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Dive into the research topics where Elly Nedivi is active.

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Featured researches published by Elly Nedivi.


Nature Protocols | 2009

Long-term, high-resolution imaging in the mouse neocortex through a chronic cranial window

Anthony Holtmaat; Tobias Bonhoeffer; David K. Chow; Ja Chuckowree; Vincenzo De Paola; Sonja B. Hofer; Mark Hübener; Tara Keck; Graham Knott; Wei-Chung Allen Lee; Ricardo Mostany; Thomas D. Mrsic-Flogel; Elly Nedivi; Carlos Portera-Cailliau; Karel Svoboda; Joshua T Trachtenberg; Linda Wilbrecht

To understand the cellular and circuit mechanisms of experience-dependent plasticity, neurons and their synapses need to be studied in the intact brain over extended periods of time. Two-photon excitation laser scanning microscopy (2PLSM), together with expression of fluorescent proteins, enables high-resolution imaging of neuronal structure in vivo. In this protocol we describe a chronic cranial window to obtain optical access to the mouse cerebral cortex for long-term imaging. A small bone flap is replaced with a coverglass, which is permanently sealed in place with dental acrylic, providing a clear imaging window with a large field of view (∼0.8–12 mm2). The surgical procedure can be completed within ∼1 h. The preparation allows imaging over time periods of months with arbitrary imaging intervals. The large size of the imaging window facilitates imaging of ongoing structural plasticity of small neuronal structures in mice, with low densities of labeled neurons. The entire dendritic and axonal arbor of individual neurons can be reconstructed.


PLOS Biology | 2005

Dynamic Remodeling of Dendritic Arbors in GABAergic Interneurons of Adult Visual Cortex

Wei-Chung Allen Lee; Hayden Huang; Guoping Feng; Joshua R. Sanes; Emery N. Brown; Peter T. C. So; Elly Nedivi

Despite decades of evidence for functional plasticity in the adult brain, the role of structural plasticity in its manifestation remains unclear. To examine the extent of neuronal remodeling that occurs in the brain on a day-to-day basis, we used a multiphoton-based microscopy system for chronic in vivo imaging and reconstruction of entire neurons in the superficial layers of the rodent cerebral cortex. Here we show the first unambiguous evidence (to our knowledge) of dendrite growth and remodeling in adult neurons. Over a period of months, neurons could be seen extending and retracting existing branches, and in rare cases adding new branch tips. Neurons exhibiting dynamic arbor rearrangements were GABA-positive non-pyramidal interneurons, while pyramidal cells remained stable. These results are consistent with the idea that dendritic structural remodeling is a substrate for adult plasticity and they suggest that circuit rearrangement in the adult cortex is restricted by cell type–specific rules.


Neuron | 2012

Clustered Dynamics of Inhibitory Synapses and Dendritic Spines in the Adult Neocortex

Jerry L. Chen; Katherine Leigh Villa; Jae Won Cha; Peter T. C. So; Yoshiyuki Kubota; Elly Nedivi

A key feature of the mammalian brain is its capacity to adapt in response to experience, in part by remodeling of synaptic connections between neurons. Excitatory synapse rearrangements have been monitored in vivo by observation of dendritic spine dynamics, but lack of a vital marker for inhibitory synapses has precluded their observation. Here, we simultaneously monitor in vivo inhibitory synapse and dendritic spine dynamics across the entire dendritic arbor of pyramidal neurons in the adult mammalian cortex using large-volume, high-resolution dual-color two-photon microscopy. We find that inhibitory synapses on dendritic shafts and spines differ in their distribution across the arbor and in their remodeling kinetics during normal and altered sensory experience. Further, we find inhibitory synapse and dendritic spine remodeling to be spatially clustered and that clustering is influenced by sensory input. Our findings provide in vivo evidence for local coordination of inhibitory and excitatory synaptic rearrangements.


