TopicNeuro

microscopy

36 Seminars26 ePosters4 Positions

Latest

PositionNeuroscience

Prof Yao Chen

Washington University School of Medicine
Saint Louis, MO, USA
Jan 4, 2026

Dr. Yao Chen’s Laboratory in the Department of Neuroscience at Washington University School of Medicine is seeking a motivated and curious scientist for a full-time staff scientist position. Our laboratory conducts fundamental research to understand how dynamics of molecular signals contribute to neuromodulator actions and sleep functions. We employ a wide variety of techniques ex vivo and in vivo, including advanced microscopy, electrophysiology, molecular biology, and behavior analysis. The principal investigator is committed to fostering a lab culture that promotes equity, kindness, rigor, and creativity. The position is responsible for developing and conducting research projects, including experimental design, implementation, data analysis and documentation of experiment results.

SeminarNeuroscience

Sensory cognition

SueYeon Chung, Srini Turaga
New York University; Janelia Research Campus
Nov 29, 2024

This webinar features presentations from SueYeon Chung (New York University) and Srinivas Turaga (HHMI Janelia Research Campus) on theoretical and computational approaches to sensory cognition. Chung introduced a “neural manifold” framework to capture how high-dimensional neural activity is structured into meaningful manifolds reflecting object representations. She demonstrated that manifold geometry—shaped by radius, dimensionality, and correlations—directly governs a population’s capacity for classifying or separating stimuli under nuisance variations. Applying these ideas as a data analysis tool, she showed how measuring object-manifold geometry can explain transformations along the ventral visual stream and suggested that manifold principles also yield better self-supervised neural network models resembling mammalian visual cortex. Turaga described simulating the entire fruit fly visual pathway using its connectome, modeling 64 key cell types in the optic lobe. His team’s systematic approach—combining sparse connectivity from electron microscopy with simple dynamical parameters—recapitulated known motion-selective responses and produced novel testable predictions. Together, these studies underscore the power of combining connectomic detail, task objectives, and geometric theories to unravel neural computations bridging from stimuli to cognitive functions.

SeminarNeuroscience

Modelling the fruit fly brain and body

Srinivas Turaga
HHMI | Janelia
May 15, 2024

Through recent advances in microscopy, we now have an unprecedented view of the brain and body of the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster. We now know the connectivity at single neuron resolution across the whole brain. How do we translate these new measurements into a deeper understanding of how the brain processes sensory information and produces behavior? I will describe two computational efforts to model the brain and the body of the fruit fly. First, I will describe a new modeling method which makes highly accurate predictions of neural activity in the fly visual system as measured in the living brain, using only measurements of its connectivity from a dead brain [1], joint work with Jakob Macke. Second, I will describe a whole body physics simulation of the fruit fly which can accurately reproduce its locomotion behaviors, both flight and walking [2], joint work with Google DeepMind.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

From primate anatomy to human neuroimaging: insights into the circuits underlying psychiatric disease and neuromodulation; Large-scale imaging of neural circuits: towards a microscopic human connectome

Suzanne Haber, PhD & Prof. Anastasia Yendiki, PhD
University of Rochester, USA / Harvard Medical School, USA
Oct 26, 2023

On Thursday, October 26th, we will host Anastasia Yendiki and Suzanne Haber. Anastasia Yendiki, PhD, is an Associate Professor in Radiology at the Harvard Medical School and an Associate Investigator at the Massachusetts General Hospital and Athinoula A. Martinos Center. Suzanne Haber, PhD, is a Professor at the University of Rochester and runs a lab at McLean hospital at Harvard Medical School in Boston. She has received numerous awards for her work on neuroanatomy. Beside her scientific presentation, she will give us a glimpse at the “Person behind the science”. The talks will be followed by a shared discussion. You can register via talks.stimulatingbrains.org to receive the (free) Zoom link!

SeminarNeuroscience

Wave-front shaping and circuit optogenetics

Valentina Emiliani
Wavefront-engineering microscopy group, Vision Institute, Paris, France
Nov 23, 2022
SeminarNeuroscience

Imperial Neurotechnology 2022 - Annual Research Symposium

Marcus Kaiser, Sarah Marzi, Giuseppe Gava, Gema Vera Gonzalez, Matteo Vinao-Carl, Sihao Lu, Hayriye Cagnan
Nottingham University, Imperial College, University of Oxford
Jul 5, 2022

A diverse mix of neurotechnology talks and posters from researchers at Imperial and beyond. Visit our event page to find out more. The event is in-person but talk sessions will be broadcast via Teams.

