence will be presented that astrocyte reactivity is molecularly diverse and context dependent, and that primary functions of reactive astrocytes include regulating CNS inflammation, protecting neural tissue, maintaining tissue homeostasis and facilitating wound repair.

 Oct 17, 2022 @ 4:00 p.m.

 Medical Center | K-207 (2-6408)

Host: Neuroscience Graduate Program

Astrocyte dysfunction in Rett syndrome?

Qiang Chang, PhD - Professor, Medical Genetics and Neurology University of Wisconsin-Madison, Director, Waisman Center

Rett syndrome (RTT) is a debilitating neurodevelopmental disorder primarily affecting girls. Mutations in the X-linked methyl-CpG binding protein 2 (MECP2) are found in more than 95% of the patients. Over the last two decades, mice and human pluripotent stem cells (PSCs) engineered to carry Mecp2/MECP2 mutations have been generated for studying the disease mechanisms and developing therapies. At the cellular level, RTT etiology is complex, because MeCP2 is expressed in all cell types in the brain. To fully understand the cellular mechanism of RTT, it is important to study both cell autonomous and non-cell autonomous phenotypes in all relevant brain cell types. The recent focus of the Chang lab has been on the role of astrocytes in RTT disease progression, which will be the topic of this talk.

 Oct 13, 2022 @ 4:00 p.m.

 Medical Center | K-207 (2-6408)

Host: Department of Neuroscience and the Del Monte Institute for Neuroscience

NSC 503 Seminars

Greg Reilly - PhD Candidate, Neuroscience Graduate Program

Title: Neurogenetic Mechanisms Underlying Sexually Dimorphic Behavioral States in C. elegans

Faculty Evaluators:  Pat White & Ross Maddox

 Oct 10, 2022 @ 4:00 p.m.

NSC 503 Seminars

Fei Shang; Jingyi Yang - PhD Candidate, Neuroscience Graduate Program

Titles:
The effect of prolonged hyperglycemia on the mouse retina - Shang
Retinal excitotoxic lesions differentially impact neurons in the ferret dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus - Yang

Faculty Evaluators: 
Julian Meeks & Jesse Schallek

 Oct 03, 2022 @ 4:00 p.m.

Investigating the signaling role of the PPP2R5D-PP2A holoenzyme and its human mutations in the central nervous system - Thesis Proposal

Abigail Sawicki Mayer - PhD Candidate

 Sep 27, 2022 @ 1:00 p.m.

 Medical Center | Ryan Case Method Room (1-9576)

The Mechanistic Effects of Cannabidiol on Microglia States and Amyloid Pathology in an Amyloidosis Mouse Model - Thesis Proposal

Bingyu Sun - PhD Candidate, Advisor: Kuan Wang, PhD

Cannabidiol (CBD) is a major nonpsychoactive component of Cannabis sativa with a range of reported pharmacological effects, including anti-inflammatory and neuroprotective properties. Such properties make CBD a promising cannabinoid drug for treating Alzheimer’s disease (AD), the most common form of dementia accompanied by chronic inflammation and neurodegeneration. Due to the paucity of disease-modifying agents, AD remains a major global health crisis. It is crucial to understand the mechanisms underlying CBD-mediated beneficial effects for developing effective therapeutics for AD. Microglia, the brain-resident immune cells, have long been observed to accumulate near the vicinity of amyloid plaques, a key pathological feature of AD. Microglia are strongly implicated in the genetics of AD as well, supporting the importance of microglia in AD pathogenesis and progression. More recently, transcriptomic studies in an amyloidosis mouse model have identified a unique disease-associated microglial (DAM) gene expression signature in these plaque-associated microglia. Surprisingly, cannabinoid receptor 2 (CB2), a G protein-coupled endocannabinoid receptor, is upregulated in DAM, highlighting the involvement of endocannabinoid signaling in AD pathogenesis. Furthermore, experimental evidence has suggested that CBD ameliorates cognitive deficits in mouse models of AD, raising the question of whether the observed beneficial effect of CBD acts through microglia. Corroborating with this hypothesis, CBD has been shown to promote microglia migration and phagocytosis of amyloid-b deposits in cell culture studies. However, considering the difference of CBD bioavailability between in vitro and in vivo conditions, precisely how CBD impacts microglia response to amyloid pathology in vivo is yet to be defined. To address this gap in knowledge, we will investigate the effect of CBD on microglia pathophysiology in a mouse amyloidosis model using histochemical, pharmacological, and transcriptomic approaches. In particular, the following specific aims are proposed: 1) investigate the impact of CBD on amyloid plaque pathology; 2) characterize how CBD influences microglia-plaque interactions and the dynamics of microglial states in reaction to plaque pathogenesis; and 3) determine the engagement of endocannabinoid signaling in CBD’s effect on microglia. Together, these studies will elucidate the functional relevance of microglia states induced by CBD in amyloid pathogenesis and provide mechanistic insights underlying CBD-mediated effect.

 Sep 27, 2022 @ 11:00 a.m.

 Medical Center | K-307 (3-6408)

NSC 503 Seminars

Cody Mckee; Luke Shaw - PhD Candidate, Neuroscience Graduate Program

Titles:  
Investigating the in vivo role of neuronal PP1β - McKee
Fast prediction in marmoset reach to grasp movement for dynamic prey - Shaw

Faculty Evaluators: 
Doug Portman & Farran Briggs

 Sep 26, 2022 @ 4:00 p.m.