Journal of Molecular Neuroscience | 1998

Hippocampal plasticity involves extensive gene induction and multiple cellular mechanisms

Dana Hevroni; Amir Rattner; Marsha Bundman; Doron Lederfein; Awni Gabarah; Miriam Mangelus; Michael A. Silverman; Hilla Kedar; Cathy Naor; Masayo Kornuc; Tamar Hanoch; Rony Seger; Lars Eyde Theill; Elly Nedivi; Gal Richter-Levin; Yoav Citri

Long-term plasticity of the central nervous system (CNS) involves induction of a set of genes whose identity is incompletely characterized. To identify candidate plasticity-related genes (CPGs), we conducted an exhaustive screen for genes that undergo induction or downregulation in the hippocampus dentate gyrus (DG) following animal treatment with the potent glutamate analog, kainate. The screen yielded 362 upregulated CPGs and 41 downregulated transcripts (dCPGs). Of these, 66 CPGs and 5 dCPGs are known genes that encode for a variety of signal transduction proteins, transcription factors, and structural proteins. Seven novel CPGs predict the following putative functions:cpg2—a dystrophin-like cytoskeletal protein;cpg4—a heat-shock protein:cpg16—a protein kinase;cpg20—a transcription factor;cpg21—a dual-specificity MAP-kinase phosphatase; andcpg30 andcpg38—two new seven-transmembrane domain receptors. Experiments performed in vitro and with cultured hippocampal cells confirmed the ability of thecpg-21 product to inactivate the MAP-kinase. To test relevance to neural plasticity, 66 CPGs were tested for induction by stimuli producing long-term potentiation (LTP). Approximately one-fourth of the genes examined were upregulated by LTP. These results indicate that an extensive genetic response is induced in mammalian brain after glutamate receptor activation, and imply that a significant proportion of this activity is coinduced by LTP. Based on the identified CPGs, it is conceivable that multiple cellular mechanisms underlie long-term plasticity of the nervous system.


Neuron | 2004

CPG2: A Brain- and Synapse-Specific Protein that Regulates the Endocytosis of Glutamate Receptors

Jeffrey R. Cottrell; Erzsebet Borok; Tamas L. Horvath; Elly Nedivi

Long-term maintenance and modification of synaptic strength involve the turnover of neurotransmitter receptors. Glutamate receptors are constitutively and acutely internalized, presumptively through clathrin-mediated receptor endocytosis. Here, we show that cpg2 is a brain-specific splice variant of the syne-1 gene that encodes a protein specifically localized to a postsynaptic endocytotic zone of excitatory synapses. RNAi-mediated CPG2 knockdown increases the number of postsynaptic clathrin-coated vesicles, some of which traffic NMDA receptors, disrupts the constitutive internalization of glutamate receptors, and inhibits the activity-induced internalization of synaptic AMPA receptors. Manipulating CPG2 levels also affects dendritic spine size, further supporting a function in regulating membrane transport. Our results suggest that CPG2 is a key component of a specialized postsynaptic endocytic mechanism devoted to the internalization of synaptic proteins, including glutamate receptors. The activity dependence and distribution of cpg2 expression further suggest that it contributes to the capacity for postsynaptic plasticity inherent to excitatory synapses.


Optics Express | 2007

Multifocal multiphoton microscopy based on multianode photomultiplier tubes

Ki Hean Kim; Christof Buehler; Karsten Bahlmann; Timothy Ragan; Wei-Chung Allen Lee; Elly Nedivi; Erica L. Heffer; Sergio Fantini; Peter T. C. So

Multifocal multiphoton microscopy (MMM) enhances imaging speed by parallelization. It is not well understood why the imaging depth of MMM is significantly shorter than conventional single-focus multiphoton microscopy (SMM). In this report, we show that the need for spatially resolved detectors in MMM results in a system that is more sensitive to the scattering of emission photons with reduced imaging depth. For imaging depths down to twice the scattering mean free path length of emission photons (2xl (s) (em)), the emission point spread function (PSF(em)) is found to consist of a narrow, diffraction limited distribution from ballistic emission photons and a broad, relatively low amplitude distribution from scattered photons. Since the scattered photon distribution is approximately 100 times wider than that of the unscattered photons at 2xl (s) (em), image contrast and depth are degraded without compromising resolution. To overcome the imaging depth limitation of MMM, we present a new design that replaces CCD cameras with multi-anode photomultiplier tubes (MAPMTs) allowing more efficient collection of scattered emission photons. We demonstrate that MAPMT-based MMM has imaging depth comparable to SMM with equivalent sensitivity by imaging tissue phantoms, ex vivo human skin specimens based on endogenous fluorophores, and green fluorescent protein (GFP) expressing neurons in mouse brain slices.


