Education & Training
June 19, 2018

The Synapse Neurobiology Training Program, training the next generation of neuroscientists

Research into the functions of synapses is crucial to understanding the mechanisms of highly prevalent brain disorders such as epilepsy, autism and Alzheimer’s disease. Professor Michele Jacob is the director of the Synapse Neurobiology Training Program (SNTP), located at Tufts Sackler School of Graduate Biomedical Sciences in Boston. SNTP provides predoctoral students with individualised, in-depth, multidisciplinary research training to investigate critical areas of synaptic function associated with disease and behaviour. Alumni of SNTP have gone on to receive recognition for both their research discoveries and their impressive contribution to various public engagement initiatives.

Research into synaptic functions is key to understanding many neurological diseases including Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, ALS, autism-spectrum disorders, depression, anxiety, epilepsy and insomnias. Synapses are specialised contact sites between single nerve cells and their target cells that function in rapid information processing. They form the basis of our central nervous system’s functions.

Mechanisms that alter synaptic activity affect our behaviours, learning and memory formation. Many disorders of the nervous system involve fundamental alterations in synaptic function, and hundreds of mutations in synaptic proteins have been implicated in human diseases such as epilepsy, autism and cognitive impairments. Additionally, synaptic receptors and channels represent over half of the pharmaceutical industry’s drug development targets, making research both medically and industrially impactful.

Dye filled neurons after electrophysiological recording of their activity in the hypothalamus in acute mouse brain slices. Generated by Dominique Ameroso, in the lab of Maribel Rios.

The future of synaptic neurobiology research
Future approaches to treating these brain disorders will involve further in-depth investigation of the mechanisms that govern synaptic function, and will also require a community of well-trained synaptic physiologists equipped to carry out research in a complex field. To improve the research skills of their predoctoral students, the Neuroscience faculty at Tufts Sackler School of Graduate Biomedical Sciences in Boston developed the Synapse Neurobiology Training Program (SNTP), with the objective that students graduate with the multi-faceted research skills necessary to address some of the critical neurological problems that have direct consequence to human health.

Founded by Professor Kathleen Dunlap, SNTP is now in its nineth year of training students. The program is now under the directorship of Professor Michele Jacob, an expert in synapse neurobiology. Her research has focused on defining molecular mechanisms that direct the proper maturation and function of neuronal and sensory cell synapses, and the role that their dysfunction plays in intellectual disabilities, autism, childhood epilepsy, and hearing loss.

The SNTP is run in the Department of Neuroscience, which is Chaired by Professor Philip Haydon, a world class expert in the key role of non-neuronal glial cells, the major cell type in the brain, in modulating synaptic function.

Students graduate with the multi-faceted research skills necessary to address some of the critical neurological problems that have direct consequence to human health

The program
Drawing on the expertise of 20 neuroscience faculty researchers from the Tufts Sackler School of Graduate Biomedical Sciences, located on the Health Sciences campus of Tufts University in Boston, and working in conjunction with Tufts Medical Center, mentors guide each student through a thesis study of synaptic functions in both the healthy and diseased states. Since its inception in 2009 the program has been funded annually by the National Institute of Neurological Diseases and Strokes (NINDS), part of the National Institute of Health (NIH). Each student is co-mentored by two SNTP faculty members that provide training in distinct yet complementary areas, equipping the student with multidisciplinary research skills.

<>

Measuring the levels of D-serine in the hippocampus in vivo by microdialysis and HPLC, the levels correlate with wakefulness and activity of the mouse. Generated by Michaela Tolman, in the lab of Phil Haydon.

Students are also given one-on-one training in areas such as imaging, bioinformatics, electrophysiology and animal behaviour methods, provided via state-of-the-art core facilities and PhD-level managers in the NINDS-funded Center for Neuroscience Research at Tufts. SNTP training emphasises critical thinking and multidisciplinary approaches for effective and influential research.

Student research areas
Since 2009, the SNTP has helped augment the neuroscience community by generating a cohort of highly skilled researchers able to produce key breakthroughs in the diagnosis, prevention and treatment of neurological diseases. SNTP students contribute to a wide range of research areas, from synaptic studies investigating appetite and wakefulness to examining the synapse activity associated with disorders such as autism, epilepsy and anxiety.

Working with SNTP mentor Dr Leon Reijmers, Patrick Davis, PhD conducted a study looking at the neuronal mechanisms that control the balance between the opposing systems that regulate the brain’s expression and suppression of fear. Dysfunction of these synaptic mechanisms can lead to ‘inappropriate’ fear responses and have been linked to anxiety disorders, Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) and specific phobias. This work has led to a publication in the high impact Nature Neuroscience journal.

<>

Inhibitory interneurons fail to mature properly in the absence of proper activation and brain function is permanently disrupted. Generated by Elizabeth Hanson, in the lab of Chris Dulla.

Jonathan Alexander, PhD completed his project under the mentorship of SNTP director Dr Michele Jacob. The research involved identifying novel molecular changes that lead to autistic behaviours, learning disabilities and chronic seizures, and resulted in publications in Nature’s Molecular Psychiatry, a chapter in Springer’s Encyclopaedia of Signalling Molecules 2nd Edition, and Elsevier’s Neurobiology of Disease Journal.