SeminarNeuroscience

Malignant synaptic plasticity in pediatric high-grade gliomas

Kathryn Taylor
Stanford
May 25, 2022

Pediatric high-grade gliomas (pHGG) are a devastating group of diseases that urgently require novel therapeutic options. We have previously demonstrated that pHGGs directly synapse onto neurons and the subsequent tumor cell depolarization, mediated by calcium-permeable AMPA channels, promotes their proliferation. The regulatory mechanisms governing these postsynaptic connections are unknown. Here, we investigated the role of BDNF-TrkB signaling in modulating the plasticity of the malignant synapse. BDNF ligand activation of its canonical receptor, TrkB (which is encoded for by the gene NTRK2), has been shown to be one important modulator of synaptic regulation in the normal setting. Electrophysiological recordings of glioma cell membrane properties, in response to acute neurotransmitter stimulation, demonstrate in an inward current resembling AMPA receptor (AMPAR) mediated excitatory neurotransmission. Extracellular BDNF increases the amplitude of this glutamate-induced tumor cell depolarization and this effect is abrogated in NTRK2 knockout glioma cells. Upon examining tumor cell excitability using in situ calcium imaging, we found that BDNF increases the intensity of glutamate-evoked calcium transients in GCaMP6s expressing glioma cells. Western blot analysis indicates the tumors AMPAR properties are altered downstream of BDNF induced TrkB activation in glioma. Cell membrane protein capture (via biotinylation) and live imaging of pH sensitive GFP-tagged AMPAR subunits demonstrate an increase of calcium permeable channels at the tumors postsynaptic membrane in response to BDNF. We find that BDNF-TrkB signaling promotes neuron-to-glioma synaptogenesis as measured by high-resolution confocal and electron microscopy in culture and tumor xenografts. Our analysis of published pHGG transcriptomic datasets, together with brain slice conditioned medium experiments in culture, indicates the tumor microenvironment as the chief source of BDNF ligand. Disruption of the BDNF-TrkB pathway in patient-derived orthotopic glioma xenograft models, both genetically and pharmacologically, results in an increased overall survival and reduced tumor proliferation rate. These findings suggest that gliomas leverage normal mechanisms of plasticity to modulate the excitatory channels involved in synaptic neurotransmission and they reveal the potential to target the regulatory components of glioma circuit dynamics as a therapeutic strategy for these lethal cancers.

SeminarNeuroscience

Learning binds novel inputs into functional synaptic clusters via spinogenesis

Nathan Hedrick
UCSD
Mar 30, 2022

Learning is known to induce the formation of new dendritic spines, but despite decades of effort, the functional properties of new spines in vivo remain unknown. Here, using a combination of longitudinal in vivo 2-photon imaging of the glutamate reporter, iGluSnFR, and correlated electron microscopy (CLEM) of dendritic spines on the apical dendrites of L2/3 excitatory neurons in the motor cortex during motor learning, we describe a framework of new spines' formation, survival, and resulting function. Specifically, our data indicate that the potentiation of a subset of clustered, pre-existing spines showing task-related activity in early sessions of learning creates a micro-environment of plasticity within dendrites, wherein multiple filopodia sample the nearby neuropil, form connections with pre-existing boutons connected to allodendritic spines, and are then selected for survival based on co-activity with nearby task-related spines. Thus, the formation and survival of new spines is determined by the functional micro-environment of dendrites. After formation, new spines show preferential co-activation with nearby task-related spines. This synchronous activity is more specific to movements than activation of the individual spines in isolation, and further, is coincident with movements that are more similar to the learned pattern. Thus, new spines functionally engage with their parent clusters to signal the learned movement. Finally, by reconstructing the axons associated with new spines, we found that they synapse with axons previously unrepresented in these dendritic domains, suggesting that the strong local co-activity structure exhibited by new spines is likely not due to axon sharing. Thus, learning involves the binding of new information streams into functional synaptic clusters to subserve the learned behavior.

SeminarNeuroscience

Neural cartography: Mapping the brain with X-ray and electron microscopy

Aaron Kuan
Harvard Medical School, USA
Mar 25, 2022
SeminarNeuroscience

A map of cell fate decisions in the human developing neocortex using correlative microscopy

Alexandre Baffet
Institut national de la santé et de la recherche médicale (Inserm)
Jan 20, 2022
SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

The wonders and complexities of brain microstructure: Enabling biomedical engineering studies combining imaging and models

Daniele Dini
Imperial College London
Nov 23, 2021

Brain microstructure plays a key role in driving the transport of drug molecules directly administered to the brain tissue as in Convection-Enhanced Delivery procedures. This study reports the first systematic attempt to characterize the cytoarchitecture of commissural, long association and projection fiber, namely: the corpus callosum, the fornix and the corona radiata. Ovine samples from three different subjects have been imaged using scanning electron microscope combined with focused ion beam milling. Particular focus has been given to the axons. For each tract, a 3D reconstruction of relatively large volumes (including a significant number of axons) has been performed. Namely, outer axonal ellipticity, outer axonal cross-sectional area and its relative perimeter have been measured. This study [1] provides useful insight into the fibrous organization of the tissue that can be described as composite material presenting elliptical tortuous tubular fibers, leading to a workflow to enable accurate simulations of drug delivery which include well-resolved microstructural features.  As a demonstration of the use of these imaging and reconstruction techniques, our research analyses the hydraulic permeability of two white matter (WM) areas (corpus callosum and fornix) whose three-dimensional microstructure was reconstructed starting from the acquisition of the electron microscopy images. Considering that the white matter structure is mainly composed of elongated and parallel axons we computed the permeability along the parallel and perpendicular directions using computational fluid dynamics [2]. The results show a statistically significant difference between parallel and perpendicular permeability, with a ratio about 2 in both the white matter structures analysed, thus demonstrating their anisotropic behaviour. This is in line with the experimental results obtained using perfusion of brain matter [3]. Moreover, we find a significant difference between permeability in corpus callosum and fornix, which suggests that also the white matter heterogeneity should be considered when modelling drug transport in the brain. Our findings, that demonstrate and quantify the anisotropic and heterogeneous character of the white matter, represent a fundamental contribution not only for drug delivery modelling but also for shedding light on the interstitial transport mechanisms in the extracellular space. These and many other discoveries will be discussed during the talk." "1. https://www.researchsquare.com/article/rs-686577/v1, 2. https://www.pnas.org/content/118/36/e2105328118, 3. https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/abstract/document/9198110

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Top-down modulation of the retinal code via histaminergic neurons in the hypothalamus

