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Turrigiano Lab

Homeostasis and Neural Circuit Plasticity and Function

How can our brains be both plastic and stable?

With billions of neurons interconnected by trillions of synapses, the mammalian brain is perhaps the most complex object in the known universe - far more complex than any human-built machine. Also unlike most machines, our brains are constantly changing to adapt to a fluid environment, to store memories, and to become better at sensory perception and motor tasks. While even simple machines require mechanics to keep them tuned up and running properly, brain circuits are able to tune themselves up on the fly, so that these learning-induced changes do not destabilize circuit function. The Turrigiano lab studies identifies and studies the homeostatic plasticity mechanisms that allow our brains to achieve this remarkable trick of being both plastic and stable. Our work spans the cellular/molecular, circuit, and systems levels of analysis to illuminate how neurons and circuits adjust their own excitability to maintain stable output and preserve information flow in the face of learning and development, and how neurological disorders might arise from failures of these self-tuning processes.

Andrea's paper screenshot.JPG

The work from Andrea Guerrero's dissertation has resulted in a manuscript entitled 'Activity deprivation modulates the Shank3/Homer1/mGluR5 signaling pathway to enable synaptic upscaling' and is now available on BioRxiv. Learn how Shank3, Homer1, and mGluR5 signaling is involved in synaptic upscaling. 

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Preprint alert (yet another one!)

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