American neuroscientist
Jeff W. Lichtman (born 1951) is an American neuroscientist .[ 1] He is the Jeremy R. Knowles Professor of Molecular and Cellular Biology and Santiago Ramón y Cajal Professor of Arts and Sciences at Harvard University . He is best known for his pioneering work developing the neuroimaging connectomic technique known as Brainbow .[ 2]
Education and career
Lichtman was born in Salt Lake City , Utah in 1951. He grew up in the Northeastern United States .[ 1] Lichtman received a BA from Bowdoin College in 1973. In 1980, he received both MD and PhD from Washington University in St. Louis , where he was advised by Dale Purves . After completing postdoctoral work at Harvard Medical School , he established his lab at Washington University School of Medicine and conducted research there for 30 years.[ 3] [ 1]
In 2004, he was appointed Jeremy R. Knowles Professor of Molecular and Cellular Biology at Harvard University . In 2013, he was named the inaugural Santiago Ramón y Cajal Professor, a five-year appointment intended to recognize outstanding research and teaching.[ 4] Lichtman is a faculty member within the Harvard Center for Brain Science and the Conte Center at Harvard University.[ 5] From 2013 to 2016, he was a Grass Foundation Trustee.[ 6]
Research
Up to ~160 colours were observed in the first Brainbow mice. (a) A motor nerve innervating ear muscle. (b) An axon tract in the brainstem . c) The dentate gyrus . From Lichtman and Sanes, 2008.[ 7]
The Lichtman lab studies activity-dependent plasticity in motor and autonomic circuits of living animals. Lichtman hypothesizes that axons undergo synaptic pruning and strengthening in response to experiences, and these experiences cause neurons which co-innervate the same cell to compete for dominance, thereby driving synaptic plasticity . The lab uses genetically modified mice and automated imaging tools to identify neural circuit motifs throughout the nervous system.[ 3]
In 2007, Lichtman and Joshua R. Sanes first published the Brainbow mouse method, in which different fluorescent proteins are expressed stochastically in neighboring neurons within a mouse's nervous system , thereby allowing neighboring neuronal processes to be distinguishable by fluorescence microscopy . Subsequently, this technique has been adapted and used to map neural circuits in mice, Caenorhabditis elegans , and Drosophila melanogaster .[ 3] [ 8]
Additionally, the Lichtman lab developed a device called the Automatic Tape-Collecting Lathe Ultramicrotome (ATLUM),[ 3] [ 9] which can be used for automated electron microscopy in neural circuit reconstruction . Data from the Lichtman lab has been used in the citizen science game EyeWire , developed in collaboration with Sebastian Seung and Winfried Denk , to construct a full connectome of the mouse retina .[ 10] [ 11]
The lab is also interested in inhibitory interneurons in the prefrontal cortex , which are thought to be selectively vulnerable in mental disorders such as autism or schizophrenia .[ 3] [ 5]
Awards and honors
Selected publications
Sanes, Joshua R.; Lichtman, Jeff W. (March 1999). "Development of the vertebrate neuromuscular junction" . Annual Review of Neuroscience . 22 (1): 389–442. doi :10.1146/annurev.neuro.22.1.389 . ISSN 0147-006X .
Feng, Guoping; Mellor, Rebecca H.; Bernstein, Michael; Keller-Peck, Cynthia; Nguyen, Quyen T.; Wallace, Mia; Nerbonne, Jeanne M.; Lichtman, Jeff W.; Sanes, Joshua R. (October 2000). "Imaging Neuronal Subsets in Transgenic Mice Expressing Multiple Spectral Variants of GFP" . Neuron . 28 (1): 41–51. doi :10.1016/s0896-6273(00)00084-2 . ISSN 0896-6273 .
Sanes, Joshua R.; Lichtman, Jeff W. (November 2001). "Induction, assembly, maturation and maintenance of a postsynaptic apparatus" . Nature Reviews Neuroscience . 2 (11): 791–805. doi :10.1038/35097557 . ISSN 1471-0048 .
Lichtman, Jeff W.; Conchello, José-Angel (December 2005). "Fluorescence microscopy" . Nature Methods . 2 (12): 910–919. doi :10.1038/nmeth817 . ISSN 1548-7105 .
Livet, Jean; Weissman, Tamily A.; Kang, Hyuno; Draft, Ryan W.; Lu, Ju; Bennis, Robyn A.; Sanes, Joshua R.; Lichtman, Jeff W. (November 2007). "Transgenic strategies for combinatorial expression of fluorescent proteins in the nervous system" . Nature . 450 (7166): 56–62. doi :10.1038/nature06293 . ISSN 1476-4687 .
Witvliet, Daniel; Mulcahy, Ben; Mitchell, James K.; Meirovitch, Yaron; Berger, Daniel R.; Wu, Yuelong; Liu, Yufang; Koh, Wan Xian; Parvathala, Rajeev; Holmyard, Douglas; Schalek, Richard L.; Shavit, Nir; Chisholm, Andrew D.; Lichtman, Jeff W.; Samuel, Aravinthan D. T.; Zhen, Mei (August 2021). "Connectomes across development reveal principles of brain maturation" . Nature . 596 (7871): 257–261. doi :10.1038/s41586-021-03778-8 . ISSN 1476-4687 . PMC 8756380 .
References
International National Academics Other