Michal Rivlin
Weismann Institute
Oct 18, 2021

The mammalian retina is considered an autonomous neuronal tissue, yet there is evidence that it receives inputs from the brain in the form of retinopetal axons. A sub-population of these axons was suggested to belong to histaminergic neurons located in the tuberomammillarynucleus (TMN) of the hypothalamus. Using viral injections to the TMN, we identified these retinopetal axons and found that although few in number, they extensively branch to cover a large portion of the retina. Using Ca2+ imaging and electrophysiology, we show that histamine application increases spontaneous firing rates and alters the light responses of a significant portion of retinal ganglion cells (RGCs). Direct activation of the histaminergic axons also induced significant changes in RGCs activity. Since activity in the TMN was shown to correlate with arousal state, our data suggest the retinal code may change with the animal's behavioral state through the release of histamine from TMN histaminergic neurons.

SeminarNeuroscience

Hard x-ray imaging of biological soft tissues

Carles Bosch, Si Chen, Ana Diaz, Tim Salditt, Yannick Schwab
Oct 14, 2021

The aim of this half day virtual meeting is to consider what is currently achievable with existing techniques and to explore where advancements can be made in the short and medium term. Leading scientists in the field will highlight the questions currently being addressed using hard X-ray imaging techniques, volume electron microscopy and their combination with other imaging modalities, with a forward look to areas of opportunity becoming accessible as a result of the recent and upcoming synchrotron upgrades. We expect an exciting day filled with science focused talks and lively discussions on how the field will develop over the next few years.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Learning from unexpected events in the neocortical microcircuit

Colleen Gillon
Richards lab, University of Toronto
Sep 22, 2021

Predictive learning hypotheses posit that the neocortex learns a hierarchical model of the structure of features in the environment. Under these hypotheses, expected or predictable features are differentiated from unexpected ones by comparing bottom-up and top-down streams of data, with unexpected features then driving changes in the representation of incoming stimuli. This is supported by numerous studies in early sensory cortices showing that pyramidal neurons respond particularly strongly to unexpected stimulus events. However, it remains unknown how their responses govern subsequent changes in stimulus representations, and thus, govern learning. Here, I present results from our study of layer 2/3 and layer 5 pyramidal neurons imaged in primary visual cortex of awake, behaving mice using two-photon calcium microscopy at both the somatic and distal apical planes. Our data reveals that individual neurons and distal apical dendrites show distinct, but predictable changes in unexpected event responses when tracked over several days. Considering existing evidence that bottom-up information is primarily targeted to somata, with distal apical dendrites receiving the bulk of top-down inputs, our findings corroborate hypothesized complementary roles for these two neuronal compartments in hierarchical computing. Altogether, our work provides novel evidence that the neocortex indeed instantiates a predictive hierarchical model in which unexpected events drive learning.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Gap Junction Coupling between Photoreceptors

Stephen Massey
University of Texas
Sep 20, 2021

Simply put, the goal of my research is to describe the neuronal circuitry of the retina. The organization of the mammalian retina is certainly complex but it is not chaotic. Although there are many cell types, most adhere to a relatively constant morphology and they are distributed in non-random mosaics. Furthermore, each cell type ramifies at a characteristic depth in the retina and makes a stereotyped set of synaptic connections. In other words, these neurons form a series of local circuits across the retina. The next step is to identify the simplest and commonest of these repeating neural circuits. They are the building blocks of retinal function. If we think of it in this way, the retina is a fabulous model for the rest of the CNS. We are interested in identifying specific circuits and cell types that support the different functions of the retina. For example, there appear to be specific pathways for rod and cone mediated vision. Rods are used under low light conditions and rod circuitry is specialized for high sensitivity when photons are scarce (when you’re out camping, starlight). The hallmark of the rod-mediated system is monochromatic vision. In contrast, the cone circuits are specialized for high acuity and color vision under relatively bright or daylight conditions. Individual neurons may be filled with fluorescent dyes under visual control. This is achieved by impaling the cell with a glass microelectrode using a 3D micromanipulator. We are also interested in the diffusion of dye through coupled neuronal networks in the retina. The dye filled cells are also combined with antibody labeling to reveal neuronal connections and circuits. This triple-labeled material may be viewed and reconstructed in 3 dimensions by multi-channel confocal microscopy. We have our own confocal microscope facility in the department and timeslots are available to students in my lab.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Analyzing Retinal Disease Using Electron Microscopic Connectomics