Blind-field visual abilities after occipital stroke: incidence, dynamics, substrates, and consequence for visual rehabilitation - Thesis Proposal

Bryan Redmond - PhD Candidate, Advisor: Krystel Huxlin, PhD

Cortical blindness (CB) is the major consequence of stroke within the occipital lobe. The resultant visual deficit has a profound impact on the quality of life of CB patients. Recent discovery of preserved conscious, visual discrimination abilities within the blind field of subacute (< 6 months post stroke) CB patients sparked new questions about these abilities, their impact on the trainability of CB patients, and the underlying mechanisms and progression over time. This proposal has three Specific Aims: 1) to design and validate a new testing methodology to detect preserved visual abilities across CB visual fields; 2) to contrast the effects of training in subacute CB patients with and without preserved blind-field visual abilities; and 3) to assess if visual preservation predicts the progression of retrograde degeneration. To accomplish these aims, we will develop a more efficient, perimetric, testing methodology for detecting preserved visual abilities in CB blind fields. We will correlate CB patient preservation status with benefit from training on a cued, direction discrimination training task, and finally, we will use optical coherence tomography-derived measurements of the retinal ganglion cell layer complex (RGCC) thickness to assess whether preservation status and training regimen impact progressive thinning of the RGCC. These experiments will test the hypothesis that the presence of visual abilities in subacute CB fields reflects relative preservation of structures in the early visual pathways and greater plastic potential that can be recruited for vision restoration.

 Sep 21, 2022 @ 9:30 a.m.

 Medical Center | K-207 (2-6408)

NSC 503 Seminars

Kathryn Toffolo; Mark Stoessel - PhD Candidate, Neuroscience Graduate Program

Titles:

  • The role of the purinergic P2Y12 receptor in cerebellar microglial dynamics - Stoessel
  • Language development in children with and without Autism Spectrum Disorder - Toffolo

Faculty Evaluators: Kuan Hong Wang & Liz Romanski

 Sep 19, 2022 @ 4:00 p.m.

An acute exercise intervention to ameliorate behavioral and neurophysiological indices of inhibitory control deficits in schizophrenia: A Mobile Brain/Body Imaging (MoBI) study - Thesis Proposal

Tori Popov - PhD Candidate, Advisor: John Foxe, PhD

Cognitive control deficits are a core feature of schizophrenia spectrum disorders (SSDs), with clear manifestations seen in both psychophysiological and electrophysiological measures of these processes. Addressing these symptoms is of critical clinical relevance since they are a main predictor of negative vocational and psychosocial outcomes. An intriguing set of findings has suggested that physical activity and exercise can have a positive effect on SSD symptomatology, but how this intervention modality impacts the neural circuitry responsible for cognitive control functions is yet unknown. The recent emergence of Mobile Brain/Body Imaging (MoBI) technologies has opened exciting new opportunities for neuroscientists seeking to understand the interface between cognition and motoric function, allowing for the successful assessment of cognitive control processes while participants are engaged in multiple forms of physical activity.

The first aim of this study is to assess whether a single acute walking intervention would ameliorate cognitive control deficits in people with SSDs. We first hypothesize that when walking people with SSDs will show improved performance on a canonical response inhibition task compared to sitting and neurodiverse, age-matched healthy control participants. We further hypothesize walking will ameliorate previously well-characterized deficits in inhibitionrelated event-related-potential (ERP) components, with increased N2 and P3 peak amplitudes, compared to sitting and neurodiverse, age-matched healthy control participants. In fact, when walking people with SSDs may portray greater cognitive control, revealed as increased N2 and P3 peak amplitudes compared to the walking condition of neurodiverse, age-matched healthy control participants.

The second aim of this study is to examine the association between the effects of a single acute walking intervention on cognitive control in people with SSDs and patients’ psychosis symptoms. We hypothesize when walking SSD patients with severe negative symptoms will portray significantly greater improvement on a canonical response inhibition task and amelioration of inhibition-related ERP component deficits than SSD patients with mild to moderate negative symptom severity. While the first aim of this study examines the therapeutic potential of walking in alleviating cognitive control deficits in people with SSDs, the second aim will allow for identification of SSD patient groups that may optimally benefit from a single acute walking intervention. Developing an understanding of the underlying neurophysiology of this promising approach will be crucial toward development of objective biomarkers of intervention success in patients with SSDs.

 Sep 16, 2022 @ 1:00 p.m.

 Medical Center | 1-7619 Lower Adolph Auditorium

Investigating the distribution and timing of pre-saccadic modulation across cortical layers in MT and the influence of FEF signals - Thesis Proposal

Amy Bucklaew - PhD Candidate, Advisor: Jude Mitchell, PhD

Attention leads eye movements producing perceptual enhancements at the saccade targets immediately prior to saccades (Deubel and Schneider, 1996; Kowler et al, 1995; Rolfs and Carrasco, 2012). Presaccadic attention has been related to enhanced neural responses before saccades made into a neuron’s receptive field, but much remains unknown about the underlying neural pathway. There is evidence that the pre-saccadic enhancements seen in extra-striate cortex are triggered by signals from the saccadic control center, FEF (Moore and Armstrong 2003). Here we’re specifically interested in the laminar distributions and timing of pre-saccadic enhancements and how FEF cortical feedback projections influence these factors. To accomplish this, we will be utilizing laminar recording arrays in marmosets to record neuronal populations from area MT/MTC. Preliminary data support that we are able to distinguish between cortical layers and make cell class distinctions using linear arrays. Based on the distribution of FEF feedback to MT/MTC, we expect to see higher and earlier modulation due to presaccadic attention in the superficial and deep layers in area MT/MTC. Furthermore, I propose to investigate FEF’s role in pre-saccadic attention effects seen in MT/MTC by utilizing optogenetic manipulation (AAC-DLX-ChR2 virus) to reversibly inactivate FEF in brief 25 ms pulses with random timing before saccades. We expect to see decreased pre-saccadic enhancements in MT/MTC when light stimulation occurs in the 100ms preceding the saccade coincident with the period of motor build-up activity in FEF. These experiments will shed light on the micro- (cell class distribution and laminar distinctions) and macro- (FEF feedback) level of the circuitry controlling pre-saccadic attention.

 Sep 15, 2022 @ 12:00 p.m.

