Revealing brain heterogeneity

old_uid19741
titleRevealing brain heterogeneity
start_date2021/11/26
schedule11h30-12h30
onlineno
summaryMy research interest is to improve current understanding of emotional and motor brain functions, including how rewarding and aversive situations affect motivated behavior. More specifically, in my lab (Uppsala University, Sweden), we focus our attention to the ventral tegmental area (VTA) and the subthalamic nucleus (STN), both of which continue to gain attention as more heterogeneous than previously believed. Further, both these areas are clinically important in Parkinson´s disease and other neurodegenerative and psychiatric disorders. In my lab, we have an interest in teasing out the anatomical and spatial organization within these structures, and to connect this to functional roles. We work with transgenic mice to identify molecular markers that have the potential to represent subtypes, or subpopulations, of STN and VTA neurons. By applying functional mouse genetics (conditional knockout and optogenetics), we then explore how distinct VTA and STN neurons contribute to behavioral regulation. Our work has contributed to the understanding of dopamine-glutamate co-release in reward behavior and how subtypes in the VTA can be teased out based on gene expression patterns. In recent work, we identified molecular markers for domains of neurons within the STN which now allows us to progress into functional analysis in mice. By teasing out how specific neuronal subtypes impact on behavior, we hope that our studies will help the advancement towards more specific treatments of neurological and neuropsychiatric conditions in which the VTA and/or the STN are involved.
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