John Dowling
Harvard University
Sep 15, 2021

John DowlingJohn E. Dowling received his AB and PhD from Harvard University. He taught in the Biology Department at Harvard from 1961 to 1964, first as an Instructor, then as assistant professor. In 1964 he moved to Johns Hopkins University, where he held an appointment as associate professor of Ophthalmology and Biophysics. He returned to Harvard as professor of Biology in 1971, was the Maria Moors Cabot Professor of Natural Sciences from 1971-2001, Harvard College professor from 1999-2004 and is presently the Gordon and Llura Gund Professor of Neurosciences. Dowling was chairman of the Biology Department at Harvard from 1975 to 1978 and served as associate dean of the faculty of Arts and Sciences from 1980 to 1984. He was Master of Leverett House at Harvard from 1981-1998 and currently serves as president of the Corporation of The Marine Biological Laboratory in Woods Hole. He is a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, a member of the National Academy of Sciences and a member of the American Philosophical Society. Awards that Dowling received include the Friedenwald Medal from the Association of Research in Ophthalmology and Vision in 1970, the Annual Award of the New England Ophthalmological Society in 1979, the Retinal Research Foundation Award for Retinal Research in 1981, an Alcon Vision Research Recognition Award in 1986, a National Eye Institute's MERIT award in 1987, the Von Sallman Prize in 1992, The Helen Keller Prize for Vision Research in 2000 and the Llura Ligget Gund Award for Lifetime Achievement and Recognition of Contribution to the Foundation Fighting Blindness in 2001. He was granted an honorary MD degree by the University of Lund (Sweden) in 1982 and an honorary Doctor of Laws degree from Dalhousie University (Canada) in 2012. Dowling's research interests have focused on the vertebrate retina as a model piece of the brain. He and his collaborators have long been interested in the functional organization of the retina, studying its synaptic organization, the electrical responses of the retinal neurons, and the mechanisms underlying neurotransmission and neuromodulation in the retina. Dowling became interested in zebrafish as a system in which one could explore the development and genetics of the vertebrate retina about 20 years ago. Part of his research team has focused on retinal development in zebrafish and the role of retinoic acid in early eye and photoreceptor development. A second group has developed behavioral tests to isolate mutations, both recessive and dominant, specific to the visual system.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Imperial Neurotechnology 2021 - Annual Research Symposium

Yulong Li, Christos Kapatos, Mary Ann Go, Sonja Hofer, Oscar Bates, Christian Wilms
Peking University, SERG Technologies, Imperial College, UCL, Scientifica Ltd
Jul 7, 2021

A diverse mix of neurotechnology talks from academic and industry colleagues plus presentations from our MRes Neurotechnology students. Visit our event page to find out more and register now!

SeminarNeuroscience

Multiphoton imaging with next-generation indicators

Manuel Mohr
Stanford University
Jun 30, 2021

Two-photon (2P) in vivo functional imaging of genetically encoded fluorescent Ca2+indicators (GECIs) for neuronal activity has become a broadly applied standard tool in modern neuroscience, because it allows simultaneous imaging of the activity of many neurons at high spatial resolution within living animals. Unfortunately, the most commonly used light-sources – tunable femtosecond pulsed ti:sapphire lasers – can be prohibitively expensive for many labs and fall short of delivering sufficient powers for some new ultra-fast 2P microscopy modalities. Inexpensive homebuilt or industrial light sources such as Ytterbium fiber lasers (YbFLs) show great promise to overcome these limitations as they are becoming widely available at costs orders of magnitude lower and power outputs of up to many times higher than conventional ti:sapphire lasers. However, these lasers are typically bound to emitting a single wavelength (i.e., not tunable) centered around 1020-1060 nm, which fails to efficiently excite state of the art green GECIs such as jGCaMP7 or 8. To this end, we designed and characterized spectral variants (yellow CaMP = YCaMP) of the ultrasensitive genetically encoded calcium indicator jGCaMP7, that allows for efficient 2P-excitation at wavelengths above 1010nm. In this talk I will give a brief overview over some of the reasons why using a fiber laser for 2P excitation might be right for you. I will talk about the development of jYCaMP and some exciting new experimental avenues that it has opened while touching on the prospect that shifting biosensors yellow could have for the 2P imaging community. Please join me for an interesting and fun discussion on whether “yellow is the new green” after the talk!

SeminarNeuroscience

Dopaminergic modulation of synaptic plasticity in learning and psychiatric disorders

Sho Yagishita
University of Tokyo
Jun 28, 2021

Transient changes in dopamine activity in response to reward and punishment have been known to regulate reward-related learning. However, the cellular basis that detects the transient dopamine signaling has long been unclear. Using two-photon microscopy and optogenetics, I have shown that transient increases and decreases of dopamine modulate plasticity of dopamine D1 and D2 receptor-expressing cells in the nucleus accumbens, respectively. At the behavioral level, I characterized that these D1 and D2 cells cooperatively tune learning by generalization and discrimination learning. Interestingly, disturbance of the dopamine signaling impaired D2 cell plasticity and discrimination learning, which was analogous to salience misattribution seen in subjects with schizophrenia.

SeminarNeuroscience

Causal coupling between neural activity, metabolism, and behavior across the Drosophila brain

Kevin Mann
Stanford School of Medicine
Jun 7, 2021

Coordinated activity across networks of neurons is a hallmark of both resting and active behavioral states in many species, including worms, flies, fish, mice and humans. These global patterns alter energy metabolism in the brain over seconds to hours, making oxygen consumption and glucose uptake widely used proxies of neural activity. However, whether changes in neural activity are causally related to changes in metabolic flux in intact circuits on the sub-second timescales associated with behavior, is unclear. Moreover, it is unclear whether differences between rest and action are associated with spatiotemporally structured changes in neuronal energy metabolism at the subcellular level. My work combines two-photon microscopy across the fruit fly brain with sensors that allow simultaneous measurements of neural activity and metabolic flux, across both resting and active behavioral states. It demonstrates that neural activity drives changes in metabolic flux, creating a tight coupling between these signals that can be measured across large-scale brain networks. Further, using local optogenetic perturbation, I show that even transient increases in neural activity result in rapid and persistent increases in cytosolic ATP, suggesting that neuronal metabolism predictively allocates resources to meet the energy demands of future neural activity. Finally, these studies reveal that the initiation of even minimal behavioral movements causes large-scale changes in the pattern of neural activity and energy metabolism, revealing unexpectedly widespread engagement of the central brain.