 Medical Center | 1-7619 Lower Adolph Auditorium

NSC 503 Seminars: M3 mAChR regulates EVS-mediated slow excitation in irregular-vestibular afferents

Anjali Sinha - PhD Candidate, Neuroscience Graduate Program

Faculty Evaluators:  Julie Fudge & Ed Lalor

 Sep 12, 2022 @ 4:00 p.m.

The role of MKK4 and MKK7 glaucomatous neurodegeneration - PhD Thesis Proposal

Sarah Yablonski - PhD Candidate, Advisor: Rick Libby

Glaucoma is a neurodegenerative disease characterized by death of retinal ganglion cells (RGCs), the output neurons of the retina. The main risk factors for developing glaucoma are age and elevated intraocular pressure (IOP). Current glaucoma therapies are only capable of lowering intraocular pressure, but this does not always halt disease progression. To develop improved therapies, it is important to understand the mechanisms underlying glaucomatous neurodegeneration of RGCs. In glaucoma, an initial insult is thought to occur to the RGC axons as they exit the eye to form the optic nerve. Multiple studies have shown that after this glaucomatous insult, the compartments of RGCs (soma, axon, and dendrites) degenerate via distinct molecular pathways. For example, the transcription factors JUN and DDIT3 were shown to be critical hubs for regulating somal degeneration after glaucomatous insult, but not dendritic or axonal degeneration. Nevertheless, it remains unknown how RGC axonal injury triggers downstream degenerative pathways and whether there may be a common upstream molecular regulator of degeneration for all RGC compartments. The MAP2Ks, MKK4 and MKK7, control activation of JUN and are indirectly capable of activating DDIT3. Therefore, they are ideal candidates for upstream activators controlling degeneration of all RGC compartments. Recent work in our lab using mechanical injury to RGC axons showed that dual deficiency of Mkk4 and Mkk7 protected RGC somas, axons, and dendrites as well as bulk RGC activity following injury. These findings suggest that MKK4 and MKK7 may be the upstream regulators controlling somal, dendritic, and axonal degeneration following a glaucomatous insult. However, it is unknown whether MKK4 and MKK7 are important for synaptic structure, metabolism, and RGC firing rates- all of which are believed to be altered during glaucoma pathogenesis. Additionally, it is unclear whether deficiency of Mkk4 and Mkk7 will provide similar levels of protection in an ocular hypertensive mouse model (which experiences IOP-dependent, age-related, and asynchronous RGC degeneration in a manner that more closely resembles human glaucoma). To address these questions, the importance of MKK4 and MKK7 in maintaining RGC structure and function will be investigated after multiple glaucoma-relevant insults. Specifically, the following specific aims are proposed: 1) determine if dual deficiency of Mkk4 and Mkk7 protects RGC health and function after axonal insult; and 2) determine the role of MKK4 and MKK7 in a mouse model of ocular hypertension. Together, these studies not only will provide additional information about the molecular roles of MKK4 and MKK7 in RGCs, but could also help provide new treatment targets for glaucoma.

 Jul 19, 2022 @ 11:00 a.m.

 Medical Center | Ryan Case Method Room: 1-9576

Host: Neuroscience Graduate Program

Linking attentional modulation to neuronal feature-selectivity in macaque V1 - PhD Thesis Defense

Shraddha Shah - PhD Candidate, Advisor: Farran Briggs, PhD

Our brains can focus on the most critical information using attentional processes, according us the ability to locate our car keys amidst clutter or hold a conversation in noisy settings.  Accordingly, attention enhances behaviorally relevant information by modulating multiple aspects among groups of neurons.  My thesis research aimed at determining general principles that might dictate attentional modulation of specific neurons and neuronal circuits.

Macaque V1 is an excellent candidate structure in which to ask mechanistic questions about attentional processes because we have a detailed understanding of its structural and functional organization.  We suggest that attentional processes may piggyback onto the feature-specific functional architecture in V1, and hypothesize that the brain can flexibly attend to different features by modulating neuronal activity specifically for neurons tuned for the task-relevant (attended) feature.  In the first study, I demonstrated that robust attentional effects can be measured in the macaque V1, comparable to effect sizes in human neuroimaging studies (Shah et al, 2021), establishing the macaque V1 as a reliable model system for studying neuronal mechanisms of visual attention.

In the second study, I investigated the role of anatomical connectivity in guiding attention-mediated changes of correlated variability.  Our research revealed that attentional modulation of interneuronal variability exhibits strikingly different patterns across neurons with distinct connectivity - 1) attention specifically decorrelated neuronal spikes among neurons monosynaptically connected via an excitatory synapse and encoding task-relevant information, 2) attention led to an increase in interneuronal correlations among neurons monosynaptically connected via an inhibitory synapse, which exhibited high correlated variability independent of attention.

In the third study, I conducted a rigorous test of the hypothesis that attentional modulation of neurons depends on neuronal feature-selectivity, especially for task-relevant features.  Monkeys were trained to perform multiple attention-demanding tasks requiring different visual feature discriminations.  A thorough comparison of the relationships between attentional modulation of neuronal firing rates in each attention task, the task-relevant feature, and the feature-selectivity of neurons was conducted.  Our results so far reveal that different attention tasks recruit distinct functional subpopulations of neurons, diverging in multidimensional feature-selectivity.

 Jul 06, 2022 @ 11:00 a.m.

