Publications by authors named "Yosif Zaki"

The ability to monitor the activity of specific cell types is critical for understanding the complex interplay between various neuronal populations driving freely moving behavior. Existing methods, such as optogenetic tagging (i.e.

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Prior adversity increases susceptibility to subsequent stressful events, but the causal underlying changes in brain circuitry are poorly understood. We harnessed unbiased whole-brain activity mapping to identify circuits that are functionally remodeled by prior adversity. This revealed that the anterior hypothalamic nucleus (AHN) displays heightened stress reactivity in previously stressed mice.

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Article Synopsis
  • Memories are formed in the brain during learning and become stable through a process called reactivation after the learning phase.
  • A strong negative experience in mice leads to the reactivation not just of that recent memory, but also of a related neutral memory formed two days earlier, linking these memories in a way that influences future fear responses.
  • The study suggests that this co-reactivation happens more during wakefulness and helps the brain integrate and relate different memories over time.
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Many studies have shown that memories are encoded in sparse neural ensembles distributed across the brain. During the post-encoding period, often during sleep, many of the cells that were active during encoding are reactivated, supporting consolidation of this memory. During memory recall, many of the same cells that were active during encoding and reactivated during consolidation are reactivated during recall.

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Unlabelled: Miniaturized fluorescence microscopes (miniscopes) enable imaging of calcium events from a large population of neurons in freely behaving animals. Traditionally, miniscopes have only been able to record from a single fluorescence wavelength. Here, we present a new open-source dual-channel Miniscope that simultaneously records two wavelengths in freely behaving animals.

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Representational drift refers to the dynamic nature of neural representations in the brain despite the behavior being seemingly stable. Although drift has been observed in many different brain regions, the mechanisms underlying it are not known. Since intrinsic neural excitability is suggested to play a key role in regulating memory allocation, fluctuations of excitability could bias the reactivation of previously stored memory ensembles and therefore act as a motor for drift.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study investigates how prefrontal cortex (PFC) projections develop and affect action-outcome associations in the dorsal striatum of postnatal mice, revealing that PFC axons achieve an adult-like pattern and synaptic strength early in development.
  • - By using Hotspot analysis, researchers found that PFC axons form clusters within the first week after birth, stabilizing over time, while excitatory synapse density continues to increase until adulthood.
  • - Mutant mice lacking the protein Cadherin-8 showed improper PFC axon targeting and reduced synaptic activity, leading to difficulties in action-outcome learning, emphasizing the importance of Cdh8 for the correct formation of these neural pathways.
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Article Synopsis
  • Rational decision-making relies on connections between the prefrontal cortex and the dorsomedial striatum, and disruptions in this projection are linked to various mental health disorders.
  • A study using Hotspot Analysis found that the anatomical positioning of these projections develops early and remains largely stable into adulthood, with steady synapse formation throughout late postnatal development.
  • Mice lacking the adhesion protein Cdh8 showed altered axon terminal positioning and difficulties in learning action-outcome associations, suggesting that early developmental mechanisms play a critical role in the function of corticostriatal connections.
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Memories are encoded in neural ensembles during learning and stabilized by post-learning reactivation. Integrating recent experiences into existing memories ensures that memories contain the most recently available information, but how the brain accomplishes this critical process remains unknown. Here we show that in mice, a strong aversive experience drives the offline ensemble reactivation of not only the recent aversive memory but also a neutral memory formed two days prior, linking the fear from the recent aversive memory to the previous neutral memory.

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With the prevalence of age-related cognitive deficits on the rise, it is essential to identify cellular and circuit alterations that contribute to age-related memory impairment. Increased intrinsic neuronal excitability after learning is important for memory consolidation, and changes to this process could underlie memory impairment in old age. Some studies find age-related deficits in hippocampal neuronal excitability that correlate with memory impairment but others do not, possibly due to selective changes only in activated neural ensembles.

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Memories are stored in the brain as cellular ensembles activated during learning and reactivated during retrieval. Using the Tet-tag system in mice, we label dorsal dentate gyrus neurons activated by positive, neutral or negative experiences with channelrhodopsin-2. Following fear-conditioning, these cells are artificially reactivated during fear memory recall.

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The formation and extinction of fear memories represent two forms of learning that each engage the hippocampus and amygdala. How cell populations in these areas contribute to fear relapse, however, remains unclear. Here, we demonstrate that, in male mice, cells active during fear conditioning in the dentate gyrus of hippocampus exhibit decreased activity during extinction and are re-engaged after contextual fear relapse.

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Miniature microscopes have gained considerable traction for in vivo calcium imaging in freely behaving animals. However, extracting calcium signals from raw videos is a computationally complex problem and remains a bottleneck for many researchers utilizing single-photon in vivo calcium imaging. Despite the existence of many powerful analysis packages designed to detect and extract calcium dynamics, most have either key parameters that are hard-coded or insufficient step-by-step guidance and validations to help the users choose the best parameters.

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For group-living animals, the social environment provides salient experience that can weaken or strengthen aspects of cognition such as memory recall. Although the cellular substrates of individually acquired fear memories in the dentate gyrus (DG) and basolateral amygdala (BLA) have been well-studied and recent work has revealed circuit mechanisms underlying the encoding of social experience, the processes by which social experience interacts with an individual’s memories to alter recall remain unknown. Here we show that stressful social experiences enhance the recall of previously acquired fear memories in male but not female mice, and that social buffering of conspecifics’ distress blocks this enhancement.

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Memory formation is thought to occur in the brain through dynamic remodeling of the synaptic architecture between neurons. The cellular mechanisms underlying these dynamics remain unclear. In this issue, Nguyen et al.

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Memory is a dynamic process that is continuously regulated by both synaptic and intrinsic neural mechanisms. While numerous studies have shown that synaptic plasticity is important in various types and phases of learning and memory, neuronal intrinsic excitability has received relatively less attention, especially regarding the dynamic nature of memory. In this review, we present evidence demonstrating the importance of intrinsic excitability in memory allocation, consolidation, and updating.

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Emerging evidence indicates that distinct hippocampal domains differentially drive cognition and emotion [1, 2]; dorsal regions encode spatial, temporal, and contextual information [3-5], whereas ventral regions regulate stress responses [6], anxiety-related behaviors [7, 8], and emotional states [8-10]. Although previous studies demonstrate that optically manipulating cells in the dorsal hippocampus can drive the behavioral expression of positive and negative memories, it is unknown whether changes in cellular activity in the ventral hippocampus can drive such behaviors [11-14]. Investigating the extent to which distinct hippocampal memories across the longitudinal axis modulate behavior could aid in the understanding of stress-related psychiatric disorders known to affect emotion, memory, and cognition [15].

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The mammalian brain contains dedicated circuits for both the learned expression and suppression of fear. These circuits require precise coordination to facilitate the appropriate expression of fear behavior, but the mechanisms underlying this coordination remain unclear. Using a combination of chemogenetics, activity-based neuronal-ensemble labeling and in vivo electrophysiology, we found that fear extinction learning confers on parvalbumin-expressing (PV) interneurons in the basolateral amygdala (BLA) a dedicated role in the selective suppression of a previously encoded fear memory and BLA fear-encoding neurons.

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