SeminarNeuroscience

Application of Airy beam light sheet microscopy to examine early neurodevelopmental structures in 3D hiPSC-derived human cortical spheroids

Deep Adhya
University of Cambridge, Department of Psychiatry
May 12, 2021

The inability to observe relevant biological processes in vivo significantly restricts human neurodevelopmental research. Advances in appropriate in vitro model systems, including patient-specific human brain organoids and human cortical spheroids (hCSs), offer a pragmatic solution to this issue. In particular, hCSs are an accessible method for generating homogenous organoids of dorsal telencephalic fate, which recapitulate key aspects of human corticogenesis, including the formation of neural rosettes—in vitro correlates of the neural tube. These neurogenic niches give rise to neural progenitors that subsequently differentiate into neurons. Studies differentiating induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs) in 2D have linked atypical formation of neural rosettes with neurodevelopmental disorders such as autism spectrum conditions. Thus far, however, conventional methods of tissue preparation in this field limit the ability to image these structures in three-dimensions within intact hCS or other 3D preparations. To overcome this limitation, we have sought to optimise a methodological approach to process hCSs to maximise the utility of a novel Airy-beam light sheet microscope (ALSM) to acquire high resolution volumetric images of internal structures within hCS representative of early developmental time points.

SeminarNeuroscience

Neural control of motor actions: from whole-brain landscape to millisecond dynamics

Takashi Kawashima
Weizmann Institute
Apr 8, 2021

Animals control motor actions at multiple timescales. We use larval zebrafish and advanced optical microscopy to understand the underlying neural mechanisms. First, we examined the mechanisms of short-term motor learning by using whole-brain neural activity imaging. We found that the 5-HT system integrates the sensory outcome of actions and determines future motor patterns. Second, we established a method for recording spiking activity and membrane potential from a population of neurons during behavior. We identified putative motor command signals and internal copy signals that encode millisecond-scale details of the swimming dynamics. These results demonstrate that zebrafish provide a holistic and mechanistic understanding of the neural basis of motor control in vertebrate brains.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Targeting the synapse in Alzheimer’s Disease

Johanna Jackson
UK Dementia Research Institute at Imperial College London
Dec 14, 2020

Alzheimer’s Disease is characterised by the accumulation of misfolded proteins, namely amyloid and tau, however it is synapse loss which leads to the cognitive impairments associated with the disease. Many studies have focussed on single time points to determine the effects of pathology on synapses however this does not inform on the plasticity of the synapses, that is how they behave in vivo as the pathology progresses. Here we used in vivo two-photon microscopy to assess the temporal dynamics of axonal boutons and dendritic spines in mouse models of tauopathy[1] (rTg4510) and amyloidopathy[2] (J20). This revealed that pre- and post-synaptic components are differentially affected in both AD models in response to pathology. In the Tg4510 model, differences in the stability and turnover of axonal boutons and dendritic spines immediately prior to neurite degeneration was revealed. Moreover, the dystrophic neurites could be partially rescued by transgene suppression. Understanding the imbalance in the response of pre- and post-synaptic components is crucial for drug discovery studies targeting the synapse in Alzheimer’s Disease. To investigate how sub-types of synapses are affected in human tissue, the Multi-‘omics Atlas Project, a UKDRI initiative to comprehensively map the pathology in human AD, will determine the synaptome changes using imaging and synaptic proteomics in human post mortem AD tissue. The use of multiple brain regions and multiple stages of disease will enable a pseudotemporal profile of pathology and the associated synapse alterations to be determined. These data will be compared to data from preclinical models to determine the functional implications of the human findings, to better inform preclinical drug discovery studies and to develop a therapeutic strategy to target synapses in Alzheimer’s Disease[3].

SeminarNeuroscience

Neural circuit and genetic bases of behaviour in Platynereis larva

Gaspar Jekely
University of Exeter
Dec 9, 2020

We study the larval stages of the marine annelid Platynereis dumerilii, a powerful experimental system for neural circuits. With serial electron microscopy, we have reconstructed the entire nervous and effector systems of a Platynereis larva. We use neurogenetics, activity imaging, and behavioural experiments to understand circuit activity and how the nervous system controls behaviour and physiology. Platynereis is one of very few systems where these different approaches can be combined to study an entire nervous system. I will talk about circuits for the whole-body coordination of locomotor cilia and a hydrodynamic startle response for predator avoidance.

SeminarNeuroscience

A journey through connectomics: from manual tracing to the first fully automated basal ganglia connectomes

Joergen Kornfeld
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Nov 17, 2020

The "mind of the worm", the first electron microscopy-based connectome of C. elegans, was an early sign of where connectomics is headed, followed by a long time of little progress in a field held back by the immense manual effort required for data acquisition and analysis. This changed over the last few years with several technological breakthroughs, which allowed increases in data set sizes by several orders of magnitude. Brain tissue can now be imaged in 3D up to a millimeter in size at nanometer resolution, revealing tissue features from synapses to the mitochondria of all contained cells. These breakthroughs in acquisition technology were paralleled by a revolution in deep-learning segmentation techniques, that equally reduced manual analysis times by several orders of magnitude, to the point where fully automated reconstructions are becoming useful. Taken together, this gives neuroscientists now access to the first wiring diagrams of thousands of automatically reconstructed neurons connected by millions of synapses, just one line of program code away. In this talk, I will cover these developments by describing the past few years' technological breakthroughs and discuss remaining challenges. Finally, I will show the potential of automated connectomics for neuroscience by demonstrating how hypotheses in reinforcement learning can now be tackled through virtual experiments in synaptic wiring diagrams of the songbird basal ganglia.