 Medical Center | Ryan Case Method Rm (1-9576)

Host: The Neuroscience Graduate Program

PhD Thesis Defense: Protective mechanisms in Naked Mole Rat CNS: roles of extracellular matrix and astroglia

Frances (Fara) Tolibzoda Zakusilo - PhD Candidate, Advisors: Vera Gorbunova, PhD and Kerry O'Banion, MD/Phd

The role of extracellular components in the aging phenotype is not well understood. A longliving rodent, Naked Mole Rat (NMR), presents as a salient model of healthy aging. Previous findings in our lab have identified extracellular matrix (ECM) component hyaluronic acid (HA) asan important contributor to the exceptional resilience of NMR to aging associated disease, suchas cancer and degenerative conditions. Our lab designed a high-molecular weight HA (HMW-HA)mouse model (nmrHas2;Cre mice) to mimic the major component of NMR ECM. Pilot data indicated that nmrHas2;Cre mice display significant increase in longevity (~5-15%) and resilienceto oncology. We, however, were not able to see a rescue of memory decline, degeneration, andinflammation associated with aging in these transgenic mice. To test the effect of HMW-HA inAlzheimer’s Disease (AD) we generated nmrHas2;Cre x MAPT/P301S double transgenic mice. These mice failed to show reduction in degeneration and inflammation, but as part of this work,we discovered that HA distribution appears to be distorted in AD as compared to healthy adult(10-months-old, 10mo) and aged (~24mo) mice, which points at HA as an intriguing diagnostictool for this neurodegenerative disease.

Since HA is deposited by multiple cells in the brain, we decided to parse apart the effect of thepolymer for a number of cell types. We purified NMR neurons, OPCs, and astroglia and assessedtheir HA profile. OPCs had the least amount of HA, followed by neurons, with astroglia culturemedia having the greatest abundance of HA. We checked if there was a correlation with resilience to stress and discovered that although astroglia were most resilient to reactive oxidative species (ROS), the correlation did not hold for other cells. That made us question therole of HA in ROS stress, one of the major contributors to aging, and look deeper into what mechanisms underly NMR astroglia’s resilience. In addition to NMR, we optimized astroglial cultures from mice and degus, rodents hypothesized to be a natural model for AD developmentwith age, and obtained human fetal astrocytes to perform a comparative study. Interestingly, human cells showed the greatest susceptibility to ROS stress compared to other species, withNMR showing greatest survival among all four. RNA sequencing analysis helped us uncover metabolism related differences between the species, where human astroglia appeared to bemost dependent on glycolysis compared to others. We have been able to significantly increasesurvival post ROS exposure in human cells by subjecting them to ketogenic and reduced nutrient media, which supports the notion of the importance of metabolic state in resilience tooxidative damage. Taken together, this work suggests that there are cell specific mechanisms inthe NMR CNS that allow for their exceptional resilience to the diseases associated with aging.

 May 25, 2022 @ 11:00 a.m.

 Medical Center | Ryan Case Methods Room (1-9576)

Host: the Neuroscience Graduate Program

NSC 503 Seminars

Alexis Fiedler; Mark Osabutey - PhD Candidate

Faculty Evaluators:  Martina Poletti, Jude Mitchell

Student Moderator:  Amy Bucklaew

 May 09, 2022 @ 4:00 p.m.

PhD Defense: c-Cbl Inhibition in Glioblastoma Multiforme: A Pathway Analysis

Neal Shah, MS - PhD Candidate, Advisor: Mark Noble, PhD

 May 09, 2022 @ 10:00 a.m.

 Medical Center | Ryan Case Method Room

Host: The Neuroscience Graduate Program

NSC 503 Seminars

Lia Calcinez Rodruiguez; Julia Granato - PhD Candidate

Titles: The effect of postnatal 17β-estradiol-mediated masculinization on microglial activation and spine density post-cranial irradiation - Rodriguez
Characterizing microglia in a mouse model of Fragile X Syndrome - Granato

Faculty Evaluators:  Ruchira Singh, Marissa Sobolewski

Student Moderator:  Jay Gonzalez-Amoretti

 May 02, 2022 @ 4:00 p.m.

Annual Neuroscience Retreat

Lorenz Studer, MD - Keynote Speaker, Director for the Center for Stem Cell Biology Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

We are pleased to announce that the Neuroscience Retreat will be occurring this year on Friday, April 29th, 2022 at the Memorial Art Gallery.

In an effort to avoid cancellation, we are limiting the number of attendees by 50% of our usual attendance, and renting even more space within the gallery. We hope that with the ability to social distance and hopefully the decline of COVID in the upcoming months we can finally have an in person celebration of Neuroscience.

 Apr 29, 2022 @ 8:30 a.m.

 Memorial Art Gallery | 

PhD Defense: Protein phosphatase 1 isoforms differentially regulate synaptic transmission and plasticity

Karl Foley, MS - PhD Candidate, Advisor: Houhui Xia, MSc, PhD

 Apr 26, 2022 @ 2:00 p.m.

 Medical Center | Ryan Case Method

Host: The Neuroscience Graduate Program

NSC 503 Seminars

Catalina Guzman; Leslie Gonzalez - PhD Candidate

Faculty Evaluators:  Ian Fiebelkorn, Greg DeAngelis

Student Moderator:  Matt Adusei

 Apr 25, 2022 @ 4:00 p.m.

