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Dive into the research topics where Lieven Huang is active.

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Featured researches published by Lieven Huang.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Increased axonal bouton dynamics in the aging mouse cortex

Federico W. Grillo; Sen Song; Leonor M. Teles-Grilo Ruivo; Lieven Huang; Ge Gao; Graham Knott; Bohumil Maco; Valentina Ferretti; Dawn Thompson; Graham Little; Vincenzo De Paola

Significance Synaptic plasticity is considered an essential process for the formation and maintenance of memory. It had been assumed for decades that cognitive deficits within the aging brain result from reduced synaptic density and plasticity. By imaging axonal arbors and boutons in the aged brain, we surprisingly find the opposite, i.e., dramatically increased rates of synapse formation, elimination, and destabilization in specific cortical circuits. This observation suggests that learning and memory deficits in the aged brain may arise not through an inability to form new synapses but rather through decreased synaptic tenacity. Aging is a major risk factor for many neurological diseases and is associated with mild cognitive decline. Previous studies suggest that aging is accompanied by reduced synapse number and synaptic plasticity in specific brain regions. However, most studies, to date, used either postmortem or ex vivo preparations and lacked key in vivo evidence. Thus, whether neuronal arbors and synaptic structures remain dynamic in the intact aged brain and whether specific synaptic deficits arise during aging remains unknown. Here we used in vivo two-photon imaging and a unique analysis method to rigorously measure and track the size and location of axonal boutons in aged mice. Unexpectedly, the aged cortex shows circuit-specific increased rates of axonal bouton formation, elimination, and destabilization. Compared with the young adult brain, large (i.e., strong) boutons show 10-fold higher rates of destabilization and 20-fold higher turnover in the aged cortex. Size fluctuations of persistent boutons, believed to encode long-term memories, also are larger in the aged brain, whereas bouton size and density are not affected. Our data uncover a striking and unexpected increase in axonal bouton dynamics in the aged cortex. The increased turnover and destabilization rates of large boutons indicate that learning and memory deficits in the aged brain arise not through an inability to form new synapses but rather through decreased synaptic tenacity. Overall our study suggests that increased synaptic structural dynamics in specific cortical circuits may be a mechanism for age-related cognitive decline.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

In vivo single branch axotomy induces GAP-43–dependent sprouting and synaptic remodeling in cerebellar cortex

Anna Letizia Allegra Mascaro; P. Cesare; Leonardo Sacconi; Giorgio Grasselli; Georgia Mandolesi; Bohumil Maco; Graham Knott; Lieven Huang; Vincenzo De Paola; Piergiorgio Strata; Francesco S. Pavone

Plasticity in the central nervous system in response to injury is a complex process involving axonal remodeling regulated by specific molecular pathways. Here, we dissected the role of growth-associated protein 43 (GAP-43; also known as neuromodulin and B-50) in axonal structural plasticity by using, as a model, climbing fibers. Single axonal branches were dissected by laser axotomy, avoiding collateral damage to the adjacent dendrite and the formation of a persistent glial scar. Despite the very small denervated area, the injured axons consistently reshape the connectivity with surrounding neurons. At the same time, adult climbing fibers react by sprouting new branches through the intact surroundings. Newly formed branches presented varicosities, suggesting that new axons were more than just exploratory sprouts. Correlative light and electron microscopy reveals that the sprouted branch contains large numbers of vesicles, with varicosities in the close vicinity of Purkinje dendrites. By using an RNA interference approach, we found that downregulating GAP-43 causes a significant increase in the turnover of presynaptic boutons. In addition, silencing hampers the generation of reactive sprouts. Our findings show the requirement of GAP-43 in sustaining synaptic stability and promoting the initiation of axonal regrowth.


Nature Communications | 2013

In-vivo single neuron axotomy triggers axon regeneration to restore synaptic density in specific cortical circuits

Allan J. Canty; Lieven Huang; Johanna Jackson; Graham Little; Graham Knott; Bohumil Maco; V. De Paola

To what extent, how and when axons respond to injury in the highly interconnected grey matter is poorly understood. Here we use two-photon imaging and focused ion beam-scanning electron microscopy to explore, at synaptic resolution, the regrowth capacity of several neuronal populations in the intact brain. Time-lapse analysis of >100 individually ablated axons for periods of up to a year reveals a surprising inability to regenerate even in a glial scar-free environment. However, depending on cell type some axons spontaneously extend for distances unseen in the unlesioned adult cortex and at maximum speeds comparable to peripheral nerve regeneration. Regrowth follows a distinct pattern from developmental axon growth. Remarkably, although never reconnecting to the original targets, axons consistently form new boutons at comparable prelesion synaptic densities, implying the existence of intrinsic homeostatic programmes, which regulate synaptic numbers on regenerating axons. Our results may help guide future clinical investigations to promote functional axon regeneration.


Expert Review of Molecular Diagnostics | 2010

Nanobodies®: proficient tools in diagnostics

Lieven Huang; Serge Muyldermans; Dirk Saerens

With the advent of new antibody engineering technologies, conventional antibodies have been minimized into smaller antibody formats. Small size is an important advantage for current and future diagnostic development. Nanobodies® (Ablynx) are among the smallest known antigen-binding antibody fragments, and are derived from the heavy-chain only antibodies that occur naturally in the serum of Camelidae. Endowed by natural evolution, these Nanobodies inherently exhibit unique biophysical, biochemical and pharmacological characteristics. In addition to their excellent potential as molecules in drug development, Nanobodies possess very attractive functional properties that aid in their development for diagnostic tools. Here we present several examples of currently available applications of Nanobodies to the field of immunosensor for cancer, immunoaffinity chromatography, in vivo and intracellular imaging.