SeminarNeuroscience

Protein Synthesis at Neuronal Synapses

Erin Schuman
Max Planck Institute for Brain Research
Oct 27, 2020

The complex morphology of neurons, with synapses located 100’s of microns from the cell body, necessitates the localization of important cell biological machines and processes within dendrites and axons. Using expansion microscopy together with metabolic labeling we have discovered that both postsynaptic spines and presynaptic terminals exhibit rapid translation, which exhibits differential sensitivity to different neurotransmitters and neuromodulators. In addition, we have explored the unique mechanisms neurons use to meet protein demands at synapses, identifying the transcriptome and translatome in the neuropil.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Tools for Analyzing and Repairing the Brain. (Simultaneous translation to Spanish)

Ed Boyden
Y. Eva Tan Professor in Neurotechnology at MIT
Oct 12, 2020

To enable the understanding and repair of complex biological systems, such as the brain, we are creating novel optical tools that enable molecular-resolution maps of such systems, as well as technologies for observing and controlling high-speed physiological dynamics in such systems. First, we have developed a method for imaging specimens with nanoscale precision, by embedding them in a swellable polymer, homogenizing their mechanical properties, and exposing them to water – which causes them to expand manyfold isotropically. This method, which we call expansion microscopy (ExM), enables ordinary microscopes to do nanoscale imaging, in a multiplexed fashion – important, for example, for brain mapping. Second, we have developed a set of genetically-encoded reagents, known as optogenetic tools, that when expressed in specific neurons, enable their electrical activities to be precisely driven or silenced in response to millisecond timescale pulses of light. Finally, we are designing, and evolving, novel reagents, such as fluorescent voltage indicators and somatically targeted calcium indicators, to enable the imaging of fast physiological processes in 3-D with millisecond precision. In this way we aim to enable the systematic mapping, control, and dynamical observation of complex biological systems like the brain. The talk will be simultaneously interpreted English-Spanish) by the Interpreter, Mg. Lourdes Martino. Para permitir la comprensión y reparación de sistemas biológicos complejos, como el cerebro, estamos creando herramientas ópticas novedosas que permiten crear mapas de resolución molecular de dichos sistemas, así como tecnologías para observar y controlar la dinámica fisiológica de alta velocidad en dichos sistemas. Primero, hemos desarrollado un método para obtener imágenes de muestras con precisión a nanoescala, incrustándolas en un polímero hinchable, homogeneizando sus propiedades mecánicas y exponiéndolas al agua, lo que hace que se expandan muchas veces isotrópicamente. Este método, que llamamos microscopía de expansión (ExM), permite que los microscopios ordinarios obtengan imágenes a nanoescala, de forma multiplexada, lo que es importante, por ejemplo, para el mapeo cerebral. En segundo lugar, hemos desarrollado un conjunto de reactivos codificados genéticamente, conocidos como herramientas optogenéticas, que cuando se expresan en neuronas específicas, permiten que sus actividades eléctricas sean activadas o silenciadas con precisión en respuesta a pulsos de luz en una escala de tiempo de milisegundos. Finalmente, estamos diseñando y desarrollando reactivos novedosos, como indicadores de voltaje fluorescentes e indicadores de calcio dirigidos somáticamente, para permitir la obtención de imágenes de procesos fisiológicos rápidos en 3-D con precisión de milisegundos. De esta manera, nuestro objetivo es permitir el mapeo sistemático, el control y la observación dinámica de sistemas biológicos complejos como el cerebro. La conferencia será traducida simultáneamente al español por la intérprete Mg. Lourdes Martino.

SeminarNeuroscience

Carnosine negatively modulates pro-oxidant activities of M1 peripheral macrophages and prevents neuroinflammation induced by amyloid-β in microglial cells

Giuseppe Caruso
Department of Drug Sciences, University of Catania
Oct 1, 2020

Carnosine is a natural dipeptide widely distributed in mammalian tissues and exists at particularly high concentrations in skeletal and cardiac muscles and brain. A growing body of evidence shows that carnosine is involved in many cellular defense mechanisms against oxidative stress, including inhibition of amyloid-β (Aβ) aggregation, modulation of nitric oxide (NO) metabolism, and scavenging both reactive nitrogen and oxygen species. Different types of cells are involved in the innate immune response, with macrophage cells representing those primarily activated, especially under different diseases characterized by oxidative stress and systemic inflammation such as depression and cardiovascular disorders. Microglia, the tissue-resident macrophages of the brain, are emerging as a central player in regulating key pathways in central nervous system inflammation; with specific regard to Alzheimer’s disease (AD) these cells exert a dual role: on one hand promoting the clearance of Aβ via phagocytosis, on the other hand increasing neuroinflammation through the secretion of inflammatory mediators and free radicals. The activity of carnosine was tested in an in vitro model of macrophage activation (M1) (RAW 264.7 cells stimulated with LPS + IFN-γ) and in a well-validated model of Aβ-induced neuroinflammation (BV-2 microglia treated with Aβ oligomers). An ample set of techniques/assays including MTT assay, trypan blue exclusion test, high performance liquid chromatography, high-throughput real-time PCR, western blot, atomic force microscopy, microchip electrophoresis coupled to laser-induced fluorescence, and ELISA aimed to evaluate the antioxidant and anti-inflammatory activities of carnosine was employed. In our experimental model of macrophage activation (M1), therapeutic concentrations of carnosine exerted the following effects: 1) an increased degradation rate of NO into its non-toxic end-products nitrite and nitrate; 2) the amelioration of the macrophage energy state, by restoring nucleoside triphosphates and counterbalancing the changes in ATP/ADP, NAD+/NADH and NADP+/NADPH ratio obtained by LPS + IFN-γ induction; 3) a reduced expression of pro-oxidant enzymes (NADPH oxidase, Cyclooxygenase-2) and of the lipid peroxidation product malondialdehyde; 4) the rescue of antioxidant enzymes expression (Glutathione peroxidase 1, Superoxide dismutase 2, Catalase); 5) an increased synthesis of transforming growth factor-β1 (TGF-β1) combined with the negative modulation of interleukines 1β and 6 (IL-1β and IL-6), and 6) the induction of nuclear factor erythroid-derived 2-like 2 (Nrf2) and heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1). In our experimental model of Aβ-induced neuroinflammation, carnosine: 1) prevented cell death in BV-2 cells challenged with Aβ oligomers; 2) lowered oxidative stress by decreasing the expression of inducible nitric oxide synthase and NADPH oxidase, and the concentrations of nitric oxide and superoxide anion; 3) decreased the secretion of pro-inflammatory cytokines such as IL-1β simultaneously rescuing IL-10 levels and increasing the expression and the release of TGF-β1; 4) prevented Aβ-induced neurodegeneration in primary mixed neuronal cultures challenged with Aβ oligomers and these neuroprotective effects was completely abolished by SB431542, a selective inhibitor of type-1 TGF-β receptor. Overall, our data suggest a novel multimodal mechanism of action of carnosine underlying its protective effects in macrophages and microglia and the therapeutic potential of this dipeptide in counteracting pro-oxidant and pro-inflammatory phenomena observed in different disorders characterized by elevated levels of oxidative stress and inflammation such as depression, cardiovascular disorders, and Alzheimer’s disease.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Interneuron desynchronization and breakdown of long-term place cell stability in temporal lobe epilepsy

