The human brain comprises approximately 100 billion neurons that express a diverse, and often subtype-specific, set of neurotransmitters and voltage-gated ion channels. Given this enormous complexity, a fundamental question is how is this achieved? The acquisition of neurotransmitter phenotype was viewed as being set by developmental programs ‘hard wired’ into the genome. By contrast, the expression of neuron-specific ion channels was considered to be highly dynamic (i.e., ‘soft wired’) and shaped largely by activity-dependent mechanisms. Recent evidence blurs this distinction by showing that neurotransmitter phenotype can be altered by activity and that neuron type-specific ion channel expression can be set, and perhaps limited by, develop...
Morphogenetic proteins are responsible for patterning the embryonic nervous system by enabling cell ...
The formation of the proper pattern of neuronal circuits during development is critical for the norm...
There are probably more different cell types in the mature nervous system than in all of the other ...
The human brain comprises approximately 100 billion neurons that express a diverse, and often subtyp...
The decade of the brain may have come and gone, but the final frontier, cracking the neuronal code, ...
The long history of probing the role of neuronal activity in the development of nervous system circu...
Across the nervous system, neurons form highly stereotypic patterns of synaptic connections that are...
AbstractThe function of the nervous system depends on the integrity of synapses and the patterning o...
AbstractNeurons share many features in common but are distinguished by expression of phenotypic char...
AbstractResearchers working on neuronal networks are increasingly taking advantage of the ability to...
Modifications of neuronal circuits allow the brain to adapt and change with experience. This plastic...
The intrinsic properties of a neuron determine the translation of synaptic input to axonal output. I...
Neurons are organized in functional circuits to allow an organism to perform complex behaviors. The ...
The purpose of neural development is to assemble functional circuits that control behavior, a proces...
International audienceThe appropriate function of the nervous system relies on precise patterns of c...
Morphogenetic proteins are responsible for patterning the embryonic nervous system by enabling cell ...
The formation of the proper pattern of neuronal circuits during development is critical for the norm...
There are probably more different cell types in the mature nervous system than in all of the other ...
The human brain comprises approximately 100 billion neurons that express a diverse, and often subtyp...
The decade of the brain may have come and gone, but the final frontier, cracking the neuronal code, ...
The long history of probing the role of neuronal activity in the development of nervous system circu...
Across the nervous system, neurons form highly stereotypic patterns of synaptic connections that are...
AbstractThe function of the nervous system depends on the integrity of synapses and the patterning o...
AbstractNeurons share many features in common but are distinguished by expression of phenotypic char...
AbstractResearchers working on neuronal networks are increasingly taking advantage of the ability to...
Modifications of neuronal circuits allow the brain to adapt and change with experience. This plastic...
The intrinsic properties of a neuron determine the translation of synaptic input to axonal output. I...
Neurons are organized in functional circuits to allow an organism to perform complex behaviors. The ...
The purpose of neural development is to assemble functional circuits that control behavior, a proces...
International audienceThe appropriate function of the nervous system relies on precise patterns of c...
Morphogenetic proteins are responsible for patterning the embryonic nervous system by enabling cell ...
The formation of the proper pattern of neuronal circuits during development is critical for the norm...
There are probably more different cell types in the mature nervous system than in all of the other ...