Neural Development | 2016

Bacurd1/Kctd13 and Bacurd2/Tnfaip1 are interacting partners to Rnd proteins which influence the long-term positioning and dendritic maturation of cerebral cortical neurons

Ivan Gladwyn-Ng; Lieven Huang; Linh Ngo; Shan Shan Li; Zhengdong Qu; Hannah Kate Vanyai; Hayley Daniella Cullen; John Michael Davis; Julian Ik-Tsen Heng

BackgroundThe development of neural circuits within the embryonic cerebral cortex relies on the timely production of neurons, their positioning within the embryonic cerebral cortex as well as their terminal differentiation and dendritic spine connectivity. The RhoA GTPases Rnd2 and Rnd3 are important for neurogenesis and cell migration within the embryonic cortex (Nat Commun 4:1635, 2013), and we recently identified the BTB/POZ domain-containing Adaptor for Cul3-mediated RhoA Degradation family member Bacurd2 (also known as Tnfaip1) as an interacting partner to Rnd2 for the migration of embryonic mouse cortical neurons (Neural Dev 10:9, 2015).FindingsWe have extended this work and report that Bacurd1/Kctd13 and Bacurd2/Tnfaip1 are interacting partners to Rnd2 and Rnd3 in vitro. Given that these genes are expressed during cortical development, we performed a series of in utero electroporation studies in mice and found that disruptions to Bacurd1/Kctd13 or Bacurd2/Tnfaip1 expression impair the long-term positioning of E14.5-born cortical neurons within the postnatal (P17) mouse cerebral cortex. We also find that forced expression of Bacurd1/Kctd13 and Bacurd2/Tnfaip1 alters the branching and dendritic spine properties of layer II/III projection neurons.ConclusionsWe identify Bacurd1/Kctd13 and Bacurd2/Tnfaip1 as interacting partners to Rnd proteins which influence the development of cortical neurons. Their neurodevelopmental functions are likely to be relevant to human brain development and disease.


Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews | 2016

In vivo whole brain, cellular and molecular imaging in nonhuman primate models of neuropathology.

Lieven Huang; Tobias D. Merson; James A. Bourne

Rodents have been the principal model to study brain anatomy and function due to their well-mapped brain architecture, rapid reproduction and amenability to genetic modification. However, there are clear limitations, for example their simpler neocortex, necessitating the need to adopt a model that is closer to humans in order to understand human cognition and brain conditions. Nonhuman primates (NHPs) are ideally suited as they are our closest relatives in the animal kingdom but in vivo imaging technologies to study brain structure and function in these species can be challenging. With the surge in NHP research in recent years, scientists have begun adapting imaging technologies, such as two-photon microscopy, for these species. Here we review the various NHP models that exist as well as their use in advanced microscopic and mesoscopic studies. We discuss the challenges in the field and investigate the opportunities that lie ahead.


Current protocols in protein science | 2015

Laser-Mediated Microlesions in Mouse Neocortex to Investigate Neuronal Degeneration and Regeneration.

Johanna Jackson; Allan J. Canty; Lieven Huang; Vincenzo De Paola

In vivo two‐photon (2P) imaging enables neural circuitry to be repeatedly visualized in both normal conditions and following trauma. This protocol describes how laser‐mediated neuronal microlesions can be created in the cerebral cortex using an ultrafast laser without causing a significant inflammatory reaction or compromising the blood‐brain barrier. Furthermore, directives are provided for the acute and chronic in vivo imaging of the lesion site, as well as for post‐hoc analysis of the lesion site in fixed tissue, which can be correlated with the live imaging phase.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2013

In vivo reactive neural plasticity investigation by means of correlative two photon: electron microscopy

A. L. Allegra Mascaro; P. Cesare; Leonardo Sacconi; Giorgio Grasselli; Georgia Mandolesi; Bohumil Maco; Graham Knott; Lieven Huang; V. De Paola; Piergiorgio Strata; Francesco S. Pavone

In the adult nervous system, different populations of neurons correspond to different regenerative behavior. Although previous works showed that olivocerebellar fibers are capable of axonal regeneration in a suitable environment as a response to injury1, we have hitherto no details about the real dynamics of fiber regeneration. We set up a model of singularly axotomized climbing fibers (CF) to investigate their reparative properties in the adult central nervous system (CNS) in vivo. Time lapse two-photon imaging has been combined to laser nanosurgery2, 3 to define a temporal pattern of the degenerative event and to follow the structural rearrangement after injury. To characterize the damage and to elucidate the possible formation of new synaptic contacts on the sprouted branches of the lesioned CF, we combined two-photon in vivo imaging with block face scanning electron microscopy (FIB-SEM). Here we describe the approach followed to characterize the reactive plasticity after injury.


Society for Neuroscience Annual Meeting | 2012

In vivo 2-photon imaging of axonal regeneration and synaptic remodeling after laser-mediated micro lesions in the adult brain

Allan J. Canty; Lieven Huang; Johanna Jackson; L Ruivo; G Little; G Knott; B Maco; C Nesarajah; De Paola


Australian Neuroscience Society Annual Meeting | 2012

Observing axonal degeneration following laser mediated micro-lesion in the living brain

Allan J. Canty; Lieven Huang; Johanna Jackson; De Paola

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Bohumil Maco

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Graham Knott

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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V. De Paola

Imperial College London

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Georgia Mandolesi

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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