Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Cha-Min Tang is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Cha-Min Tang.


Neuron | 2004

Unique Roles of SK and Kv4.2 Potassium Channels in Dendritic Integration

Xiang Cai; Conrad W. Liang; Sukumaran Muralidharan; Joseph P. Y. Kao; Cha-Min Tang; Scott M. Thompson

Focal activation of glutamate receptors in distal dendrites of hippocampal pyramidal cells triggers voltage-dependent Ca(2+) channel-mediated plateau potentials that are confined to the stimulated dendrite. We examined the role of dendritic K(+) conductances in determining the amplitude, duration, and spatial compartmentalization of plateau potentials. Manipulations that blocked SK-type Ca(2+)-activated K(+) channels, including apamin and BAPTA dialysis, increased the duration of plateau potentials without affecting their amplitude or compartmentalization. Manipulations that blocked Kv4.2 A-type K(+) channels, including a dominant-negative Kv4.2 construct and 4-aminopyridine, increased the amplitude of plateau potentials by allowing them to recruit neighboring dendrites. Prolongation of plateau potentials or block of Kv4.2 channels at branch points facilitated the ability of dendritic excitation to trigger fast action potentials. SK channels thus underlie repolarization of dendritic plateau potentials, whereas Kv4.2 channels confine these potentials to single dendritic branches, and both act in concert to regulate synaptic integration.


The Journal of Comparative Neurology | 1999

Functional synapses are formed between human NTera2 (NT2N, hNT) neurons grown on astrocytes

Rebecca S. Hartley; Michael Margulis; Paul S. Fishman; Virginia M.-Y. Lee; Cha-Min Tang

The formation of functional synapses is a late milestone of neuronal differentiation. The establishment of functional synapses can be used to assess neuronal characteristics of different cell lines. In the present study, we examined the in vitro conditions that influence the ability of human neurons derived from the NT2 cell line (NT2N neurons) to establish synapses. The morphologic, immunologic, and electrophysiologic characteristics of these synapses was examined. In the absence of astrocytes, NT2N neurons rarely formed synapses and their action potentials were weak and uncommon. In contrast, when plated on primary astrocytes, NT2N neurons were able to form both glutamatergic excitatory (71%) and GABAergic inhibitory (29%) functional synapses whose properties (kinetics, ion selectivity, pharmacology, and ultrastructure) were similar to those of synapses of neurons in primary cultures. In addition, coculture of NT2N neurons with astrocytes modified the morphology of the neurons and extended their in vitro viability to more than 1 year. Because astrocyte‐conditioned medium did not produce these effects, we infer that direct contact between NT2N neurons and astrocytes is required. These results suggest that NT2N neurons are similar to primary neurons in their synaptogenesis and their requirement for glial support for optimal survival and maturation. This system provides a model for further investigations into the neurobiology of synapses formed by human neurons. J. Comp. Neurol. 407:1–10, 1999.


Neuron | 1994

Saturation of postsynaptic glutamate receptors after quantal release of transmitter.

Cha-Min Tang; Michael Margulis; Qing-Yao Shi; Alex Fielding

Miniature excitatory postsynaptic currents (mEPSCs) were elicited from small numbers of release sites after brief microperfusion of Ba2+ and K+ onto proximal dendritic processes of hippocampal neurons in culture. Temporal summation of closely timed mEPSCs deviated significantly from linearity. The number of instances of closely timed mEPSCs that were also closely matched in terms of peak amplitudes was significantly greater than that expected by chance. Amplitude pairing became statistically more significant after prolongation of mEPSC duration and inhibition of glutamate receptor desensitization with cyclothiazide. These results are best explained by postsynaptic receptors that approach saturation after quantal release of transmitter.


Journal of Biomedical Optics | 2005

Optical coherence tomography in the diagnosis and treatment of neurological disorders

M. Samir Jafri; Suzanne Farhang; Rebecca Tang; Naman Desai; Paul S. Fishman; Robert G. Rohwer; Cha-Min Tang; Joseph M. Schmitt

Optical contrast is often the limiting factor in the imaging of live biological tissue. Studies were conducted in postmortem human brain to identify clinical applications where the structures of interest possess high intrinsic optical contrast and where the real-time, high-resolution imaging capabilities of optical coherence tomography (OCT) may be critical. Myelinated fiber tracts and blood vessels are two structures with high optical contrast. The ability to image these two structures in real time may improve the efficacy and safety of a neurosurgical procedure to treat Parkinsons disease called deep brain stimulation (DBS). OCT was evaluated as a potential optical guidance system for DBS in 25 human brains. The results suggest that catheter-based OCT has the resolution and contrast necessary for DBS targeting. The results also demonstrate the ability of OCT to detect blood vessels with high sensitivity, suggesting a possible means to avoid their laceration during DBS. Other microscopic structures in the human brain with high optical contrast are pathological vacuoles associated with transmissible spongiform encephalopathy (TSE). TSE include diseases such as Mad Cow disease and Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) in humans. OCT performed on the brain from a woman who died of CJD was able to detect clearly the pathological vacuoles.