Peyman Golshani
UCLA
Aug 5, 2020

Temporal lobe epilepsy is associated with memory deficits but the circuit mechanisms underlying these cognitive disabilities are not understood. We used electrophysiological recordings, open-source wire-free miniaturized microscopy and computational modeling to probe these deficits in a model of temporal lobe epilepsy. We find desynchronization of dentate gyrus interneurons with CA1 interneurons during theta oscillations and a loss of precision and stability of place fields. We also find that emergence of place cell dysfunction is delayed, providing a potential temporal window for treatments. Computation modeling shows that desynchronization rather than interneuron cell loss can drive place cell dysfunction. Future studies will uncover cell types driving these changes and transcriptional changes that may be driving dysfunction.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Neuroscience Investigations in the Virgin Lands of African Biodiversity

James O Olopade
University of Ibadan
May 22, 2020

Africa is blessed with a rich diversity and abundance in rodent and avian populations. This natural endowment on the continent portends research opportunities to study unique anatomical profiles and investigate animal models that may confer better neural architecture to study neurodegenerative diseases, adult neurogenesis, stroke and stem cell therapies. To this end, African researchers are beginning to pay closer attention to some of her indigenous rodents and birds in an attempt to develop spontaneous laboratory models for homegrown neuroscience-based research. For this presentation, I will be showing studies in our lab, involving cellular neuroanatomy of two rodents, the African giant rat (AGR) and Greater cane rat (GCR), Eidolon Bats (EB) and also the Striped Owl (SO). Using histological stains (Cresyl violet and Rapid Golgi) and immunohistochemical biomarkers (GFAP, NeuN, CNPase, Iba-1, Collagen 2, Doublecortin, Ki67, Calbindin, etc), and Electron Microscopy, morphology and functional organizations of neuronal and glial populations of the AGR , GCR, EB and SO brains have been described, with our work ongoing. In addition, the developmental profiles of the prenatal GCR brains have been chronicled across its entire gestational period. Brains of embryos/foetuses were harvested for gross morphological descriptions and then processed using immunofluorescence biomarkers to determine the pattern, onset, duration and peak of neurogenesis (Pax6, Tbr1, Tbr2, NF, HuCD, MAP2) and the onset and peak of glial cell expressions and myelination in the prenatal GCR. The outcome of these research efforts has shown unique neuroanatomical expressions and networks amongst Africa’s rich biodiversity. It is hopeful that continuous effort in this regard will provide sufficient basic research data on neural developments and cellular neuroanatomy with subsequent translational consequences.

ePosterNeuroscience

Blazed oblique plane microscopy reveals scale-invariant predictions of brain-wide activity

Maximilian Hoffmann, Jörg Henninger, Johannes Veith, Lars Richter, Benjamin Judkewitz

COSYNE 2023

ePosterNeuroscience

Recording Multi-Neuronal Activity in Unrestrained Animals with 3D Random-Access 2-Photon Microscopy

Akihiro Yamaguchi, Rui Wu, Paul McNulty, Doycho Karagyozov, Mirna Mihovilovic Skanata, Marc Gershow

COSYNE 2023

ePosterNeuroscience

Advancing in-vivo brain vasculature imaging: Super-resolution 3D ultrasound localization microscopy of the mouse brain and in non-human primate using RCA probes

Adrien Bertolo, Jeremy Ferrier, Tanguy Delaporte, Julien Claron, Oscar Demeulenaere, Mickael Tanter, Pierre Pouget, Bruno Osmanski, Mathieu Pernot, Thomas Deffieux

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Arkitekt: Streaming analysis and real-time bioimage workflows for microscopy

Johannes Roos, Stéphane Bancelin, Tom Delaire, Florian Levet, Maren Engelhardt, Virgile Viasnoff, Rémi Galland, Valentin Nägerl, Jean-Baptiste Sibarita