PhD Defense: Amygdala-Prefrontal Circuits Implicated in Expression Perception

Keshov Sharma, MS - PhD Candidate, Mentors: Liz Romanski, PhD; Julie Fudge, MD

Facial and vocal expressions are a fundamental component of communication in primates. Accurate interpretation of an expression is a critical social function that relies on brain networks involved in face and vocal perception, multisensoryintegration, and emotion. In macaques, viewing an expression engages areas within the occipital and temporal lobes, the amygdala, the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), and ventrolateral prefrontal cortex (VLPFC). While previous studies of macaque facial and auditory processing have focused on the temporal cortex, this thesis expands our understanding of amygdala and prefrontal contributions to expression perception through precise anatomical analysis of amygdala projections to the prefrontal cortex as well as investigation of population level dynamics of VLPFC neuronal responses to naturalistic expressions. As background for the thesis aims, neural tracer injections were made across theACC. The intermediate subdivision of the basal nucleus (Bi) and magnocellular division of the accessory basal nucleus were identified as a specific source of inputs to the ACC from the amygdala. The isolation of the Bi as a specific sourceof amygdala output to the ACC prompted investigation of the specificity of amygdala-prefrontal projections to another location: the VLPFC. In the first thesis aim, combinatorial analysis of retrograde and anterograde projections from the VLPFC and amygdala, respectively, revealed that the Bi is a specific source of amygdala input to the VLPFC, similar to the ACC. These results provide evidence for a direct anatomical pathway underlying the functional coactivation of the amygdala and VLPFC during expression perception. The second aim investigated the role of the VLPFC in the processing of social stimuli using neurophysiology in awake, behaving macaques. Neural activity was recorded from the VLPFC, using multi-electrode arrays, while subjects viewed audiovisual movies of three distinct naturalistic expressions from three different conspecifics. Analysis revealed that single neurons rarely encoded identity or expression independently, typically having complex, non-linear responses to different identity-expression combinations. While ANOVA analysis revealed main effects of expression and identity on single neuron firing rates, decoding of single cell firing rates resulted in low decoding accuracy of expression and identity. Combined as a pseudo-population, decoding accuracy for both variables increased as a function of VLPFC population size, with identity increasing faster than expression. Pseudo-population decoding across the response time resulted in early and sustained identity decoding accuracy compared to expression. Principle component analysis of the mean population response to each stimulus revealed that population responses to the same identity were closer in the response space and followed similar trajectories over time, facilitatingseparation of population responses by identity. These results indicate that VLPFC activity in response to naturalistic expressions is non-linear and temporally dynamic; that information about expression and identity is readily available at the population level during expression perception; and show that identity is the dominant categorical variable in the natural structure of VLPFC neural activity during expression perception.

 Apr 21, 2022 @ 11:00 a.m.

 Medical Center | K-207 (2-6408)

Host: Neuroscience Graduate Program

PhD Defense: Variations in neuronal population activity across behaviors, brain regions, and disease

Uday Chockanathan, MS - PhD Candidate, Mentor: Krishnan Padmanabhan, Ph.D.

Although it is generally accepted that perception, cognition, and behavior arise from the collective activity of groups of neurons in the brain, only recently has it become possible to record from these large populations of neurons in awake behaving animals. As a result of these experimental advances, two critical challenges have emerged: how do we design and perform novel experiments that allow us to study the activity of these populations, and what new analytical and computational methods can be drawn upon to study this activity. To address these questions, I developed novel experimental methods for recording from large populations of neurons and applied cutting edge approaches from statistics and physics to show how this population activity varies across behaviors, brain regions, and disease states. First, I demonstrated that running is associated with an increase in the dimensionality of population activity in the main olfactory bulb (MOB) (Chockanathan and Warner et al. 2021, J. Neurophys.). Second, I showed how the diversity, or entropy, of patterns of population activity in dorsal CA1 hippocampus, was diminished in the APP/PS1 model of amyloid beta (Aβ) pathology (Chockanathan et al. 2020, Sci. Rep.), suggesting a potential truncation of the neural “vocabulary” available to represent memories or percepts in Alzheimer disease (AD). Third, I compared the properties of population activity between dorsal CA1 and ventral CA1 as mice navigated a virtual reality environment and showed that dorsal CA1 had a larger spatial information content of neural populations than ventral CA1 (Chockanathan et al. 2021, eNeuro). Fourth, I showed that population activity in dorsal and ventral CA1 is differentially affected in APP/PS1 mice. While dorsal CA1 patterns are more dominated by pairwise interactions, ventral CA1 patterns are less bound by pairwise interactions, suggesting that effects of Aβ pathology are heterogeneous across different brain regions. Taken together, my work demonstrates novel approaches to analyzing population activity across different brain regions that offer insights into behavior and stimulus representations. These approaches allowed me to link mechanisms of disease pathology to behavior through the intermediary of neural activity.

 Apr 19, 2022 @ 1:00 p.m.

 Medical Center | Ryan Case Method Room (1-9576)

Host: Neuroscience Graduate Program

NSC 503 Seminars

Sean Lydon; Estephanie Balbuena - PhD Candidate

Titles:  MKK4 and MKK7 regulate glaucomatous neurogeneration independent of JUM and DDIT3 - Lydon
Cerebral spinal fluid-arginine vasopressin impacts on glymphatic function - Balbuena

Faculty Evaluators:  Dragony Fu, David Dodell-Feder

Student Moderator:  Caitlin Sharp

 Apr 18, 2022 @ 4:00 p.m.

NSC 503 Seminars

Bryan Redmond; Thomas Delgado - PhD Candidate

Titles:Transglutaminase 2 modulates the response of astrocytes to injury and their ability to support neurons - Delgado
Fundus versus pupil-controlled fixation: impact on visual sensitivity changes in V1-damaged patients - Redmond

Faculty Evaluators:  Vera Gorbunova, Suzanne Haber

Student Moderator:  MaKenna Cealie

 Apr 11, 2022 @ 4:00 p.m.

 Medical Center | K-307 (3-6408)

NSC 503 Guest Speaker: Semantic integration of linguistic stimuli in individuals with Autism

Emily Coderre, PhD - Assistant Professor, Univ. of Vermont

Bio:

Dr. Coderre studies the cognitive neuroscience of language using neuroimaging techniques such as electroencephalography (EEG) and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Her research examines the cognitive processes underlying language in both typically-developing populations and in special population such as bilinguals and individuals with autism. She is particularly interested in how we understand the meaning of language during word, sentence, and narrative comprehension, and in how such understanding is impaired in autism. Her work aims to better understand the mechanisms of language deficits in autism in order to design more effective treatment interventions.

Abstract:

Individuals with autism spectrum disorder(ASD) often have difficulties with integratingthe meaning, or semantics, of stimuli. Thesedifficulties with semantic integration may play acentral role in the well-documented difficultieswith language comprehension among many ofthese individuals. However, some research hassuggested that individuals with ASD do not havedifficulties integrating the meaning of non-linguistic stimuli like pictures. This asymmetricpattern of difficulties between linguistic andnon-linguistic modalities suggests potentialalterations in semantic processing mechanismsthat are specific to language, rather thanarising from a domain-general alteration insemantic processing more generally. In this talkI will present several studies comparing thesemantic integration of linguistic stimuli (i.e.,written words) and non-linguistic stimuli (i.e.,pictures) between individuals with ASD andtypically developing individuals. These studiesmake use of various imaging techniques,including electroencephalography (EEG) andfunctional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI),to pinpoint the precise timecourse and neuralconnectivity patterns that characterizesemantic integration processes acrossmodalities in individuals with ASD.

