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Dive into the research topics where Adam Claridge-Chang is active.

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Featured researches published by Adam Claridge-Chang.


Cell | 2009

Writing memories with light-addressable reinforcement circuitry.

Adam Claridge-Chang; Robert D. Roorda; Eleftheria Vrontou; Lucas Sjulson; Haiyan Li; Jay Hirsh; Gero Miesenböck

Dopaminergic neurons are thought to drive learning by signaling changes in the expectations of salient events, such as rewards or punishments. Olfactory conditioning in Drosophila requires direct dopamine action on intrinsic mushroom body neurons, the likely storage sites of olfactory memories. Neither the cellular sources of the conditioning dopamine nor its precise postsynaptic targets are known. By optically controlling genetically circumscribed subsets of dopaminergic neurons in the behaving fly, we have mapped the origin of aversive reinforcement signals to the PPL1 cluster of 12 dopaminergic cells. PPL1 projections target restricted domains in the vertical lobes and heel of the mushroom body. Artificially evoked activity in a small number of identifiable cells thus suffices for programming behaviorally meaningful memories. The delineation of core reinforcement circuitry is an essential first step in dissecting the neural mechanisms that compute and represent valuations, store associations, and guide actions.


Cell | 2007

Excitatory Local Circuits and Their Implications for Olfactory Processing in the Fly Antennal Lobe

Yuhua Shang; Adam Claridge-Chang; Lucas Sjulson; Marc Pypaert; Gero Miesenböck

Conflicting views exist of how circuits of the antennal lobe, the insect equivalent of the olfactory bulb, translate input from olfactory receptor neurons (ORNs) into projection-neuron (PN) output. Synaptic connections between ORNs and PNs are one-to-one, yet PNs are more broadly tuned to odors than ORNs. The basis for this difference in receptive range remains unknown. Analyzing a Drosophila mutant lacking ORN input to one glomerulus, we show that some of the apparent complexity in the antennal lobes output arises from lateral, interglomerular excitation of PNs. We describe a previously unidentified population of cholinergic local neurons (LNs) with multiglomerular processes. These excitatory LNs respond broadly to odors but exhibit little glomerular specificity in their synaptic output, suggesting that PNs are driven by a combination of glomerulus-specific ORN afferents and diffuse LN excitation. Lateral excitation may boost PN signals and enhance their transmission to third-order neurons in a mechanism akin to stochastic resonance.


PLOS Genetics | 2005

Control of Daily Transcript Oscillations in Drosophila by Light and the Circadian Clock

Herman Wijnen; Felix Naef; Catharine Boothroyd; Adam Claridge-Chang; Michael W Young

The transcriptional circuits of circadian clocks control physiological and behavioral rhythms. Light may affect such overt rhythms in two ways: (1) by entraining the clock circuits and (2) via clock-independent molecular pathways. In this study we examine the relationship between autonomous transcript oscillations and light-driven transcript responses. Transcript profiles of wild-type and arrhythmic mutant Drosophila were recorded both in the presence of an environmental photocycle and in constant darkness. Systematic autonomous oscillations in the 12- to 48-h period range were detectable only in wild-type flies and occurred preferentially at the circadian period length. However, an extensive program of light-driven expression was confirmed in arrhythmic mutant flies. Many light-responsive transcripts are preferentially expressed in the compound eyes and the phospholipase C component of phototransduction, NORPA (no receptor potential), is required for their light-dependent regulation. Although there is evidence for the existence of multiple molecular clock circuits in cyanobacteria, protists, plants, and fungi, Drosophila appears to possess only one such system. The sustained photic expression responses identified here are partially coupled to the circadian clock and may reflect a mechanism for flies to modulate functions such as visual sensitivity and synaptic transmission in response to seasonal changes in photoperiod.


Current Opinion in Neurobiology | 2012

The surveillance state of behavioral automation

Andreas T. Schaefer; Adam Claridge-Chang

Highlights ► Behavioral automation is accelerating experimental throughput. ► Automation is integrating behavior with physiology. ► Comprehensive observation allows quantitative description of complex behaviors. ► Observational methods are being integrated with psychology experiments.


