Skip to main content

Main navigation

  • About BCS
    • Mission
    • History
    • Building 46
      • Building 46 Room Reservations
    • Leadership
    • Employment
    • Contact
      • BCS Spot Awards
      • Building 46 Email and Slack
    • Directory
  • Faculty + Research
    • Faculty
    • Areas of Research
    • Postdoctoral Research
      • Postdoctoral Association and Committees
    • Core Facilities
    • InBrain
      • InBRAIN Collaboration Data Sharing Policy
  • Academics
    • Course 9: Brain and Cognitive Sciences
    • Course 6-9: Computation and Cognition
      • Course 6-9 MEng
    • Brain and Cognitive Sciences PhD
      • How to Apply
      • Program Details
      • Classes
      • Research
      • Student Life
      • For Current Students
    • Molecular and Cellular Neuroscience Program
      • How to Apply to MCN
      • MCN Faculty and Research Areas
      • MCN Curriculum
      • Model Systems
      • MCN Events
      • MCN FAQ
      • MCN Contacts
    • Computationally-Enabled Integrative Neuroscience Program
    • Research Scholars Program
    • Course Offerings
  • News + Events
    • News
    • Events
    • Recordings
    • Newsletter
  • Community + Culture
    • Community + Culture
    • Community Stories
    • Outreach
      • MIT Summer Research Program (MSRP)
      • Post-Baccalaureate Research Scholars
      • Conferences, Outreach and Networking Opportunities
    • Get Involved (MIT login required)
    • Resources (MIT login Required)
  • Give to BCS
    • Join the Champions of the Brain Fellows Society
    • Meet Our Donors

Utility Menu

  • Directory
  • Apply to BCS
  • Contact Us

Footer

  • Contact Us
  • Employment
  • Be a Test Subject
  • Login

Footer 2

  • McGovern
  • Picower

Utility Menu

  • Directory
  • Apply to BCS
  • Contact Us
Brain and Cognitive Sciences
Menu
MIT

Main navigation

  • About BCS
    • Mission
    • History
    • Building 46
    • Leadership
    • Employment
    • Contact
    • Directory
  • Faculty + Research
    • Faculty
    • Areas of Research
    • Postdoctoral Research
    • Core Facilities
    • InBrain
  • Academics
    • Course 9: Brain and Cognitive Sciences
    • Course 6-9: Computation and Cognition
    • Brain and Cognitive Sciences PhD
    • Molecular and Cellular Neuroscience Program
    • Computationally-Enabled Integrative Neuroscience Program
    • Research Scholars Program
    • Course Offerings
  • News + Events
    • News
    • Events
    • Recordings
    • Newsletter
  • Community + Culture
    • Community + Culture
    • Community Stories
    • Outreach
    • Get Involved (MIT login required)
    • Resources (MIT login Required)
  • Give to BCS
    • Join the Champions of the Brain Fellows Society
    • Meet Our Donors

Events

News Menu

  • News
  • Events
  • Newsletters

Breadcrumb

  1. Home
  2. Events
  3. Dimitra Vardalaki Thesis Defense: Functional and ultrastructural investigation of mouse and human dendritic spines
Dimitra Vardalaki Thesis Defense: Functional and ultrastructural investigation of mouse and human dendritic spines
Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences (BCS)

Dimitra Vardalaki Thesis Defense: Functional and ultrastructural investigation of mouse and human dendritic spines

Add to CalendarAmerica/New_YorkDimitra Vardalaki Thesis Defense: Functional and ultrastructural investigation of mouse and human dendritic spines04/13/2023 11:00 am04/13/2023 11:00 amMIT, Picower Seminar Room,46-3310
April 13, 2023
11:00 am
Location
MIT, Picower Seminar Room,46-3310
Contact
jugale@mit.edu
    Description

    Date:Time: Thursday, April 13th at 11:00AM ET

    Location: MIT, Picower Seminar Room 46-3310

    Thesis Title: Functional and ultrastructural investigation of mouse and human dendritic spines

    Abstract: Dendritic spines are the physical site of the majority of excitatory synaptic connections in the mammalian brain. Their complex morphological attributes and protein composition have inspired decades of theoretical and experimental work on how classes of dendritic spines differentially sculpt input processing and plasticity. The technical challenge of tethering physiological measurements of synaptic strength to spine morphology and protein expression in specific cell types leaves many open questions for the field. Here, we combine super-resolution protein imaging and patch-clamp electrophysiology to investigate the formation of nascent connections in the adult mouse cortex, and we develop a new method to apply these techniques to human neurons. In the first project presented, we used super-resolution protein imaging and patch-clamp electrophysiology to identify filopodia as the structural substrate for silent synapses in adult neocortex. Of 2,234 spiny synapses from adult mouse layer 5 pyramidal neurons, a surprisingly large fraction (~25%) lacked AMPA receptors. These putative silent synapses were located at the tips of thin dendritic protrusions that lack the distinct head of conventional spines, known as filopodia, which were more abundant in adult cortex by an order of magnitude than previously believed (compromising ~30% of all dendritic protrusions). Physiological experiments revealed that filopodia do indeed lack AMPAR-mediated transmission, but they exhibit NMDAR-mediated synaptic transmission. We further showed that functionally silent synapses on filopodia can be unsilenced via Hebbian plasticity, recruiting new active connections into a neuron’s input matrix. In the second project, we developed Patch2MAP to perform super-resolution imaging of proteins localized in the 3D morphology of any cell type in human tissue (or in any other species) without the need for exogenous protein expression. Our method, which combines patch-clamp electrophysiology with epitope-preserving magnified analysis of proteome (eMAP), further allows for correlation of physiological properties with subcellular protein expression. We applied Patch2MAP to individual spiny synapses in human cortical pyramidal neurons and demonstrated that electrophysiological AMPA-to-NMDA receptor ratios correspond tightly to respective protein expression levels. Taken together, the combination of protein imaging and physiological measurements expand our understanding on how the interplay of structure and protein content of spiny synapses shape synaptic input and open new avenues for a comprehensive investigation of synaptic function in humans.

    Thesis Supervisor: Mark T. Harnett

    Thesis Committee: Mark Bear, Morgan Sheng, Bernardo Sabatini

    Upcoming Events

    See All Events
    Don't miss our next newsletter!
    Sign Up

    Footer menu

    • Contact Us
    • Employment
    • Be a Test Subject
    • Login

    Footer 2

    • McGovern
    • Picower
    Brain and Cognitive Sciences

    MIT Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    77 Massachusetts Avenue, Room 46-2005

    Cambridge, MA 02139-4307 | (617) 253-5748

    For Emergencies | Accessibility

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology