Biology Seminar 4/26 @ 12pm: Dr. Ivan Rodriguez

The sick sense is in the nose

Ivan Rodriguez, PhD (University of Geneva)

Sociability offers many advantages, although a major drawback is the increased risk of exposure to contagious pathogens, like parasites, viruses, or bacteria. Social species have evolved various behavioral strategies reducing the probability of pathogen exposure. We found that in rodents, preference toward healthy individuals was dependent on the olfactory system, more precisely on vomeronasal function. We discovered a novel family of vomeronasal sensors, termed formyl-peptide receptors, that respond to disease-related ligands. This receptor family, initially expressed in immune cells during evolution, acquired neuronal specificity in the rodent lineage via two gene shuffling events. This thus corresponds to a switch from sensing pathogens inside the organism to sensing the outside world through the nose, and represents a striking case of neofunctionalization.

To attend, email: el1417 at hunter dot cuny dot edu

Congratulations to Dr. Rebecca Ravenelle!

This week, Becky defended her dissertation, “Circuits Underlying Serotonin Mediated Sex Differences in Fear Learning”, with lots of beautiful data, thoughtful experiments, and super interesting findings! Congratulations Becky for a job incredibly well done, and here is to putting everything into a paper!

Very happy to have Central Park nearby to celebrate with the lab, and Nesha Burghardt, Becky’s primary mentor on the project.

Very happy to have Central Park nearby to celebrate with the lab, and Nesha Burghardt, Becky’s primary mentor on the project.

Congratulations to Itamar on winning the Mina Reese Dissertation Fellowship!

Huge congratulations going out to Itamar on his successful Dissertation Fellowship application!

Itamar has been doing some beautiful analyses of behavioral and neural changes after chronic stress. Lots of pretty images and new circuit findings coming soon from that work. Congratulations!

Itamar in behavior & physiology experiment mode

Itamar in behavior & physiology experiment mode

Itamar in workshop mode

Itamar in workshop mode

New Paper Out

We are interested in translating our safety learning work to humans in order to decrease anxiety. To this end, we are collaborating with Dr. Tracy Dennis-Tiwary’s Emotion Regulation Lab . In a new paper, we outline our ideas for how to more seamlessly study the effects of safety learning on anxiety across the species.

Cho, H., Likhtik, E. & Dennis-Tiwary, T.A. Absence Makes the Mind Grow Fonder: Reconceptualizing Studies of Safety Learning in Translational Research on Anxiety. Cogn Affect Behav Neurosci (2021).

New paper out

In our new review paper, “White Matter Plasticity in Anxiety: Disruption of Neural Network Synchronization during Threat-Safety Discrimination”, we argue that stress- and anxiety-related disorders are associated with altered myelin plasticity. In turn, changes in myelin plasticity, compromise synchronous communication within circuits that are crucial for proper learning of threat - safety discrimination.

Liu J., Likhtik E., Shereen D.A., Dennis-Tiwary T.A., Casaccia P. (2020) White Matter Plasticity in Anxiety: Disruption of Neural Network Synchronization during Threat-Safety Discrimination. Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience.

FrontiersMyelinSynchronyModel_2020.jpg

CNC Neuroscience Seminar - Carmel Martin-Fairey

Friday, November 13, 2020 3:00 - 4:30pm

A Time to Deliver

Dr. Carmel Martin-Fairey (Harris-Stowe State University)

Dr. Martin-Fairey will discuss the roles that genetic and environmental disruptions of circadian rhythms play in risks for preterm birth.

Please email el1417 at hunter dot cuny dot edu to attend

Neuroscience Seminar: Nesha Burghardt

Friday, October 16th, 3:00 - 4:30 pm

Vulnerable and Resilient Phenotypes in a Mouse Model of Anorexia Nervosa.

Dr. Nesha Burghardt (Hunter College, CUNY)

Please email el1417 at hunter dot cuny dot edu for link to attend

New paper out

SafetyDiscriminationScores+.jpg

How can we boost the ability to learn about safety? When we amplify the salience of stimuli that signal safety, we improve their effectiveness. But that’s not all - we also improve discrimination of new non-threatening stimuli, and increase exploration of new environments, thereby decreasing generalized fear.

Our new paper is out showing these positive behavioral effects of Salient Safety training in the Safety issue of Behavioural Brain Research.

Nahmoud I., Ganay Vasquez J., Cho H., Dennis-Tiwary T., Likhtik E. (2020) Salient safety conditioning improves novel discrimination learning. Behav Brain Res 397: 112907.


We Welcome Emma to the lab!

Emma Denholtz has officially joined the lab and is fully immersed in our work on circuits that encode safety signaling in the brain. In this period of uncertainty (and associated anxiety), we’re very interested in figuring out how the brain extracts information about cues that organisms rely on for safety, as a means to relieve anxiety. Emma is working on using behavior, electrophysiology, neuroanatomy, and calcium signaling to delve into this question. Happy to have you on board!