Nature Neuroscience | 2005

Soluble CPG15 expressed during early development rescues cortical progenitors from apoptosis

Ulrich Putz; Corey C. Harwell; Elly Nedivi

The balance between proliferation and apoptosis is critical for proper development of the nervous system. Yet, little is known about molecules that regulate apoptosis of proliferative neurons. Here we identify a soluble, secreted form of CPG15 expressed in embryonic rat brain regions undergoing rapid proliferation and apoptosis, and show that it protects cultured cortical neurons from apoptosis by preventing activation of caspase 3. Using a lentivirus-delivered small hairpin RNA, we demonstrate that endogenous CPG15 is essential for the survival of undifferentiated cortical progenitors in vitro and in vivo. We further show that CPG15 overexpression in vivo expands the progenitor pool by preventing apoptosis, resulting in an enlarged, indented cortical plate and cellular heterotopias within the ventricular zone, similar to the phenotypes of mutant mice with supernumerary forebrain progenitors. CPG15 expressed during mammalian forebrain morphogenesis may help balance neuronal number by countering apoptosis in specific neuroblasts subpopulations, thus influencing final brain size and shape.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

A dynamic zone defines interneuron remodeling in the adult neocortex

Wei-Chung Allen Lee; Jerry L. Chen; Hayden Huang; Jennifer H. Leslie; Yael Amitai; Peter T. C. So; Elly Nedivi

The contribution of structural remodeling to long-term adult brain plasticity is unclear. Here, we investigate features of GABAergic interneuron dendrite dynamics and extract clues regarding its potential role in cortical function and circuit plasticity. We show that remodeling interneurons are contained within a “dynamic zone” corresponding to a superficial strip of layers 2/3, and remodeling dendrites respect the lower border of this zone. Remodeling occurs primarily at the periphery of dendritic fields with addition and retraction of new branch tips. We further show that dendrite remodeling is not intrinsic to a specific interneuron class. These data suggest that interneuron remodeling is not a feature predetermined by genetic lineage, but rather, it is imposed by cortical laminar circuitry. Our findings are consistent with dynamic GABAergic modulation of feedforward and recurrent connections in response to top-down feedback and suggest a structural component to functional plasticity of supragranular neocortical laminae.


Progress in Neurobiology | 2011

Activity-regulated genes as mediators of neural circuit plasticity.

Jennifer H. Leslie; Elly Nedivi

Modifications of neuronal circuits allow the brain to adapt and change with experience. This plasticity manifests during development and throughout life, and can be remarkably long lasting. Evidence has linked activity-regulated gene expression to the long-term structural and electrophysiological adaptations that take place during developmental critical periods, learning and memory, and alterations to sensory map representations in the adult. In all these cases, the cellular response to neuronal activity integrates multiple tightly coordinated mechanisms to precisely orchestrate long-lasting, functional and structural changes in brain circuits. Experience-dependent plasticity is triggered when neuronal excitation activates cellular signaling pathways from the synapse to the nucleus that initiate new programs of gene expression. The protein products of activity-regulated genes then work via a diverse array of cellular mechanisms to modify neuronal functional properties. Synaptic strengthening or weakening can reweight existing circuit connections, while structural changes including synapse addition and elimination create new connections. Posttranscriptional regulatory mechanisms, often also dependent on activity, further modulate activity-regulated gene transcript and protein function. Thus, activity-regulated genes implement varied forms of structural and functional plasticity to fine-tune brain circuit wiring.


Molecular and Cellular Neuroscience | 2003

Regulation of cpg15 by signaling pathways that mediate synaptic plasticity

Tadahiro Fujino; Wei-Chung Allen Lee; Elly Nedivi

Transcriptional activation is a key link between neuronal activity and long-term synaptic plasticity. Little is known about genes responding to this activation whose products directly effect functional and structural changes at the synapse. cpg15 is an activity-regulated gene encoding a membrane-bound ligand that regulates dendritic and axonal arbor growth and synaptic maturation. We report that cpg15 is an immediate-early gene induced by Ca(2+) influx through NMDA receptors and L-type voltage-sensitive calcium channels. Activity-dependent cpg15 expression requires convergent activation of the CaM kinase and MAP kinase pathways. Although activation of PKA is not required for activity-dependent expression, cpg15 is induced by cAMP in active neurons. CREB binds the cpg15 promoter in vivo and partially regulates its activity-dependent expression. cpg15 is an effector gene that is a target for signal transduction pathways that mediate synaptic plasticity and thus may take part in an activity-regulated transcriptional program that directs long-term changes in synaptic connections.

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Peter T. C. So

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Jae Won Cha

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Kalen P. Berry

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Tadahiro Fujino

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Katherine Leigh Villa

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Yoshiyuki Kubota

Graduate University for Advanced Studies

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Hayden Huang

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Jeffrey R. Cottrell

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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