Sheena Josselyn

Last updated
Sheena Josselyn
SJ Blowing bubbles.jpg
Born
Cleveland, Ohio
NationalityCanadian
Alma materQueens University, University of Toronto
Known forEngrams
SpousePaul Frankland
AwardsDaniel H. Efron Research Award from American College of Neuropsychopharmacology, Innovations in Psychopharmacology Award from Canadian College of Neuropsychopharmacology, Brenda Milner Lecturer (University of Lethbridge), Bryan Kolb Lecturer in Behavioural Neuroscience (University of Calgary), Canada Research Chair (CRC) in brain circuits and cognition Tier I
Scientific career
FieldsNeuroscience
InstitutionsSickKids at the University of Toronto

Sheena Josselyn is a Canadian neuroscientist and a full professor of psychology and physiology at Hospital for Sick Children and The University of Toronto. [1] [2] Josselyn studies the neural basis of memory, specifically how the brain forms and stores memories in rodent models. [3] She has made critical contributions to the field of Neuronal Memory Allocation and the study of engrams. [4]

Contents

Early life and education

Josselyn was born in Cleveland, Ohio but grew up in Kingston, Ontario, Canada. [5] Josselyn completed her undergraduate education at Queens University in Kingston, Ontario, Canada. Following her undergraduate degree, Josselyn completed a master's degree in clinical psychology under the mentorship of Dr. Rick Beninger. [5] In her Masters, Josselyn published two first author papers, the first studying the modulatory effects of adenosine on dopamine in the striatum [6] and the second on the interaction between neuropeptide Y and antipsychotics in the nucleus accumbens. [7]

Josselyn then moved to Toronto to complete her PhD in psychology and neuroscience at the University of Toronto. [5] Under the mentorship of Dr. Franco Vaccarino, Josselyn studied the effects of CCKB and CCKA modulation on associative learning and published multiple first author papers. [8] [9] [10] Following her PhD, Josselyn completed her postdoctoral work at Yale University in New Haven under the mentorship of Dr. Mike Davis. [11] Shortly after, she moved to LA to complete another postdoc under the mentorship of Dr. Alcino J. Silva at the University of California Los Angeles. [5] Josselyn helped discover the importance of CREB in memory formation and retrieval [12] which led to probing the molecular mechanisms and biological purpose of forgetting. [13]

Career and research

After finishing her postdoctoral work, Josselyn moved back to Toronto to start her lab at SickKids Hospital at the University of Toronto. [5] Her overall goal is to understand how humans learn and remember such that one day her work can impact translational research at her institute and in her community. [5] Some of Josselyn's early discoveries include discovering that CREB over-expression in the auditory thalamus increases memory and fear, [14] and further, that ablating neurons that highly expressed CREB after fear learning actually ablates fear memories in rodent. [15] These were some of the first findings isolating specific neurons representing a specific memory in the brain. [3] [15] Josselyn's multidisciplinary approach to tackling questions regarding memories led her to several prestigious awards and recognitions including becoming a member of the Royal Society of Canada in 2018 for her research. [16]

Awards

Publications

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Fear conditioning</span> Behavioral paradigm in which organisms learn to predict aversive events

Pavlovian fear conditioning is a behavioral paradigm in which organisms learn to predict aversive events. It is a form of learning in which an aversive stimulus is associated with a particular neutral context or neutral stimulus, resulting in the expression of fear responses to the originally neutral stimulus or context. This can be done by pairing the neutral stimulus with an aversive stimulus. Eventually, the neutral stimulus alone can elicit the state of fear. In the vocabulary of classical conditioning, the neutral stimulus or context is the "conditional stimulus" (CS), the aversive stimulus is the "unconditional stimulus" (US), and the fear is the "conditional response" (CR).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Karl Lashley</span> American psychologist

Karl Spencer Lashley was an American psychologist and behaviorist remembered for his contributions to the study of learning and memory. A Review of General Psychology survey, published in 2002, ranked Lashley as the 61st most cited psychologist of the 20th century.

An engram is a unit of cognitive information imprinted in a physical substance, theorized to be the means by which memories are stored as biophysical or biochemical changes in the brain or other biological tissue, in response to external stimuli.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">CREB</span> Class of proteins

CREB-TF is a cellular transcription factor. It binds to certain DNA sequences called cAMP response elements (CRE), thereby increasing or decreasing the transcription of the genes. CREB was first described in 1987 as a cAMP-responsive transcription factor regulating the somatostatin gene.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Susumu Tonegawa</span> Japanese scientist (born 1939)

Susumu Tonegawa is a Japanese scientist who was the sole recipient of the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1987 for his discovery of V(D)J recombination, the genetic mechanism which produces antibody diversity. Although he won the Nobel Prize for his work in immunology, Tonegawa is a molecular biologist by training and he again changed fields following his Nobel Prize win; he now studies neuroscience, examining the molecular, cellular and neuronal basis of memory formation and retrieval.

