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1.
Cell ; 186(1): 178-193.e15, 2023 01 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36608653

RESUMO

The hypothalamus regulates innate social behaviors, including mating and aggression. These behaviors can be evoked by optogenetic stimulation of specific neuronal subpopulations within MPOA and VMHvl, respectively. Here, we perform dynamical systems modeling of population neuronal activity in these nuclei during social behaviors. In VMHvl, unsupervised analysis identified a dominant dimension of neural activity with a large time constant (>50 s), generating an approximate line attractor in neural state space. Progression of the neural trajectory along this attractor was correlated with an escalation of agonistic behavior, suggesting that it may encode a scalable state of aggressiveness. Consistent with this, individual differences in the magnitude of the integration dimension time constant were strongly correlated with differences in aggressiveness. In contrast, approximate line attractors were not observed in MPOA during mating; instead, neurons with fast dynamics were tuned to specific actions. Thus, different hypothalamic nuclei employ distinct neural population codes to represent similar social behaviors.


Assuntos
Comportamento Sexual Animal , Núcleo Hipotalâmico Ventromedial , Animais , Comportamento Sexual Animal/fisiologia , Núcleo Hipotalâmico Ventromedial/fisiologia , Hipotálamo/fisiologia , Agressão/fisiologia , Comportamento Social
2.
Biostatistics ; 23(2): 643-665, 2022 04 13.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33417699

RESUMO

Personalized cancer treatments based on the molecular profile of a patient's tumor are an emerging and exciting class of treatments in oncology. As genomic tumor profiling is becoming more common, targeted treatments for specific molecular alterations are gaining traction. To discover new potential therapeutics that may apply to broad classes of tumors matching some molecular pattern, experimentalists and pharmacologists rely on high-throughput, in vitro screens of many compounds against many different cell lines. We propose a hierarchical Bayesian model of how cancer cell lines respond to drugs in these experiments and develop a method for fitting the model to real-world high-throughput screening data. Through a case study, the model is shown to capture nontrivial associations between molecular features and drug response, such as requiring both wild type TP53 and overexpression of MDM2 to be sensitive to Nutlin-3(a). In quantitative benchmarks, the model outperforms a standard approach in biology, with $\approx20\%$ lower predictive error on held out data. When combined with a conditional randomization testing procedure, the model discovers markers of therapeutic response that recapitulate known biology and suggest new avenues for investigation. All code for the article is publicly available at https://github.com/tansey/deep-dose-response.


Assuntos
Antineoplásicos , Neoplasias , Antineoplásicos/farmacologia , Teorema de Bayes , Avaliação Pré-Clínica de Medicamentos/métodos , Detecção Precoce de Câncer , Ensaios de Triagem em Larga Escala , Humanos , Neoplasias/tratamento farmacológico , Neoplasias/genética
3.
Cell ; 174(1): 44-58.e17, 2018 06 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29779950

RESUMO

Many naturalistic behaviors are built from modular components that are expressed sequentially. Although striatal circuits have been implicated in action selection and implementation, the neural mechanisms that compose behavior in unrestrained animals are not well understood. Here, we record bulk and cellular neural activity in the direct and indirect pathways of dorsolateral striatum (DLS) as mice spontaneously express action sequences. These experiments reveal that DLS neurons systematically encode information about the identity and ordering of sub-second 3D behavioral motifs; this encoding is facilitated by fast-timescale decorrelations between the direct and indirect pathways. Furthermore, lesioning the DLS prevents appropriate sequence assembly during exploratory or odor-evoked behaviors. By characterizing naturalistic behavior at neural timescales, these experiments identify a code for elemental 3D pose dynamics built from complementary pathway dynamics, support a role for DLS in constructing meaningful behavioral sequences, and suggest models for how actions are sculpted over time.


Assuntos
Comportamento Animal , Corpo Estriado/metabolismo , Animais , Comportamento Animal/efeitos dos fármacos , Cálcio/metabolismo , Corpo Estriado/efeitos dos fármacos , Eletrodos Implantados , Feminino , Masculino , Camundongos , Camundongos Endogâmicos C57BL , Camundongos Transgênicos , N-Metilaspartato/farmacologia , Neurônios/efeitos dos fármacos , Neurônios/fisiologia , Fotometria , Receptores de Dopamina D1/deficiência , Receptores de Dopamina D1/genética
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