Personal profile

Research Interests

Research Topics

Drug Discovery, Endocrinology, Metabolic Regulation, Neurobiology, Optogenetics, Reproductive Biology

Disease Research Interests

Metabolic Disorders/Diabetes, Neurological and Behavioral Disorders, Reproductive Diseases, Infertility, and Menopause

Education

B.A. 2012 University of Rochester
Ph.D. 2017 SUNY Upstate Medical University
Postdoc. 2017-2021 University of Michigan

Professional Information

Neural circuitry regulating feeding and emotion

Feeding behavior is largely controlled by conserved neural circuitry located in the hypothalamus. These neural circuits are interconnected with brain circuits that regulate diverse physiological and emotional processes, and dysfunction in this circuitry is likely at the core of many metabolic and psychiatric disorders, such as anorexia nervosa and obesity. To better understand the neural circuitry controlling feeding, and how this circuitry is altered in pathological conditions, we focus our studies on the central melanocortin system. The melanocortin system is well conserved across species and is critically involved in communicating metabolic state with diverse neural circuitry controlling emotion, behavior, and physiology. The melanocortin system is composed of “first order” pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC) and agouti-related peptide (AgRP) neurons located in the hypothalamic arcuate nucleus. These neurons directly sense changes in stored energy via the fat secreted factor leptin, and communicate this information to diverse secondary sites throughout the brain. POMC and AgRP neurons produce the endogenous melanocortin receptor agonist alpha-melanocyte stimulating hormone (aMSH) or the endogenous melanocortin receptor antagonist/inverse agonist AgRP, which together act on central melanocortin receptors (MC3R and MC4R) distributed throughout the brain.

Importantly, mutations in the central melanocortin pathway produce profound obesity across diverse species, and mutations in the MC4R are the most common cause of severe monogenetic obesity in humans, occurring as frequently as 1:500 individuals. Thus, this circuitry provides a well validated and physiologically relevant system for studying how metabolic state influences motivation and emotion, and for determining how these interactions are disturbed in diseases characterized by pathological feeding behavior. Current studies in the lab are focused on characterizing the response of MC3R and MC4R expressing neurons in physiological and pathological forms of feeding, and determining how POMC and AgRP neurons relay information to secondary melanocortin receptor sites throughout the brain. To accomplish this goal the lab employs a multidisciplinary approach including in vivo calcium imaging (Inscopix miniscope imaging), optogenetics, chemogenetics, mouse molecular genetics, neuropharmacology, light sheet imaging of neuronal circuitry, and single cell/single neuron RNA sequencing. We hope that these studies will provide new approaches for treating human diseases at the intersection of energy homeostasis and emotion, such as anorexia nervosa.

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