Publications by authors named "Mu ming Poo"

With early training in physics, my career was marked by continuous learning and searching for interesting problems in biology. Here, I recount some key events that influenced my choices of research topics. The diversity of topics could be attributed to my own lack of a particular focus and the interests of students and postdocs who happened to join my laboratory.

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  • The study examines how the stiffness of the extracellular matrix influences chromatin organization and the efficiency of converting fibroblasts into neurons, finding optimal results at a stiffness of 20 kPa.
  • ATAC sequencing reveals that chromatin accessibility to neuronal genes peaks at this stiffness, while histone acetylation and histone acetyltransferase (HAT) activity are also maximized at 20 kPa, with inhibition of HAT activity negating the effects of matrix stiffness.
  • Changes in transporter proteins like G-actin and cofilin affect HAT's transport into the nucleus, showing a complex relationship between matrix stiffness and epigenetic regulation crucial for advances in cell engineering and regenerative medicine.
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  • Mapping single-neuron projections in the hippocampus (HIP) is crucial to grasping how the brain's connectivity and functions work.
  • Researchers reconstructed over 10,000 single-neuron projectomes and identified 43 distinct subtypes based on their projection patterns.
  • The study revealed that projection characteristics vary based on neuron location in the HIP and highlighted wiring diagrams for neurons connecting within the HIP and to other brain regions, informing us about their functional roles.
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Neuromodulators in the brain act globally at many forms of synaptic plasticity, represented as metaplasticity, which is rarely considered by existing spiking (SNNs) and nonspiking artificial neural networks (ANNs). Here, we report an efficient brain-inspired computing algorithm for SNNs and ANNs, referred to here as neuromodulation-assisted credit assignment (NACA), which uses expectation signals to induce defined levels of neuromodulators to selective synapses, whereby the long-term synaptic potentiation and depression are modified in a nonlinear manner depending on the neuromodulator level. The NACA algorithm achieved high recognition accuracy with substantially reduced computational cost in learning spatial and temporal classification tasks.

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An electroencephalographic (EEG) signature of auditory hallucinations (AHs) is important for facilitating the diagnosis and treatment of AHs in schizophrenia. We recorded EEG from 25 schizophrenia patients with recurrent AHs. During the period of AHs, EEG recordings exhibited significantly elevated beta2-band power in the temporal region, as compared to those recorded in the absence of AHs or during stimulation with verbal sounds.

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The role of transcription factors and biomolecules in cell type conversion has been widely studied. Yet, it remains unclear whether and how intracellular mechanotransduction through focal adhesions (FAs) and the cytoskeleton regulates the epigenetic state and cell reprogramming. Here, it is shown that cytoskeletal structures and the mechanical properties of cells are modulated during the early phase of induced neuronal (iN) reprogramming, with an increase in actin cytoskeleton assembly induced by Ascl1 transgene.

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Although the advantage of spike timing-based over rate-based network computation has been recognized, the underlying mechanism remains unclear. Using Tempotron and Perceptron as elementary neural models, we examined the intrinsic difference between spike timing-based and rate-based computations. For more direct comparison, we modified Tempotron computation into rate-based computation with the retention of some temporal information.

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Future neuroscience and biomedical projects involving non-human primates (NHPs) remain essential in our endeavors to understand the complexities and functioning of the mammalian central nervous system. In so doing, the NHP neuroscience researcher must be allowed to incorporate state-of-the-art technologies, including the use of novel viral vectors, gene therapy and transgenic approaches to answer continuing and emerging research questions that can only be addressed in NHP research models. This perspective piece captures these emerging technologies and some specific research questions they can address.

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The optimal protocol for neuromodulation by transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) remains unclear. Using the rotarod paradigm, we found that mouse motor learning was enhanced by anodal tDCS (3.2 mA/cm) during but not before or after the performance of a task.

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Single-cell transcriptomic analysis has facilitated cell type identification in the brain and mapping of cell type-specific connectomes, helping to elucidate neural circuits underlying brain functions and to treat brain disorders by neuromodulation. Yet, we lack a consensual definition of neuronal types/subtypes and clear distinction between cause and effect within interconnected networks.

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COVID-19-induced brain dysfunction (CIBD) will put a strain on world health systems complicated by the heterogeneity of manifestations, which is higher than any other aspect of human biology. Neural, psychological and social causes must be disentangled for effective population-level management of CIBD. International cooperation is required in order to discover neurotechnologies appropriate for health systems.

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Marmosets are highly social non-human primates that live in families. They exhibit rich vocalization, but the neural basis underlying this complex vocal communication is largely unknown. Here we report the existence of specific neuron populations in marmoset A1 that respond selectively to distinct simple or compound calls made by conspecific marmosets.

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Mingjie Zhang is a distinguished structural biologist whose research interest is the protein assemblies in cells, particularly those at the synapse, where two neurons meet and transmit nervous impulses from one to the other. In recent years, his group discovered the phenomenon of phase separation in both the pre- and post-synaptic sites of neurons and elucidated its regulation and physiological function. In this interview, Executive Editor-in-Chief Mu-ming Poo talks with Prof.

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