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Combining electrophysiology, tissue clearing, and light sheet microscopy for an integrated approach towards brain circuit understanding

Sebastian Böhm, Marta Solano Mateos, James A. Oakes, Saiedeh Saghafi, Christoph F. Fuchssteiner, Thomas Klausberger, Hans-Ulrich Dodt

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Combined expansion and STED microscopy reveals fingerprints of synaptic nanostructure across brain regions and in ASD-related SHANK3 deficiency

Jan Philipp Delling, Helen Friedericke Bauer, Susanne Gerlach-Arbeiter, Michael Schön, Christian Jacob, Jan Wagner, Maria Teresa Pedro, Bernd Knöll, Tobias M. Böckers

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Dendritic spine recovery analysis using synthetic microscopy

Sophie Seidler, Andreas Kist

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Dense reconstruction of mammalian brain tissue with light microscopy

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

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Dense synapse-level reconstruction of brain tissue with super-resolution light microscopy

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

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Development and application of L-shaped vertical micro-coils for in vivo neurostimulation in two-photon microscopy

Xiyuan Liu, Kayeon Kim, Changsi Cai, Shelley Fried, Anpan Han

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Dissection of a neuronal integrator circuit through correlated light and electron microscopy in larval zebrafish. Part 1: Functional imaging and ultrastructure in the same animal

Jonathan Boulanger-Weill, Florian Kämpf, Gregor Schuhknecht, Sumit Vohra, Mariela Petkova, Maren Eberle, Richard Schalek, Filippo Del Bene, Florian Engert, Jeff Lichtman, Armin Bahl

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Dissection of a neuronal integrator circuit through correlated light and electron microscopy in larval zebrafish. Part 2: Correlating functional analyses and ultrastructure across different animals

Gregor Schuhknecht, Florian Kämpf, Jonathan Boulanger-Weill, Sumit Vohra, Heike Naumann, Mariela Petkova, Michał Januszewski, Robert Tiller, Moritz Stingl, Alina Hebling, Richard Schalek, Filippo Del Bene, Jeff Lichtman, Florian Engert, Armin Bahl

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Dissociated neurovascular response to microelectrode stimulation in mouse visual cortex under two-photon microscopy and epifluorescence imaging

Alexandra Yonza, Kayeon Kim, Changsi Cai, Anpan Han, Xiyuan Liu, Shelley Fried

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Dual-plane 3-photon microscopy in layer 2/3 and 6 of the mouse visual cortex

Matilda Cloves, Troy Margrie

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Mapping of neuronal populations with light-sheet fluorescence microscopy

Giacomo Mazzamuto, Irene Costantini, Danila Di Meo, Franco Cheli, Michele Sorelli, Samuel Bradley, Josephine Ramazzotti, Curzio Checcucci, Alessandra Franceschini, Ludovico Silvestri, Francesco Saverio Pavone

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Microcircuits in the marmoset prefrontal cortex: A large volume correlative light-electron microscopy study

Nilton Liuji Kamiji, Takaaki Miyazaki, Mitsuo Suga, Akiya Watakabe, Yasuo Kawaguchi, Yoshiyuki Kubota

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

NeuroDeblur: A novel software for fast deconvolution of large light-sheet, confocal, or bright-field microscopy stacks

Klaus Becker, Saiedeh Saghafi

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Oblique light sheet tracking microscopy for whole brain functional imaging in a freely swimming zebrafish larva

Kavya Mohan, Charlie R.Heller, Ivana Roman, Eunjung Min, Jennifer M. Li, Drew N.Robson

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Organization principles of the neuronal ultrastructure revealed with 3D electron microscopy

Matthias Haberl, Silvia Viana da Silva, Mark Ellisman

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

pathoDISCO-HE: Light sheet microscopy and fluorescent labelling of glioblastoma multiforme for 3D virtual H&E imaging and improved pathohistological evaluation

James Oakes-Klein, Saiedeh Saghafi, Adelheid Wöhrer, Georg Widhalm, Hans-Ulrich Dodt

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Physiological measurements of activity and microtubule health in human iPSC-derived neurons using fluorescence and second harmonic microscopy

Natalia Garcia Perez, Emma Moles-Garcia, Milvia Alata, Pieter Vanden Berghe

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Portable and turn-key multimodal multiphoton microscopy for easy-to-access label-free and intravital imaging

Stefanie Kiderlen, Lukas Krainer

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Response modulation dynamics of multi-electrode stimulation in the mouse visual cortex under two-photon microscopy

Kayeon Kim, Alexandra Katherine Isis Yonza, Xiyuan Liu, Anpan Han, Shelley Fried, Changsi Cai

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Spatial transcriptomics-correlated electron microscopy integrates transcriptional and ultrastructural responses to brain injury

Peter Androvic, Martina Schifferer, Katrin Perez Anderson, Ludovico Cantuti-Castelvetri, Hanyi Jiang, Hao Ji, Lu Liu, Garyfallia Gouna, Stefan Berghoff, Simon Besson-Girard, Johanna Knoferle, Mikael Simons, Ozgun Gokce

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

STED microscopy reveals dendrite-specificity of spines

Jan Knobloch, Gilles Laurent, Marcel Lauterbach

FENS Forum 2024

ePosterNeuroscience

Visualization of the intact cochlea and its architecture by newly refined light sheet fluorescence microscopy

Lennart Roos, Aleyna M. Diniz, Mostafa Aakthe, Anupriya Thirumalai, Koert Elisabeth, Jakob Neef, Bettina J. Wolf, Jan Huisken, Tobias Moser

FENS Forum 2024

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