Student Moderator:  Kathryn Toffolo

 Apr 04, 2022 @ 4:00 p.m.

Host: The Neuroscience Graduate Program

Diversity Matters (for seeing and hearing)

Lisa Goodrich, PhD - Professor of Neurobiology, Harvard Medical School

Spiral ganglion neurons (SGNs), the primary sensory neurons of the inner ear, have quite simple bipolar shapes. Although grossly similar in morphology, SGNs vary in their intrinsic properties, with some showing low spontaneous firing rates and others showing much higher spontaneous firing rates, likely improving the ability to detect sounds across a wide dynamic range and in a noisy environment. Retinal neurons, on the other hand, are celebrated for their diverse shapes, particularly evident in the amacrine cells, a population of interneurons that modulate the flow of information from the photoreceptors to the retinal ganglion cells, which are the primary sensory neurons for vision. Whereas sound frequency dictates order in the cochlea, in the retina, neurons are organized by identity, with subtypes of neurons forming cell-type specific microcircuits within defined regions of the neuropil. Although cochlear and retinal circuits are obviously different in many ways, they are somehow created using the same basic sets of molecules and cellular mechanisms that operate across the developing nervous system. We use molecular genetic approaches in the mouse to understand how different types of neural circuits are assembled, investigating both the cellular mechanisms and the molecular mechanisms.

 Mar 31, 2022 @ 4:00 p.m.

 Medical Center | Upper Auditorium (3-7619)

Host: University of Rochester Flaum Eye Institute Basic Science Seminar Series (Co-sponsored by Department of Otolaryngology)

NSC 503 Seminars

Ari Seldowitz; Yanya Ding - PhD Candidate

Titles: Neurophysiology of auditory processing in a mouse model of Batten Disease - Ding
Interactions of major unitary proteins and steroids in murine social chemosensation - Seldowitz

Faculty Evaluators:  Margot Mayer-Pröschel, Jean Bidlack

Student Moderator:  Sarah Yablonski

 Mar 28, 2022 @ 4:00 p.m.

Thesis Proposal: Secondary insults and the brain: Contribution of peripheral infection to neuropathology in ataxia telangiectasia (AT)

Maleelo Shamambo - PhD Candidate, Advisor: Margot Mayer-Proschel, Ph.D.

 Mar 23, 2022 @ 9:00 a.m.

Virtual

Host: The Neuroscience Graduate Program

NSC 503 Seminars

Paige Nicklas; Abigail Sawicki - PhD Candidate

Titles: Trisomy 21 and Brain Injury: MoBI Exploration of Cognitive-Motor Integration - Nicklas
Investigating how de novo mutations in ppp2r5d effect neurons and oligodendrocytes - Sawicki

Faculty Evaluators:  Duje Tadin, Benjamin Suarez-Jimenez

Student Moderator:  Jo Fritzinger

 Mar 21, 2022 @ 4:00 p.m.

NSC 503 Guest Speaker: What do Astrocytes (Really) do?

Shane Liddlelow, PhD - Asst. Professor, NYU Langone Health

Astrocytes are the most abundant cells in themammalian central nervous system (CNS). They areintegral to brain and spinal-cord physiology andperform many functions important for normalneuronal development, synapse formation, andproper propagation of action potentials. We stillknow very little, however, about how thesefunctions change in response to immune attack,chronic neurodegenerative disease, or acutetrauma.

Our work focuses on the mechanisms that inducedifferent forms of reactive astrocytes, and howthese reactive cells interact with other cells in theCNS in a positive or negative way. We use highthroughput single cell and bulk RNA sequencing, andspatial transcriptomics to investigate theheterogeneity of astrocytes in multiple species. Wealso take advantage of genetic engineering andmodern in vitro modeling to interrogate diseasemechanisms and interaction with other CNS cellsthat change between health and disease. We aim toapply this knowledge to reactive astrocytes inhuman disease, and believe that the discovery ofastrocytes with different reactive states hasimportant implications for the development of newtherapies for CNS injury and diseases.

Ultimately, we aim to provide a morecomprehensive understanding of what astrocytesdo in disease and how we might ameliorate diseaseby targeting astrocytes
.

 Mar 14, 2022 @ 4:00 p.m.

Host: The Neuroscience Graduate Program

PhD Defense: The ins and outs of the primate amygdala: connectivity gradients, development, and early life stress

Alexandra McHale, MS - PhD Candidate, Mentor: Julie Fudge, MD

The amygdala, a heterogeneous collection of nuclei, plays a fundamental role in processing emotions. In primates, the basal amygdala nucleus is massively modulated by the prefrontal cortex and insula, and influences motivated behaviors through its striatal outputs. In Aim 1, I examined the complexity of cortical inputs and striatal outputs of the basal nucleus, and cortical inputs to the amygdalo-recipient ("limbic") striatum. Using tract tracing techniques, I found that cortical cytoarchitecture shaped the strength and complexity of cortical projections into the basal nucleus. Agranular cortical areas formed broad, "foundational" projections throughout the basal nucleus, while increasingly differentiated cortical areas sent more restricted, overlapping inputs to specific basal nucleus subregions. Direct cortical inputs to the "limbic" striatum also followed similar rules, with agranular cortices projecting throughout, and increasingly differentiated cortices overlapping these inputs in restricted regions. Thus, the basal nucleus, and the "limbic" striatum it innervates, receive predictable, "connectivity fingerprints" from the cortex.