Delta-sleep-inducing peptide (DSIP) is a neuropeptide that when infused into the mesodiencephalic ventricle of recipient rabbits induces spindle and delta EEG activity and reduced motor activities.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ariadne (drug)</span> Psychoactive phenethylamine drug

Ariadne is a little-known psychoactive drug. It is a homologue of the psychedelics 2C-D and DOM. Ariadne was first synthesized by Alexander Shulgin. In his 1991 book PiHKAL, Shulgin reported testing Ariadne up to a dose of 32 mg, and reported that it produced "the alert of a psychedelic, with none of the rest of the package". Very little published data exists about the human pharmacology of Ariadne apart from Shulgin's limited testing; unpublished human trials reportedly observed some psychoactive effects, but no hallucinations.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Cirazoline</span> Chemical compound

Cirazoline is a full agonist at the α1A adrenergic receptor, a partial agonist at both the α1B and α1D adrenergic receptors, and a nonselective antagonist to the α2 adrenergic receptor. It is believed that this combination of properties could make cirazoline an effective vasoconstricting agent.

The cellular transcription factor CREB helps learning and the stabilization and retrieval of fear-based, long-term memories. This is done mainly through its expression in the hippocampus and the amygdala. Studies supporting the role of CREB in cognition include those that knock out the gene, reduce its expression, or overexpress it.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jacqueline Crawley</span> American behavioral neuroscientist

Jacqueline N. Crawley is an American behavioral neuroscientist and an expert on rodent behavioral analysis. Since July 2012, she is the Robert E. Chason Chair in Translational Research in the MIND Institute and professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the University of California, Davis School of Medicine in Sacramento. Previously, from 1983–2012, she was chief of the Laboratory of Behavioral Neuroscience in the intramural program of the National Institute of Mental Health. Her translational research program focuses on testing hypotheses about the genetic causes of autism spectrum disorders and discovering treatments for the diagnostic symptoms of autism, using mouse models. She has published more than 275 peer-reviewed articles in scientific journals and 110 review articles and book chapters. According to Scopus, her works have been cited over 36,000 times, giving her an h-index of 99. She has co-edited 4 books and is the author of What's Wrong With my Mouse? Behavioral Phenotyping of Transgenic and Knockout Mice, which was very well received.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Melanocyte-inhibiting factor</span>

Melanocyte-inhibiting factor (also known as Pro-Leu-Gly-NH2, Melanostatin, MSH release–inhibiting hormone or MIF-1) is an endogenous peptide fragment derived from cleavage of the hormone oxytocin, but having generally different actions in the body. MIF-1 produces multiple effects, both blocking the effects of opioid receptor activation, while at the same time acting as a positive allosteric modulator of the D2 and D4 dopamine receptor subtypes, as well as inhibiting release of other neuropeptides such as alpha-MSH, and potentiating melatonin activity.

Memory allocation is a process that determines which specific synapses and neurons in a neural network will store a given memory. Although multiple neurons can receive a stimulus, only a subset of the neurons will induce the necessary plasticity for memory encoding. The selection of this subset of neurons is termed neuronal allocation. Similarly, multiple synapses can be activated by a given set of inputs, but specific mechanisms determine which synapses actually go on to encode the memory, and this process is referred to as synaptic allocation. Memory allocation was first discovered in the lateral amygdala by Sheena Josselyn and colleagues in Alcino J. Silva's laboratory.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Alcino J. Silva</span> American neuroscientist (born 1961)

Alcino J. Silva is a Portuguese-American neuroscientist who was the recipient of the 2008 Order of Prince Henry and elected as a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in 2013 for his contributions to the molecular cellular cognition of memory, a field he pioneered with the publication of two articles in Science in 1992.

Memory erasure is the selective artificial removal of memories or associations from the mind.

Neurogenesis is the process by which nervous system cells, the neurons, are produced by neural stem cells (NSCs). In short, it is brain growth in relation to its organization. This occurs in all species of animals except the porifera (sponges) and placozoans. Types of NSCs include neuroepithelial cells (NECs), radial glial cells (RGCs), basal progenitors (BPs), intermediate neuronal precursors (INPs), subventricular zone astrocytes, and subgranular zone radial astrocytes, among others.

Elizabeth A. Buffalo is professor of physiology and biophysics at the University of Washington School of Medicine and chief of the neuroscience division at the Washington National Primate Research Center. She is known for her research in the field of neurophysiology pertaining to the role of the hippocampus and medial temporal lobe structures in learning and memory and in spatial representation and navigation.

Christine Denny is an American neuroscientist and associate professor of Clinical Neurobiology in Psychiatry in the Department of Psychiatry at Columbia University Irving Medical Center in New York City. Denny investigates the molecular mechanisms underlying learning and memory. She developed a novel technique to label neurons that encode specific memories. She used this technique to probe what happens to hippocampal memory traces in different disease states.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Farah Lubin</span> American neuroscientist

Farah D. Lubin is an American neuroscientist and Professor of Neurobiology and Cell, Developmental, and Integrative Biology at the University of Alabama at Birmingham within the Heersink School of Medicine. Lubin is the Principal Investigator of the Lubin Lab which explores the epigenetic mechanisms underlying cognition and how these mechanisms are altered in disease states such as epilepsy and neurodegeneration. Lubin discovered the role of NF-κB in fear memory reconsolidation and also uncovered a novel role for epigenetic regulation of BDNF during long-term memory formation and in epilepsy leading to memory loss. Lubin is a champion for diversity at UAB as the Director of the Roadmap Scholar Program and as a faculty mentor for several institutional and national programs to increase retention of underrepresented minorities in STEM.

Catherine Hartley is an American psychologist and an Associate Professor of Psychology within the Department of Psychology and Center for Neural Science at New York University in New York City. Hartley's research explores how brain development impacts the evaluation of negative experiences, decision-making, and motivated behavior. Her work has helped to elucidate how uncontrollable aversive events affect fear learning and how learning to control aversive stimuli can improve emotional resilience.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Panayiota Poirazi</span> Neurobiologist

Panayiota Poirazi is a neuroscientist known for her work in modelling dendritic computations. She is an elected member of the European Molecular Biology Organization (EMBO).

References

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  4. Macdonald, Cynthia (23 May 2019). "The memory hunters". Canadian Institute for Advanced Research (CIFAR). Retrieved 25 March 2022.
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  6. Josselyn, Sheena A.; Beninger, Richard J. (1991-05-01). "Behavioral effects of intrastriatal caffeine mediated by adenosinergic modulation of dopamine". Pharmacology Biochemistry and Behavior. 39 (1): 97–103. doi:10.1016/0091-3057(91)90403-O. ISSN   0091-3057. PMID   1924519. S2CID   12144897.
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  10. Josselyn, S. A.; Franco, V. P.; Vaccarino, F. J. (1996-01-01). "Devazepide, a CCKA receptor antagonist, impairs the acquisition of conditioned reward and conditioned activity". Psychopharmacology. 123 (2): 131–143. doi:10.1007/bf02246170. ISSN   0033-3158. PMID   8741936. S2CID   10061243.
  11. 1 2 "SC Talks: "How Memories Are Formed", Sheena Josselyn, November 20, 2019". Senior College. Retrieved 2020-03-26.
  12. Kida, Satoshi; Josselyn, Sheena A.; de Ortiz, Sandra Peña; Kogan, Jeffrey H.; Chevere, Itzamarie; Masushige, Shoichi; Silva, Alcino J. (2002-04-01). "CREB required for the stability of new and reactivated fear memories". Nature Neuroscience. 5 (4): 348–355. doi:10.1038/nn819. ISSN   1546-1726. PMID   11889468. S2CID   9255921.
  13. Silva, Alcino J.; Josselyn, Sheena A. (2002-08-01). "The molecules of forgetfulness". Nature. 418 (6901): 929–930. doi: 10.1038/418929a . ISSN   1476-4687. PMID   12198533. S2CID   4342684.
  14. Han, Jin-Hee; Yiu, Adelaide P.; Cole, Christina J.; Hsiang, Hwa-Lin; Neve, Rachael L.; Josselyn, Sheena A. (2008-06-01). "Increasing CREB in the auditory thalamus enhances memory and generalization of auditory conditioned fear". Learning & Memory. 15 (6): 443–453. doi: 10.1101/lm.993608 . ISSN   1072-0502. PMC   2414255 . PMID   18519545.
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