Optics Express | 2011

A forward-imaging needle-type OCT probe for image guided stereotactic procedures

Chia-Pin Liang; Jeremiah Wierwille; Thais Moreira; Gary Schwartzbauer; M. Samir Jafri; Cha-Min Tang; Yu Chen

A forward-imaging needle-type optical coherence tomography (OCT) probe with Doppler OCT (DOCT) capability has the potential to solve critical challenges in interventional procedures. A case in point is stereotactic neurosurgery where probes are advanced into the brain based on predetermined coordinates. Laceration of blood vessels in front of the advancing probe is an unavoidable complication with current methods. Moreover, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) leakage during surgery can shift the brain rendering the predetermined coordinates unreliable. In order to address these challenges, we developed a forward-imaging OCT probe (740 μm O.D.) using a gradient-index (GRIN) rod lens that can provide real-time imaging feedback for avoiding at-risk vessels (8 frames/s with 1024 A-scans per frame for OCT/DOCT dual imaging) and guiding the instrument to specific targets with 12 μm axial resolution (100 frames/s with 160 A-scans per frame for OCT imaging only). The high signal-to-background characteristic of DOCT provides exceptional sensitivity in detecting and quantifying the blood flow within the sheep brain parenchyma in real time. The OCT/DOCT dual imaging also demonstrated its capability to differentiate the vessel type (artery/vein) on rat’s femoral vessels. We also demonstrated in ex vivo human brain that the location of the tip of the OCT probe can be inferred from micro-anatomical landmarks in OCT images. These findings demonstrate the suitability of OCT guidance during stereotactic procedures in the brain and its potential for reducing the risk of cerebral hemorrhage.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1997

N-Nmoc-l-Glutamate, a New Caged Glutamate with High Chemical Stability and Low Pre-photolysis Activity

Francis M. Rossi; Michael Margulis; Cha-Min Tang; Joseph P. Y. Kao

We report the synthesis, the physicochemical characterization, and biological evaluation of a new caged glutamate,N-(o-nitromandelyl)oxycarbonyl-l-glutamic acid (Nmoc-Glu), that liberates free glutamate on photolysis. The low affinity of certain glutamate receptors and their rapid entry into desensitization have effectively prevented the creation of an ideal caged glutamate. In the absence of an ideal compound, Nmoc-Glu was designed to resist spontaneous hydrolysis while maintaining reasonable photorelease yield and kinetics. Chemical and physiological analyses reveal that Nmoc-Glu, indeed, has exceptionally low residual activity and high chemical stability. The quantum yield of Nmoc-Glu is 0.11. Photolytic uncaging and release of free glutamate occur in two steps, consisting of an initial light-induced cleavage that proceeds on the sub-millisecond time scale, and a subsequent light-independent, pH-dependent decarboxylation step that proceeds on the millisecond time scale. The low residual activity and high chemical stability of Nmoc-Glu are important advantages in applications where pre-photolysis Glu receptor activation and desensitization must be minimized.


Journal of Neuroscience Methods | 2009

Optical coherence tomography guided neurosurgical procedures in small rodents

M. Samir Jafri; Rebecca Tang; Cha-Min Tang

The delivery of therapeutic agents directly to targets deep within the brain is becoming an important tool in the treatment of a variety of neurological disorders. Currently, the standard method to accomplish this is by using stereotactic procedures. While this existing method is adequate for many experimental situations, it is essentially a blind procedure that cannot provide real-time feedback on whether the actual location deviated from the intended location or whether the therapeutic agent was actually delivered. Here we describe an optical guidance technique that is designed to work in conjunction with existing stereotactic procedures to provide the needed real-time feedback for therapeutic delivery in live animals. This real-time feedback is enabled by a technology called catheter-based optical coherence tomography (OCT). In this study we show that OCT can provide real-time position feedback based on microanatomic landmarks from the live rodent brain. We show that OCT can provide the necessary guidance to perform microsurgery such as the selective transection of the Schaffer collateral inputs to the CA1 region of the hippocampus with minimal perturbation of overlying structures. We also show that OCT allows visual monitoring of the successful delivery of viral vectors to specific subregions of the hippocampus.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Interlamellar CA1 network in the hippocampus

Sunggu Yang; Sungchil Yang; Thais Moreira; Gloria E. Hoffman; Greg C. Carlson; Kevin J. Bender; Bradley E. Alger; Cha-Min Tang

Significance It has generally been thought that CA1 cells form only negligible connections with each other along the longitudinal axis of the hippocampus. But if CA1 cells were interconnected in an effective autoassociational network, this information would add a critical new dimension to our understanding of cellular processing within this structure. Here, we report the existence of a well-organized, longitudinally projecting synaptic network among CA1 pyramidal neurons. We further show that synapses of this network are capable of supporting synaptic plasticity, including long-term potentiation, and a short-term memory mechanism called “dendritic hold and read.” These observations will contribute to the construction of more realistic models of hippocampal information processing in behavior, memory, and other cognitive functions. To understand the cellular basis of learning and memory, the neurophysiology of the hippocampus has been largely examined in thin transverse slice preparations. However, the synaptic architecture along the longitudinal septo-temporal axis perpendicular to the transverse projections in CA1 is largely unknown, despite its potential significance for understanding the information processing carried out by the hippocampus. Here, using a battery of powerful techniques, including 3D digital holography and focal glutamate uncaging, voltage-sensitive dye, two-photon imaging, electrophysiology, and immunohistochemistry, we show that CA1 pyramidal neurons are connected to one another in an associational and well-organized fashion along the longitudinal axis of the hippocampus. Such CA1 longitudinal connections mediate reliable signal transfer among the pyramidal cells and express significant synaptic plasticity. These results illustrate a need to reconceptualize hippocampal CA1 network function to include not only processing in the transverse plane, but also operations made possible by the longitudinal network. Our data will thus provide an essential basis for future computational modeling studies on information processing operations carried out in the full 3D hippocampal network that underlies its complex cognitive functions.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2007

Hyperexcitability of Distal Dendrites in Hippocampal Pyramidal Cells after Chronic Partial Deafferentation

Xiang Cai; Dong-Sheng Wei; Sandra E. Gallagher; Ashish A. Bagal; Yan-Ai Mei; Joseph P. Y. Kao; Scott M. Thompson; Cha-Min Tang

Traumatic injury to the CNS results in chronic partial deafferentation of subsets of surviving neurons. Such injuries are often followed by a delayed but long-lasting period of aberrant hyperexcitability. The cellular mechanisms underlying this delayed hyperexcitability are poorly understood. We developed an in vitro model of deafferentation and reactive hyperexcitability using organotypic hippocampal slice cultures to study the underlying cellular mechanisms. One week after transection of the Schaffer collateral and temporoammonic afferents to CA1 neurons, brief tetanic stimulation of the residual excitatory synapses produced abnormally prolonged depolarizations, compared with responses in normally innervated neurons. Responses to weak stimulation, in contrast, were unaffected after deafferentation. Direct stimulation of distal apical dendrites using focal photolysis of caged glutamate triggered abnormally prolonged plateau potentials in the deafferented neurons when strong stimulation was given, but responses to weak stimulation were not different from controls. An identical phenotype was produced by chronic “chemical deafferentation” with glutamate receptor antagonists. Responses to strong synaptic and photolytic stimulation were selectively prolonged by small-conductance (SK-type) calcium-activated potassium channel blockers in normally innervated cells but not after deafferentation. No significant changes in SK2 mRNA or protein levels, GABAergic inhibition, glutamate receptor function, input resistance, or action potential parameters were observed after chronic deafferentation. We suggest that a posttranslational downregulation of SK channel function in thin distal dendrites is a significant contributor to deafferentation-induced reactive hyperexcitability.


Journal of Visualized Experiments | 2011

Patterned photostimulation with digital micromirror devices to investigate dendritic integration across branch points.

Conrad W. Liang; Michael Mohammadi; M. Daniel Santos; Cha-Min Tang

Light is a versatile and precise means to control neuronal excitability. The recent introduction of light sensitive effectors such as channel-rhodopsin and caged neurotransmitters have led to interests in developing better means to control patterns of light in space and time that are useful for experimental neuroscience. One conventional strategy, employed in confocal and 2-photon microscopy, is to focus light to a diffraction limited spot and then scan that single spot sequentially over the region of interest. This approach becomes problematic if large areas have to be stimulated within a brief time window, a problem more applicable to photostimulation than for imaging. An alternate strategy is to project the complete spatial pattern on the target with the aid of a digital micromirror device (DMD). The DMD approach is appealing because the hardware components are relatively inexpensive and is supported by commercial interests. Because such a system is not available for upright microscopes, we will discuss the critical issues in the construction and operations of such a DMD system. Even though we will be primarily describing the construction of the system for UV photolysis, the modifications for building the much simpler visible light system for optogenetic experiments will also be provided. The UV photolysis system was used to carryout experiments to study a fundamental question in neuroscience, how are spatially distributed inputs integrated across distal dendritic branch points. The results suggest that integration can be non-linear across branch points and the supralinearity is largely mediated by NMDA receptors.

Collaboration


Dive into the Cha-Min Tang's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Sunggu Yang

Incheon National University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Sungchil Yang

City University of Hong Kong

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge