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| Dinu Florin Albeanu CSHL FELLOW PhD, Harvard University, 2008 BS, MIT, 2001 Neuronal circuits; sensory coding and synaptic plasticity; neuronal correlates of behavior; olfactory processing email albeanu@cshl.edu, phone (516) 367-8822 The world outside us is flooded with information and our sensory systems are dedicated to perceive different bits of this information and process it in a form that’s understandable by our brain. Useful information must be extracted and the rest ignored. For instance, even as one skims through this page, while the eyes read the letters, the ears tune to the track on the ipod, the nose smells the wires burning in the next room (hopefully not!) and the reader debates between a coffee and finishing the contents of this window. Each sensory system thus receives vastly different nature of stimuli and requires processing them differently, all at the same time. To understand any brain area or neuro-circuit, we broadly address the following questions: The olfactory system, particularly the olfactory bulb, in rodents provides us with an ideal substrate to answer these questions, given its well-defined circuitry and multi-layered organization. Rodents, being nocturnal animals, depend heavily on olfaction for survival - finding food, mates, avoiding predators and more. Airborne chemicals or odors are translated into neuronal signals by specific receptors in the nose and sent first to the bulb and then to higher centers in the brain (olfactory cortex). The bulb thus being the relay center provides the opportunity to study both the nature of the inputs it receives, and the nature of output it sends to the brain and the computations that allow for this input-output transformation. Technological advances in multi-photon imaging, the explosion of numerous genetically encoded reporters of neuronal activity coupled with electrophysiological measurements and opto-genetic tools now enable us to monitor and alter patterns of activity with unprecedented synaptic resolution, while the animals perform various olfactory tasks. Selected Publications Soucy, E.R.*, Albeanu, D.F.*, Murthy, V.N and Meister, M. 2009. Precision and diversity in an odor map on the olfactory bulb. Nat Neurosci.12 (2):210-20. Petzold, G., Albeanu, D.F., Sato, T.F, Murthy, V.N. 2008. Coupling of neural activity to blood flow in olfactory glomeruli is mediated by astrocytic pathways. Neuron. 58 (6):897-910. Albeanu D.F.*, Soucy E.R*, Sato T.F., Meister M. and Murthy V.N. 2008. LED array as cost effective and efficient lighting sources for widefield microscopy. PLoS ONE.3(5):e2146. Li, Z.*, Burrone, J.*, Tyler, W.J., Hartman, K.N., Albeanu, D.F. and Murthy, V.N. 2005. Synaptic vesicle recycling studied using transgenic mice expressing synaptopHluorin. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. 102:6131-6136. |