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Sesack, Susan R.
Ph.D., Yale University
Research Interests
Monoamine neurons and their prefrontal cortical targets play an important role in the regulation of cognitive functions and have been implicated in the pathophysiology of schizophrenia. Moreover, the prefrontal cortex is the only cortical region with descending projections to the limbic, hypothalamic and brainstem regions that regulate mood, motivation, arousal and attention. Progress toward understanding the neural basis of cognition and emotion as well as the treatment of diseases affecting higher brain function can be made by examining the cellular bases for the physiological actions of monoamines in prefrontal cortical and subcortical regions, as well as the synaptic relationships between the prefrontal cortex and monoamine and other subcortical neurons. Questions regarding synaptic connectivity and neuromodulation are addressed using light and electron microscopic immunocytochemical and tract-tracing methods, as well as in vivo neurophysiological techniques. Subjects currently under investigation include: (1) monoamine afferents to the prefrontal cortex, their synaptic targets, transporter and receptor localization, anatomical substrates for functional interactions, and response to environmental manipulations, (2) neurophysiological responses of brainstem monoamines to intrinsic and extrinsic afferent sources as well as electron microscopic examination of physiologically characterized and intracellularly labeled cells, (3) synaptic mechanisms underlying prefrontal cortical regulation of monoamine cell activity and other prominent limbic structures, such as the amygdala, basal forebrain, hypothalamus and brainstem. Hypotheses regarding cortical-monoamine interactions that are derived from rat studies can also be tested in primate brain before being applied to current network models of cortical function in humans.
Recent Publications
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![[Picture of Susan R. Sesack]](/images/faculty/sesack.jpg)