Check out our Q&A with Mark Fishman, who uses the zebrafish to study body–brain interactions and the genetic structure of social behavior at Harvard University! www.cell.com/current-biol...
Very happy to see this out. 👏 @yinanwan.bsky.social
Bogdan Bintu and team.
Whole-embryo spatial transcriptomics at subcellular resolution from gastrulation to organogenesis | free link Science www.science.org/eprint/5MHTM...
Brain and Heart in Parallel: Zebrafish Study Reframes the Biology of Fear 🧠 🧪🧬 #AcademicSky #higherEd
www.mcb.harvard.edu/department/n...
@engertlab.bsky.social @kherrera.bsky.social @mishaahrens.bsky.social @rachellegaudet.bsky.social @cellpress.bsky.social @harvardbrainsci.bsky.social
I'm pleased to share our newest preprint, which was actually the very first project started in my lab. It took a long time to come together! We address the challenge of translating complex psychiatric genetics into biological mechanism. tinyurl.com/4w7hv8d8
And finally, shout-out to mentors @mishaahrens.bsky.social, Florian Engert, and Mark Fishman, our RA Arman Zarghani-Shiraz who made the transgenic lines, an everyone else in our labs who's helped along the way!
So, if it's not interoceptive feedback, how is the brain linking behavior to heart rate? Well, we don't know yet. Brain-wide imaging reveals many areas reflecting this state, but it's hard to guess their roles without anatomically grounding their connectivity. Something we hope to do very very soon.
This suggests the interoceptive representation of optopaced tachycardia is different from the naturally occurring one. So, we looked at what's happening in the nodose ganglia and saw that while some neurons had activity mirroring "normal" tachycardia, they actually don't respond to the optopacing!
However, the interpretation of these data was tricky. These "optopaced" beats are not normal beats, and seem to be less efficient at transporting blood. So, we "helped" the fish by adding extra oxygen to the water, and saw that this rescued the OMR during the optoacing.
But could a high heart rate, by itself, be enough to stop the OMR? To test this, we used optogenetics to control how fast the heart beat using timed light pulses, and saw that this was sufficient to bring down the OMR
We do believe noradrenergic signaling is involved in both cardiac and behavior states - propranolol abates the heart rate and elevates the OMR. However, severing spinal inputs to sympathetic ganglia only affects heart rate suggesting feedback is not involved in the behavioral changes.
So, does the reduced OMR occur because the fish _senses_ a high heart rate? Or do central mechanisms control both cardiac and behavioral changes? We manipulated the autonomic nervous system in various ways, and long story short, we believe interoceptive feedback is _unnecessary_ for the coupling.
A quick thread of highlights:
We find two types of behavioral coupling: elevations in heart-rate occur after high energy swim events and persist for over a minute.
Second, with higher heart rate comes a reduced tendency to perform a routine behavior, the optomotor response (OMR).
New paper out : "Synchronization of behavioral and cardiac dynamics in larval zebrafish"
Here, we report a pretty striking relationship between behavioral state and heart rate in larval zebrafish, and then explore the mechanisms that lead to this coupling
bit.ly/4ciYt3R
However, the interpretation of these data was tricky. These "optopaced" beats are not normal beats, and seem to be less efficient at transporting blood. So, we "helped" the fish by adding extra oxygen to the water, and saw that this rescued the OMR during the optoacing.
Social context modulates cannibalistic attraction in Drosophila larvae https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.64898/2026.01.08.698439v1
1/6: New publication from the lab: “Plastic landmark anchoring in zebrafish compass neurons” by Ryosuke Tanaka (@ryosuketanaka.bsky.social) and Ruben is available here:
rdcu.be/eX1L4
Smarter Microscopes, Faster Maps: Lichtman Lab’s “SmartEM” Brings AI to Connectomics 🧠 🧪🧬 #AcademicSky #higherEd
www.mcb.harvard.edu/department/n... @yaronmr.bsky.social @harvard.edu @harvardbrainsci.bsky.social @natmethods.nature.com @rachellegaudet.bsky.social @thermofishersci.bsky.social
New paper alert!!...🤩 Led by @blogeman.bsky.social, we identify how cell type-specific hormonal responses in the hypothalamus tunes parenting behavior in males and females 🐭🧠🍼. Highlights in thread 👇 1/6
www.biorxiv.org/content/10.6...
To study how animals understand the physical world (and the rules that govern its dynamics), @jinyao-y.bsky.social trains rats to play fetch with robots 🐀🤖🎾
To learn more, come to our poster Tuesday morning!
[Board W11] Rats learn and use intuitive physics knowledge to solve fetch tasks.
#SfN2025
Out now in @currentbiology.bsky.social led by Kaarthik A Balakrishnan: We identify medullary circuits that represent the valence of thermal stimuli and control both long-term strategies of cold-avoidance and short term hot avoidance behaviors to enable thermoregulation. www.cell.com/current-biol...
🧠🌟🐭 Excited to share some of my postdoc work on the evolution of dexterity!
We compared deer mice evolved in forest vs prairie habitats. We found that forest mice have:
(1) more corticospinal neurons (CSNs)
(2) better hand dexterity
(3) more dexterous climbing, which is linked to CSN number🧵
Lab’s 1st preprint!
Menstruation is understudied due to societal taboos + a biological challenge: mice (a key system for research + drug discovery) don’t menstruate.
@cagricevrim.bsky.social made menstruating mice + used them to discover early events in menstruation.
He is on the job market!
“Blame your parents if you can’t pay enough attention." At least when you are a zebrafish! Our new study on attentional switching together with Kumaresh Krishnan, @paulapflitsch.bsky.social , @zwitscherarmin.bsky.social and Florian Engert is out in Science Advances:
doi.org/10.1126/scia...
🚨Our preprint is online!🚨
www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1...
How do #dopamine neurons perform the key calculations in reinforcement #learning?
Read on to find out more! 🧵
Preprint -
Excited to present WHOLISTIC, which extends the concept of whole-brain functional imaging to the entire body. Pioneering work by incredibly talented Virginia Ruetten @vmsruetten.bsky.social, this platform reveals whole-organism cellular dynamics in vivo.
www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1...
🚨Hiring Alert! Join Gregor Schuhknechts’s
new group Brain Algorithms and Circuits @mpibrain.bsky.social !
🧠 Fully funded PhD & Postdoc
🐟 Larval #zebrafish model
🔬 Imaging, electrophysiology, EM
💻 #SystemsNeuroscience
👉 brain.mpg.de/schuhknecht
🚨Very happy that my PhD work is now out in @nature.com!
We discovered that evolution, by acting in the midbrain, shifted the threshold to escape in Peromyscus mice, to fine-tune defensive strategies in different environments
www.nature.com/articles/s41...
This was a truly collaborative effort! 🧵⬇️
Solar-Powered Thieves: New Study Uncovers Animal Organelle That Sustains Photosynthesis from Stolen Chloroplasts 🧠🧪 #AcademicSky #higherEd
www.mcb.harvard.edu/department/n...
@nbellono.bsky.social @rachellegaudet.bsky.social @naoshigeuchida.bsky.social @neurovenki.bsky.social @dulaclab.bsky.social
Octopuses Use Microbial Signals to Guide Complex Behaviors
🧠🧪 #AcademicSky #higherEd
www.mcb.harvard.edu/department/n... @nbellono.bsky.social @rachellegaudet.bsky.social @naoshigeuchida.bsky.social @neurovenki.bsky.social @dulaclab.bsky.social @harvardbrainsci.bsky.social @cellpress.bsky.social
A connectomic resource for neural cataloguing and circuit dissection of the larval zebrafish brain https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2025.06.10.658982v1