Any comments on this work are greatly appreciated, letโs make science participative!!! 14/14
13.12.2024 12:50 โ ๐ 1 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 0 ๐ 0@clementpouget.bsky.social
๐ซ๐ท๐ณ๏ธโ๐ Post Doc @ ESPCI Paris with Gisella Vetere ! I may love food more than I do science He/him/il/lui
Any comments on this work are greatly appreciated, letโs make science participative!!! 14/14
13.12.2024 12:50 โ ๐ 1 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 0 ๐ 0
Finally, science wouldnโt be fun without friends, so big shoutout to everyone in the lab (veterelab.weebly.com) who either participated directly in the project, or helped by being the best of friends,Flora, Nadja, Pablo, Nina, Livia, and so many others... 13/14
Thereโs quite a bit of additional stuff and neat observations, but thatโs the gist of it! Once again, very proud of this project, conducted with my amazing mentor @gisellavetere.bsky.social ! I couldnโt have hoped for a better team to do my PhD in. 12/14
13.12.2024 12:50 โ ๐ 1 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 1 ๐ 02) FC cells are mostly reactivated in similar quantity and quality; and 3) that โshockโ and โfreezingโ populations differ in their coordinated reactivation at recall, which parallels some observations we saw in opto experiments. 11/14
13.12.2024 12:50 โ ๐ 1 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 1 ๐ 0We then used calcium imaging to study how the populations we opto-tagged actually behaved during encoding and recall of a fear memory, and showed that 1) the four populations we designated are very distinct from one another; 10/14
13.12.2024 12:50 โ ๐ 1 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 1 ๐ 0We indeed showed that, in both these cases, opto reactivation didnโt trigger recall, proving that our past results really targeted engram-encoding populations of the dCA1. 9/14
13.12.2024 12:50 โ ๐ 1 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 1 ๐ 0Specifically, we tagged โshockโ-active cells during immediate shock, and โfreezingโ-active cells during sweeping; two paradigms in which animals do not form an associative memory with the context. 8/14
13.12.2024 12:50 โ ๐ 1 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 1 ๐ 0I remember the excitement after analyzing the first batches of animals and realizing this was the case! We quickly decided to control if this effect could be explained by any non-memory related tagging: 7/14
13.12.2024 12:50 โ ๐ 1 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 1 ๐ 0We found that only reactivation of โshockโ or โfreezingโ active cells could trigger memory recall. In other words, it seems that engram encoding consists in a selection process, sensitive to internal/external correlates of activity!! (I suspect this to be rather dCA1-specific). 6/14
13.12.2024 12:50 โ ๐ 1 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 1 ๐ 0Combined with a DLC-based closed-loop opto setup, we were able to tag (and subsequently manipulate) dCA1 neurons active during โpre-shockโ, โshockโ, โfreezingโ, and โno-freezingโ in different animals. 5/14
13.12.2024 12:50 โ ๐ 1 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 1 ๐ 0Instead, we made use of f-FLiCRE, an even faster variant of FLiCRE from the great Tina Kim (and produced for us by @brimble.bsky.social), allowing us to selectively manipulate the activity of cells active at different FC moments (some only a few secs long, which we also tested in-vitro). 4/14
13.12.2024 12:50 โ ๐ 1 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 1 ๐ 0However, technical limitations have limited progress into determining the identity of these so-called โengram cellsโ. Specifically, drug/IEG techs indifferently tags neurons active in a >1h time window, which only allows the manipulation of FC-active cells as a whole. 3/14
13.12.2024 12:50 โ ๐ 1 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 1 ๐ 0Tons of amazing papers have revealed how reactivating neurons active during memory acquisition (specifically, FC) can trigger memory recall. These built the foundation of engram research as we know it today. 2/14
13.12.2024 12:50 โ ๐ 0 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 1 ๐ 0Our preprint of my PhDโs work in @gisellavetere.bsky.social lab is finally out on BiorXiv: doi.org/10.1101/2024..., and Iโm so excited to share it! If youโve ever wondered about reconciling engram manipulation experiments and neuronal activity during encoding, youโre on the right thread! 1/14
13.12.2024 12:50 โ ๐ 36 ๐ 13 ๐ฌ 2 ๐ 2Amazing work, and thanks for the thread! I'll definitely use this as my next journal club
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