The organization of "connectivity fingerprints" in the basal nucleus might have origins in development. In humans, the basal nucleus adds neurons through early life; these neurons are thought to originate in the surrounding paralaminar nucleus (PL), which contains immature, post-mitotic neurons. In Aim 2, I compared numbers of immature (doublecortin, DCX+) and mature (non-DCX+) neurons, and their cellular features, in infant and adolescent primate PL. Infant PL had more immature neurons and fewer mature neurons compared to adolescent PL, suggesting cellular maturation between infancy and adolescence. In Aim 3, I examined effects of maternal deprivation on DCX+ and non-DCX+ PL neurons in infant primates. There were no differences in DCX+ or non-DCX+ PL neuron counts between maternally-deprived and control infants. However, tbr-1 expression (a late-appearing gene transcript in glutamatergic precursors) and mature neuron number were positively correlated across animals, with lower levels in maternally deprived versus control, suggesting cellular growth delay in maternally deprived infant PL. In these studies, I found that connectivity of basal nucleus networks is more complex and highly organized than previously recognized. In addition, development and early life stress influence cellular growth in the surrounding PL/basal nucleus, potentially influencing the construction of neuronal circuits.

 Mar 09, 2022 @ 1:00 p.m.

Host: Neuroscience Graduate Program

NSC 503 Seminars

Dennisha King; Evan Newbold - PhD Candidate

Titles:  The role of the microglia in the paralaminar nucleus of the amygdala during development in Rhesus Macaques - King
Delivery potential of the glymphatic system - Newbold

Faculty Evaluators:  Ed Freedman, Marc Schieber

Student Moderator:  Michael Duhain

 Feb 28, 2022 @ 4:00 p.m.

PhD Defense: Linking olfaction and locomotion in mice

Emily Warner Crosier, MS - PhD Candidate, Mentor: Krishnan Padmanabhan, Ph.D.

 Feb 28, 2022 @ 1:00 p.m.

Flyer

Host: Neuroscience Graduate Program

NSC 503 Seminars

Bryan Crum; Mike Gianetto - PhD Candidate

Titles:  "Aquaporin 4’s role in glymphatic function" - Giannetto
"Investigation of traumatic brain injury induced anosmia in a mouse model" - Crum

Faculty Evaluators:  Krishnan Padmanabhan, Mark Noble

Student Moderator:  Mark Stossel

 Feb 21, 2022 @ 4:00 p.m.

PhD Thesis Defense: Redox-Fyn-c-Cbl (RFC) pathway regulates O-2A/OPC cell cycle exit and differentiation by thyroid hormone and negative regulation of the RFC pathway during early OPC development

Yunpeng Pang, MS - PhD Candidate, Mentor: Mark Noble, PhD

Thyroid hormone (TH) plays an important role in the development of the central nervous system (CNS). Inparticular, TH signal is critical for the differentiation of oligodendrocyte precursor cells (O-2A/OPCs) intooligodendrocytes, which myelinate the CNS. Although gene regulations by TH and TH receptors have been thefocus of the field, it is still not clear how does TH drive cell cycle exit in dividing OPCs. Previous work from theNoble laboratory revealed that intracellular redox status is a central regulator of OPC fate decisions between celldivision and differentiation. Here, we report the critical role of c-Cbl, a tumor suppressor protein, in regulating thecell cycle exit of dividing OPCs in response to TH signal via the redox-Fyn-c-Cbl (RFC) pathway. In particular, wefound that treatment of TH in vitro leads to increased intracellular reactive oxygen species (ROS) production andsuperactivation of c-Cbl, downregulation of multiple targets of c-Cbl including PDGFRa, and subsequently leadingto OPC cell cycle exit. We found that c-Cbl is required for TH-driven downregulation of multiple c-Cbl targets andcell cycle proteins, as well as OPC cell cycle exit. Additionally, we found that other glial differentiation signalsincluding TGF-β and BMP4 converge on the activation of the RFC pathway and that they similarly requiregeneration of ROS to drive OPC cell cycle exit. We also found that in vivo injection of TH in a hypothyroid modelresulted in c-Cbl superactivation and led to downregulating of c-Cbl target PDGFRa, suggesting that activation ofthe RFC pathway is relevant in an in vivo setting.
The RFC pathway is also carefully regulated during early development and we uncovered two mechanisms bywhich c-Cbl superactivation can be dampened to allow proliferation of OPCs during development despiteoxidation and ROS signaling by prodifferentation factors. First, growth factors such as NT3 decreased the ability ofROS generation by TH. Secondly, we found that bioactive lipid sphingosine-1 phosphate (S1P) induced inhibitorycomplex formation between c-Cbl and β-pix. Intriguingly, in early embryonic human fetal derived OPCs we foundthe inhibitory complex between c-Cbl and beta-pix exist and prevented TH induced c-Cbl superactivation and cellcycle exit by TH. Here, we investigated whether the c-Cbl/β-pix inhibitory complex is required for embryonichuman OPCs to resist TH-induced c-Cbl superactivation and found that both pharmacological inhibition ofupstream regulators of β-pix and genetic knockdown of β-pix itself released the negative control of c-Cblsuperactivation and allowed embryonic human OPCs to response to TH, leading to cell cycle exit and acceleratedof OL generation. Our findings provide a novel molecular architecture of c-Cbl superactivation via the RFCpathway as well as negative regulation of c-Cbl superactivation. Together these mechanisms help to shed light onthe potentially critical role of c-Cbl in the development of glial progenitors in the CNS.

 Feb 15, 2022 @ 2:00 p.m.

Flyer

Host: Neuroscience Graduate Program

NSC 503 Guest Speaker: Dr. Andre Fenton

Andre Fenton, PhD - Professor, NYU

Professor of Neural Science
NYU

I study how brains store experiences as memories, and how the expression of knowledge activates information that is relevant without activating what is irrelevant. My laboratory uses molecular, electrophysiological, behavioral, engineering, and theoretical methods to investigate these fundamental and interrelated issues in neuroscience.

