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Anna Bronec, M.Sc.

From Dendrites to Consciousness – Investigating the Neuronal Basis of Integration

I am a PhD student in neuroscience with a focus on the cellular mechanisms underlying dendrite-soma coupling in cortical pyramidal neurons. My research investigates how metabotropic receptors modulate signal integration and propagation across neuronal compartments. Using in-vitro whole-cell patch-clamp recordings combined with optogenetics, I selectively activate dendrites and monitor the resulting somatic responses. A key part of my work involves studying the effects of general anesthetics on dendrite-soma communication in vitro, to better understand how these substances alter integrative neuronal processing. My methodological expertise includes electrophysiological data analysis, current-clamp recordings, pharmacological manipulation, and in-vivo LFP recordings. Through this research, I aim to uncover how local cellular dynamics contribute to global brain states such as wakefulness and unconsciousness.



Publications

2024

The deepest layer of the cortex (layer 6b [L6b]) contains relatively few neurons, but it is the only cortical layer responsive to the potent wake-promoting neuropeptide orexin/hypocretin. Can these few neurons significantly influence brain state? Here, we show that L6b-photoactivation causes a surprisingly robust enhancement of attention-associated high-gamma oscillations and population spiking while abolishing slow waves in sleep-deprived mice. To explain this powerful impact on brain state, we investigated L6b’s synaptic output using optogenetics, electrophysiology, and monoCaTChR ex vivo. We found powerful output in the higher-order thalamus and apical dendrites of L5 pyramidal neurons, via L1a and L5a, as well as in superior colliculus and L6 interneurons. L6b subpopulations with distinct morphologies and short- and long-term plasticities project to these diverse targets. The L1a-targeting subpopulation triggered powerful NMDA-receptor-dependent spikes that elicited burst firing in L5. We conclude that orexin/hypocretin-activated cortical neurons form a multifaceted, fine-tuned circuit for the sustained control of the higher-order thalamocortical system.

Layer 6b controls brain state via apical dendrites and the higher-order thalamocortical system. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuron.2023.11.021.



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