Project Abstract
This project proposes to study how connections between nerve cells in the C. elegans brain process
information to generate behavior. Healthy brain function is critically important to our everyday lives, and it is the
connections among nerve cells (neurons) that confer the brain its ability to perceive the environment and to
control our actions. Similarly, changes to the patterns and properties of neural connections can dramatically
alter brain function and have been implicated in aging-related cognitive decline and in disease. For this reason,
neuroscientists have long sought to characterize neural connections in the brain. And because many cognitive
disorders and diseases are not restricted to one region of the brain, but are instead global brain phenomenon,
tools are needed to characterize neural connections across the entire brain. But just knowing who is connected
to whom is not enough. Rather, it is the strength and sign of the connections between neurons as well as their
excitability and temporal properties that ultimately determine how a collection of neurons process information
and generate behavior. Functional connectivity is the term used to describe the detailed properties of neural
connections in the brain, and in contrast to a wiring diagram or `connectome,' a map of functional connectivity
captures the details of how each neuron's activity affects others in the network. Currently no method exists that
provides the combined resolution and scale necessary to directly measure functional connectivity at cellular
resolution of an entire brain for any animal, and especially not during unrestrained behavior. A major hurdle
has been the lack of a tractable model system in which to develop brain-wide probes of functional connectivity.
To overcome this hurdle, I propose to work in the small nematode C. elegans. In contrast to mammalian
brains, C. elegans has a compact nervous system of only 302 neurons and is the only organism to have a
complete map of its neuroanatomical wiring. I will develop new techniques for measuring and interpreting
whole-brain functional connectivity in the nematode C. elegans at cellular resolution during unrestrained
behavior. By innovating new tools for the worm, I will develop solutions to technical challenges now, that will
later be translated to vertebrate systems. To measure brain-wide functional connectivity, I will develop a new
optical neurophysiology microscope to sequentially activate each neuron in the brain, while simultaneously
recording activity from every neuron. I will infer synaptic strength and neural excitability from the network's
response. I will perform these measurements in freely moving animals to study the interplay between functional
connectivity and animal behavior. And I will apply measurements of functional connectivity to address
outstanding questions about how neural circuits in C. elegans change due to the animal's behavior state,
learning, or aging. I will also directly compare the animal's anatomical wiring, or connectome, to its functional
connectivity. By measuring the functional connections in the brain of a moving animal I will investigate
fundamental questions that relate brain structure, function and organism behavior.