Nature Methods | 2017

Optogenetic inhibition of behavior with anion channelrhodopsins

Farhan Mohammad; James Charles Stewart; Stanislav Ott; Katarina Chlebikova; Jia Yi Chua; Tong-Wey Koh; Joses Ho; Adam Claridge-Chang

Optogenetics uses light exposure to manipulate physiology in genetically modified organisms. Abundant tools for optogenetic excitation are available, but the limitations of current optogenetic inhibitors present an obstacle to demonstrating the necessity of neuronal circuits. Here we show that anion channelrhodopsins can be used to specifically and rapidly inhibit neural systems involved in Drosophila locomotion, wing expansion, memory retrieval and gustation, thus demonstrating their broad utility in the circuit analysis of behavior.


Current Biology | 2014

The Right Dorsal Habenula Limits Attraction to an Odor in Zebrafish

Seetha Krishnan; Ajay S. Mathuru; Caroline Kibat; Mashiur Rahman; Charlotte Lupton; James Charles Stewart; Adam Claridge-Chang; Shih-Cheng Yen; Suresh Jesuthasan

BACKGROUND The habenula consists of an evolutionarily conserved set of nuclei that control neuromodulator release. In lower vertebrates, the dorsal habenula receives innervation from sensory regions, but the significance of this is unclear. Here, we address the role of the habenula in olfaction by imaging neural activity in larval zebrafish expressing GCaMP3 throughout the habenula and by carrying out behavioral assays. RESULTS Activity in several hundred neurons throughout the habenula was recorded using wide-field fluorescence microscopy, fast focusing, and deconvolution. This enabled the creation of 4D maps of odor-evoked activity. Odors activated the habenula in two broad spatiotemporal patterns. Increasing concentrations of a putative social cue (a bile salt) evoked a corresponding increase in neuronal activity in the right dorsal habenula. In behavioral assays, fish were attracted to intermediate concentration of this cue but avoided higher concentration. Increasing cholinergic activity through nicotine exposure rendered the intermediate concentration aversive in a habenula-dependent manner. Pharmacologically blocking nicotinic receptors or lesioning the right dorsal habenula attenuated avoidance. CONCLUSIONS These data provide physiological and functional evidence that the habenula functions as a higher center in zebrafish olfaction and suggest that activity in the right dorsal subdomain gates innate attraction to specific odors.


Current Biology | 2016

Ancient Anxiety Pathways Influence Drosophila Defense Behaviors

Farhan Mohammad; Sameer Aryal; Joses Ho; James Charles Stewart; Nurul Ayuni Norman; Teng Li Tan; Agnese Eisaka; Adam Claridge-Chang

Summary Anxiety helps us anticipate and assess potential danger in ambiguous situations [1, 2, 3]; however, the anxiety disorders are the most prevalent class of psychiatric illness [4, 5, 6]. Emotional states are shared between humans and other animals [7], as observed by behavioral manifestations [8], physiological responses [9], and gene conservation [10]. Anxiety research makes wide use of three rodent behavioral assays—elevated plus maze, open field, and light/dark box—that present a choice between sheltered and exposed regions [11]. Exposure avoidance in anxiety-related defense behaviors was confirmed to be a correlate of rodent anxiety by treatment with known anxiety-altering agents [12, 13, 14] and is now used to characterize anxiety systems. Modeling anxiety with a small neurogenetic animal would further aid the elucidation of its neuronal and molecular bases. Drosophila neurogenetics research has elucidated the mechanisms of fundamental behaviors and implicated genes that are often orthologous across species. In an enclosed arena, flies stay close to the walls during spontaneous locomotion [15, 16], a behavior proposed to be related to anxiety [17]. We tested this hypothesis with manipulations of the GABA receptor, serotonin signaling, and stress. The effects of these interventions were strikingly concordant with rodent anxiety, verifying that these behaviors report on an anxiety-like state. Application of this method was able to identify several new fly anxiety genes. The presence of conserved neurogenetic pathways in the insect brain identifies Drosophila as an attractive genetic model for the study of anxiety and anxiety-related disorders, complementing existing rodent systems.


Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews | 2016

Concordance and incongruence in preclinical anxiety models: Systematic review and meta-analyses.

Farhan Mohammad; Joses Ho; Jia Hern Woo; Chun Lei Lim; Dennis Jun Jie Poon; Bhumika Lamba; Adam Claridge-Chang

Rodent defense behavior assays have been widely used as preclinical models of anxiety to study possibly therapeutic anxiety-reducing interventions. However, some proposed anxiety-modulating factors - genes, drugs and stressors - have had discordant effects across different studies. To reconcile the effect sizes of purported anxiety factors, we conducted systematic review and meta-analyses of the literature on ten anxiety-linked interventions, as examined in the elevated plus maze, open field and light-dark box assays. Diazepam, 5-HT1A receptor gene knockout and overexpression, SERT gene knockout and overexpression, pain, restraint, social isolation, corticotropin-releasing hormone and Crhr1 were selected for review. Eight interventions had statistically significant effects on rodent anxiety, while Htr1a overexpression and Crh knockout did not. Evidence for publication bias was found in the diazepam, Htt knockout, and social isolation literatures. The Htr1a and Crhr1 results indicate a disconnect between preclinical science and clinical research. Furthermore, the meta-analytic data confirmed that genetic SERT anxiety effects were paradoxical in the context of the clinical use of SERT inhibitors to reduce anxiety.


Annals of Medicine | 2002

Molecular genetics of timing in intrinsic circadian rhythm sleep disorders.

Herman Wijnen; Catharine Boothroyd; Michael W Young; Adam Claridge-Chang

Recent advances in circadian biology are identifying key genes and the molecular clockworks they command. These biochemical systems provide new tools for evaluating clinically observed, intrinsic circadian rhythm sleep disorders. A striking example was last years discovery of a point mutation in a human clock gene that produces a sleep phase syndrome. This finding suggested that other intrinsic sleep disorders may have genetic underpinnings, and that less debilitating variations in sleep/wake behavior may be revealed by molecular screening of known clock genes in broader human populations.


PLOS Genetics | 2015

Estimating Information Processing in a Memory System: The Utility of Meta-analytic Methods for Genetics

Tugce Yildizoglu; Jan-Marek Weislogel; Farhan Mohammad; Edwin Chan; Pryseley Nkouibert Assam; Adam Claridge-Chang

Genetic studies in Drosophila reveal that olfactory memory relies on a brain structure called the mushroom body. The mainstream view is that each of the three lobes of the mushroom body play specialized roles in short-term aversive olfactory memory, but a number of studies have made divergent conclusions based on their varying experimental findings. Like many fields, neurogenetics uses null hypothesis significance testing for data analysis. Critics of significance testing claim that this method promotes discrepancies by using arbitrary thresholds (α) to apply reject/accept dichotomies to continuous data, which is not reflective of the biological reality of quantitative phenotypes. We explored using estimation statistics, an alternative data analysis framework, to examine published fly short-term memory data. Systematic review was used to identify behavioral experiments examining the physiological basis of olfactory memory and meta-analytic approaches were applied to assess the role of lobular specialization. Multivariate meta-regression models revealed that short-term memory lobular specialization is not supported by the data; it identified the cellular extent of a transgenic driver as the major predictor of its effect on short-term memory. These findings demonstrate that effect sizes, meta-analysis, meta-regression, hierarchical models and estimation methods in general can be successfully harnessed to identify knowledge gaps, synthesize divergent results, accommodate heterogeneous experimental design and quantify genetic mechanisms.

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Farhan Mohammad

National University of Singapore

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Jia Yi Chua

National University of Singapore

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Suresh Jesuthasan

Nanyang Technological University

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Seetha Krishnan

National University of Singapore

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Stanislav Ott

National University of Singapore

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