Establishing a causal relationship between an animal’s genetic make-up and its behavior is one of the foremost challenges in neuroscience: while it seems clear that certain normal and pathological behavioral traits have a genetic basis, bridging the gaps between genes, neurons, circuits and behavior encompasses nearly all disciplines of neuroscience and is far from trivial. In this course, we will present basic concepts on multiple levels of nervous system organization and function. We will discuss the unique properties of brain cells, the diversity of cell types and how cells of different types assemble into functional circuits, how the brain is altered by experience, and provide some examples of how genetic mutations can lead to altered cellular, circuit and behavioral functions associated with neurodevelopmental and psychiatric disease. Throughout the course, we will cover modern methods in neuroscience that have provided novel insights into the organization and function of brain circuits, including electrophysiology, functional imaging, and next-generation sequencing.
- Lecture 1: Introduction and overview. Innate versus adaptive behavior and the role of experience (nature vs. nurture).
- Lecture 2: Neurogenetics: the hereditary basis of behavioral traits
- Lecture 3: Cell biology of neurons I: basic shared features
- Lecture 4: Cell biology of neurons II: cellular diversity
- Lecture 5: Cell biology of non-neuronal cells: glial cells (Guest lecture by Inbal Goshen, HUJI)
- Lecture 6: Signal transduction and gene expression in neurons: definition of, and changes in neuronal properties by genes
- Lecture 7: Communication between neurons - neurotransmitter systems, synaptic mechanisms and short-term synaptic dynamics
- Lecture 8: Neural circuits I: assembly of neural circuits
- Lecture 9: Neural circuits II: structure and function of microcircuits
- Lecture 10: Neural circuits III: structure and function of meso-scale circuits
- Lecture 11: Experience-dependent plasticity I: different forms of plasticity (development vs adult, local vs cell-wide, time-scales) underlying molecular mechanisms
- Lecture 12: Experience-dependent plasticity II: Adult plasticity - learning & memory
- Lecture 13: Neuropathology I: Disassmebly of neural circuits, mechanisms of neurodegeneration.
- Lecture 14: Student seminars on pre-assigned papers.
- Lecture 15: Student seminars on pre-assigned papers.