In work with  laboratory, we identified protein kinase M zeta (PKMzeta) as a key molecular component of long term memory. PKMζ is a persistently active kinase that maintains enhanced electrical communication at the synapses between neurons. We discovered PKMζ's role in long-term memory storage by infusing ZIP, a selective inhibitor of PKMζ, into specific brain areas. Long-term memory for a particular place was erased after infusing ZIP into hippocampus a day, even a month after rats learned a place avoidance task. Importantly, ZIP did not alter baseline synaptic activity nor did it impair the rat's ability to relearn and remember the same information if it was retrained after the erasure. Subsequent work has shown that PKMζ is involved in memory storage in many parts of the brain. Our initial work on PKMζ and memory was selected as one of the ten "Breakthroughs of the Year 2006" by the editors of Science, and received substantial attention in the popular media, including the . We are continuing to study PKMζ's role in the synaptic organization of memory and in maintaining memory-related brain activity.

Neural coordination
We are investigating the role of the hippocampus in controlling how we choose relevant information to process, by studying the interaction of memories and neural activity in signaling information from multiple spatial frames. While rats and mice solve problems that require using relevant information and ignoring distractions, we make recordings from multiple sites and use computational tools to decode information from these recordings about cognitive variables like current location, memory, attention, and cognitive control. Evidence from this work suggests that neural activity is exquisitely coordinated on multiple time scales from milliseconds to minutes, so that neurons that represent the same information discharge together in time, but are desynchronized when representing conflicting information. We are studying specific disturbances of this neural coordination in rat and mouse models of schizophrenia, intellectual disability, autism, depression, epilepsy, and traumatic brain injury.

Recording electrical brain activity
We have developed an inexpensive, miniature, wireless digital device for recording electrical brain activity from rats that have spontaneous seizures and abnormalities of neural coordination. By making recordings that last days to weeks, we can characterize abnormalities in the coordinated electrical activity that leads up to seizures. Our goal is to learn whether this activity underlies cognitive impairments, and whether behavioral and pharmacological interventions can attenuate the neural and cognitive abnormalities. Together with business and engineering partners, we have developed our brain-recording technology for medical applications.

Student Moderator:  Uday Chockanathan

 Feb 14, 2022 @ 4:00 p.m.

PhD Qualifying Exam: TBA

Caitlin Sharpe - PhD Candidate

ABSTRACT

Schizophrenia is a psychotic disorder that affects millions of people worldwide. Although antipsychotic medications are widely used as an effective treatment for many psychosis symptoms, these medications do little to alleviate the cognitive impairments and visual perceptual distortions commonly found in this population. Long-term aerobic exercise is one intervention that has been shown to improve cognitive abilities in individuals with schizophrenia. However, the impact of aerobic exercise on visual processing in schizophrenia has not yet been studied and the exact extent to which aerobic exercise may improve executive function and visual perception in this population remains unclear. Assessing changes in neural activity during exercise in response to visual stimuli may allow us to simultaneously examine both the therapeutic potential of walking in this population and the neurobiological basis of these effects. The current project will accomplish this using mobile brain/body imaging (MoBI) which allows synchronous collection of electrophysiological, kinematic, and behavioral data. The first aim of this study is to assess whether an acute walking intervention may ameliorate cognitive and visual perceptual deficits in people with schizophrenia. We hypothesize that walking will improve executive function and alleviate visual perceptual abnormalities. Specifically, electrophysiological deficits in visual processing pathways will be reduced in patients while walking and participants with a schizophrenia spectrum disorder will experience more cognitive and perceptual benefits from walking than healthy controls. The second aim of this project is to assess the association between effects of walking on visual perception in individuals with schizophrenia and patients’ psychosis symptoms. We predict that patients reporting greater negative symptoms will demonstrate increased visual processing abnormalities at rest and a greater amelioration of these deficits while walking compared to patients reporting fewer negative symptoms. While the first aim of this study assesses the therapeutic potential of walking in alleviating cognitive and visual perceptual abnormities in schizophrenia, the second aim will allow us to identify sets of patients that may benefit maximally from this treatment.  

 Feb 09, 2022 @ 1:30 p.m.

Host: Neuroscience Graduate Program

NSC 503 Seminars

Jay Gonzalez-Amoretti; Amy Bucklaew - PhD Candidate

Titles:  Comparison of visual tuning and pre-saccadic attention modulaton between area MT and MTC - Bucklaew
Identifying populaton codes in prefrontal cortex involved in spatial and feature-based attention - Gonzalez-Amoretti

Faculty Evaluators:  Keith Nehrke, Jennifer Hunter

Student Moderator:  Dennis Jung

 Feb 07, 2022 @ 4:00 p.m.

NSC 503 Seminars

Lelo Shamambo; Tori Popov - PhD Candidate

Titles:  How does peripheral infection affect neurologic pathology in Ataxia Telangiectasia (AT)? - Popov
The Effect of An Acute Walking Intervention On Response Inhibition In Individuals With A Schizophrenia Spectrum Disorder - Shamambo

Faculty Evaluators:  Anne Luebke, Chris Pröschel

Student Moderator:  Silei Zhu

 Jan 31, 2022 @ 4:00 p.m.

NSC 503 Seminars

Dennis Jung; Bingyu Sun - PhD Candidate

Titles:  Ensemble-level neural correlates of visual working memory from the local field potentials recorded from the LPFC of non-human primates - Sun
The effect of cannabidiol on microglia in 5xFAD mouse model - Jung

Faculty Evaluators:  Paul Kammermeier, Amy Kiernan

Student Moderator:  Fei Shang

 Jan 24, 2022 @ 4:00 p.m.

NSC 503 Seminars

Fara Zakusilo; Alesha Usuki - PhD Candidate

Faculty Evaluators:  Ken Henry, Manual Gomez-Ramirez

Student Moderator:  Emily Przysinda

 Jan 10, 2022 @ 4:00 p.m.