Elizabeth Hanson, PhD worked on a study of glial cell modulation of excitatory synaptic activity in the normal developing cortex, compared to a cortex associated with epilepsy caused by a traumatic brain injury. Guided by Dr Chris Dulla, Hanson’s work has been published in Wiley’s Glia Journal, Elsevier’s Neurobiology of Disease and the high impact Journal of Neuroscience.

Michaela Tolman, currently working with Dr Phil Haydon, is identifying how non-neuronal glial cells modulate synaptic activity to regulate wakefulness, and has published this work in Cell Press’s Neuron.

New SNTP trainee Dominique Ameroso is working with Dr Maribel Rios to elucidate regulatory mechanisms that govern synaptic functions associated with appetite, energy status and glucose balance control within the body.

SNTP students have undertaken an impressive range of outreach activities to enhance public understanding and increase interest in learning and careers in science

Student outreach initiatives
As well as conducting their own doctoral thesis research, engaging with the academic literature in journal clubs, and attending weekly seminars by leaders in the field, SNTP students have also undertaken an impressive range of outreach activities to enhance public understanding and increase interest in learning and careers in science. Current students have taken the opportunity to teach science sessions in local Boston high schools and colleges, engaging with underserved groups within the population. This has involved assisting high school classes with experimental design and data analysis, teaching UMass Boston undergraduate students valuable modern research techniques and talking to students about the wide range of career paths available to neuroscience students, and the pathways to obtaining PhD training.

SNTP trainees also staffed the recruitment both at the Annual Biomedical Research Conference for Minority Students (ABRCMS), engaging with students from under-represented communities within STEM. Other activities include talking to students at the Annual Northeast Scientific Training Programs (NEST) retreat about how best to develop their scientific careers, membership of the Boston Chapter of Women in Bio, and various student mentorship programs. Alumni of the SNTP who are currently completing thesis research at Tufts continue to contribute to outreach efforts, with students volunteering with the Boston Brain Bee, the Museum of Science and the Science Communication Collaborative with Emerson University. Alumni also contribute to mentorship programs at Tufts and to directing and lecturing a graduate student-run Neuropsychiatry course for Tufts Medical Center psychiatry residents.

With a need for a new generation of synaptic neuroscientists to tackle the growing health issues of Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s and autism, as well as to explain disorders such as anxiety and insomnia, training in modern research techniques and multifaceted skillsets are crucial to progress. Tufts’ SNTP continues to develop multi-skilled neuroscience doctorates, as well as maintain a notable contribution by its trainees towards outreach events, engaging both the scientific community and the wider public in synapse and brain research.

Q&A

What qualities do you look for in students when considering applications to SNTP?
<>The SNTP benefits from a large and high-quality pool of graduate students interested in neuroscience, and in particular the synapse. A committee of SNTP faculty mentors selects the trainees. Qualities that distinguish top candidates for the SNTP are outstanding performance in all coursework and research, strong recommendations from their thesis research mentor and thesis advisory committee, high quality of the thesis project, and demonstration of a willingness to assume an active role in one’s education (e.g., inquisitiveness, taking leadership positions).

How does participation in SNTP help prepare your students for a career in the field?
<>The SNTP is designed to provide students with the rigorous, multidisciplinary research training and critical thinking skills they need to compete for research jobs in academia or industry and maintain successful, independent research programs. Dual mentorship is required to provide each SNTP trainee with in-depth exposure to multiple mentoring styles and to techniques and approaches beyond those available through the primary mentor’s lab. To further improve trainees’ chances of success, the training plan also provides opportunities to acquire effective written and oral communication skills, engage in activities that develop mentoring skills, interact with clinical faculty to gain the clinical perspective on their thesis research, and interact as hosts with seminar and symposium speakers to develop a personal contact network with experts in the field.

One of your aims is to get SNTP trainees heavily involved in outreach initiatives and mentoring of younger students. Why do you consider this to be important?
<>SNTP trainees are capable, proactive, and motivated young scientists. They have independently engaged in an impressive array of outreach activities that include teaching workshops at high schools and colleges with large populations of students from underserved groups. These activities attest to SNTP trainees’ intellectual curiosity, interactive attitude, sense of community responsibility, and love of science.

Your students have studied disorders such as epilepsy, Alzheimer’s and autism. What do you see as the long-term future of research and treatment for some of these major disorders?
<>New therapeutic approaches for preventing or treating these diseases in the future will be facilitated by continued in-depth exploration of the mechanisms that drive synaptic function, through the work of well-trained neuroscience researchers.

What plans do you have for the future of SNTP going forward? Are you looking to make any changes to the structure or aims of the program?
<>The goal of the SNTP is to keep developing talented well-trained young investigators necessary for a vibrant neuroscience research community capable of developing new approaches for disorders caused by synaptic dysfunction.

This feature article was created with the approval of the research team featured. This is a collaborative production, supported by those featured to aid free of charge, global distribution.

Want to read more articles like this?

Sign up to our mailing list and read about the topics that matter to you the most.
Sign Up!

One thought on “The Synapse Neurobiology Training Program, training the next generation of neuroscientists

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *