Clay O. Lacefield
Columbia University
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Featured researches published by Clay O. Lacefield.
Hippocampus | 2012
Clay O. Lacefield; Vladimir Itskov; Thomas Reardon; René Hen; Joshua A. Gordon
Throughout the adult life of most mammals, new neurons are continuously generated in the dentate gyrus of the hippocampal formation. Recent work has documented specific cognitive deficits after elimination of adult hippocampal neurogenesis in rodents, suggesting that these neurons may contribute to information processing in hippocampal circuits. Young adult‐born neurons exhibit enhanced excitability and have altered capacity for synaptic plasticity in hippocampal slice preparations in vitro. Still, little is known about the effect of adult‐born granule cells on hippocampal activity in vivo. To assess the impact of these new neurons on neural circuits in the dentate, we recorded perforant‐path evoked responses and spontaneous network activity from the dentate gyrus of urethane‐anesthetized mice whose hippocampus had been focally X‐irradiated to eliminate the population of young adult‐born granule cells. After X‐irradiation, perforant‐path responses were reduced in magnitude. In contrast, there was a marked increase in the amplitude of spontaneous γ‐frequency bursts in the dentate gyrus and hilus, as well as increased synchronization of dentate neuron firing to these bursts. A similar increase in gamma burst amplitude was also found in animals in which adult neurogenesis was eliminated using the GFAP:TK pharmacogenetic ablation technique. These data suggest that young neurons may inhibit or destabilize recurrent network activity in the dentate and hilus. This unexpected result yields a new perspective on how a modest number of young adult‐generated granule cells may modulate activity in the larger population of mature granule cells, rather than acting solely as independent encoding units.
The Journal of Physiology | 2004
Jesse H. Goldberg; Clay O. Lacefield; Rafael Yuste
Interneuronal networks in neocortex underlie feedforward and feedback inhibition and control the temporal organization of pyramidal cell activity. We previously found that lower layer neocortical interneurones can reach action potential threshold in response to the stimulation of a single presynaptic cell. To better understand this phenomenon and the circuit roles of lower layer neocortical interneurones, we combined two‐photon calcium imaging with whole cell recordings and anatomical reconstructions of low threshold spiking (LTS) interneurones from mouse neocortex. In both visual and somatosensory cortex, LTS interneurones are somatostatin‐positive, concentrated in layer 5 and possess dense axonal innervation to layer 1. Due to the LTS properties, these neurones operate in burst and tonic modes. In burst mode, dendritic T‐type calcium channels boosted small synaptic inputs and triggered low threshold calcium spikes, while in tonic mode, sodium‐based APs evoked smaller calcium influxes. In both modes, the entire dendritic tree of LTS interneurones behaved as a ‘global’ single spiking unit. This, together with the fact that synaptic inputs to layer 5 LTS cells are facilitating, and that their axons target the dendritic region of the pyramidal neurones where bursts are generated, make these neurones ideally suited to detect and control burst generation of individual lower layer pyramidal neurones.
Neuron | 2000
Scott A. Small; Ed X. Wu; Dusan Bartsch; Gerard M. Perera; Clay O. Lacefield; Robert DeLaPaz; Richard Mayeux; Yaakov Stern; Eric R. Kandel
We have developed a variant of functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) designed to be sensitive to static neuronal function. This method is based on resting instead of dynamic changes in oxygen-dependent signal and therefore allows for a spatial resolution that can detect signal from different hippocampal subregions in human subjects as well as in mice. We found that hippocampal signal was significantly diminished in elderly subjects with memory decline compared to age-matched controls, and different subjects showed dysfunction in different subregions. Among healthy elders, signal intensity from the subiculum was correlated selectively with memory performance. This method does not require an activation task; it can be used in anesthetized normal and in genetically modified and cognitively impaired mice. In mice the signal was found to be sufficiently sensitive to detect functional changes in the absence of underlying anatomical changes.
The Journal of Neuroscience | 2005
Joshua A. Gordon; Clay O. Lacefield; Clifford G. Kentros; René Hen
Mice lacking the serotonin 1A receptor (5-HT1AR) show increased levels of anxiety-related behavior across multiple tests and background strains. Tissue-specific rescue experiments, lesion studies, and neurophysiological findings all point toward the hippocampus as a potential mediator of the phenotype. Serotonin, acting through 5-HT1ARs, can suppress hippocampal theta-frequency oscillations, suggesting that theta oscillations might be increased in the knock-outs. To test this hypothesis, local field potential recordings were obtained from the hippocampus of awake, behaving knock-outs and wild-type littermates. The magnitude of theta oscillations was increased in the knock-outs, specifically in the anxiety-provoking elevated plus maze and not in a familiar environment or during rapid eye movement sleep. Theta power correlated with the fraction of time spent in the open arms, an anxiety-related behavioral variable. These results suggest a possible role for the hippocampus, and theta oscillations in particular, in the expression of anxiety in 5-HT1AR-deficient mice.
Neurophotonics | 2014
Hongtao Ma; Samuel Harris; Redi Rahmani; Clay O. Lacefield; Mingrui Zhao; Andy G. S. Daniel; Zhiping Zhou; Randy M. Bruno; Jason Berwick; Theodore H. Schwartz
Abstract. In vivo calcium imaging is an incredibly powerful technique that provides simultaneous information on fast neuronal events, such as action potentials and subthreshold synaptic activity, as well as slower events that occur in the glia and surrounding neuropil. Bulk-loading methods that involve multiple injections can be used for single-cell as well as wide-field imaging studies. However, multiple injections result in inhomogeneous loading as well as multiple sites of potential cortical injury. We used convection-enhanced delivery to create smooth, continuous loading of a large area of the cortical surface through a solitary injection site and demonstrated the efficacy of the technique using confocal microscopy imaging of single cells and physiological responses to single-trial events of spontaneous activity, somatosensory-evoked potentials, and epileptiform events. Combinations of calcium imaging with voltage-sensitive dye and intrinsic signal imaging demonstrate the utility of this technique in neurovascular coupling investigations. Convection-enhanced loading of calcium dyes may be a useful technique to advance the study of cortical processing when widespread loading of a wide-field imaging is required.
Nature Photonics | 2015
Matthew B. Bouchard; Venkatakaushik Voleti; César S. Mendes; Clay O. Lacefield; Wesley B. Grueber; Richard S. Mann; Randy M. Bruno; Elizabeth M. C. Hillman
Neuron | 2016
Eftychios A. Pnevmatikakis; Daniel Soudry; Yuanjun Gao; Timothy A. Machado; Josh Merel; David Pfau; Thomas Reardon; Yu Mu; Clay O. Lacefield; Weijian Yang; Misha B. Ahrens; Randy M. Bruno; Thomas M. Jessell; Darcy S. Peterka; Rafael Yuste; Liam Paninski
Genetics | 2003
William B. Raich; Celine Moorman; Clay O. Lacefield; Jonah Lehrer; Dusan Bartsch; Ronald H.A. Plasterk; Eric R. Kandel; Oliver Hobert
arXiv: Neurons and Cognition | 2014
Kira E. Poskanzer; Eftychios A. Pnevmatikakis; Yuanjun Gao; Daniel Soudry; David Pfau; Clay O. Lacefield; Randy M. Bruno; Rafael Yuste; Liam Paninski
Nature | 2018
Y. Kate Hong; Clay O. Lacefield; Chris C. Rodgers; Randy M. Bruno