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One or more keywords matched the following properties of Hale, Melina E
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overview My research integrates biomechanics and neurobiology to study how axial movements are generated and coordinated to respond to the physical properties of an organism's environment. Of particular interest to me are the startle response and rhythmic swimming behaviors of fishes. These behaviors provide excellent model systems for examining motor control and the mechanics of axial movement. Because the startle response involves a discrete behavior, large neurons and simple neural circuits, it has been important in studies of motor control. Because it is critical for survival and involves maximal performance, it has been important for work on muscle physiology and performance. Rhythmic axial and fin swimming has long been studied in lampreys and tadpoles to examine central pattern generation in spinal circuits and in a wide diversity fishes to understand the relationship between morphology and movement. The scope of questions I am asking can be divided into three interconnected research initiatives. The first explores the broad question: How do morphology, physiology and the physics of the aquatic environment interact to produce swimming movement? To address this question, I examine the scaling of locomotor performance through development with changes in the physics of movement such as the Reynolds number, a ratio of inertial to viscous forces. The second area examines the generation of swimming movements. Questions I am addressing include: How do reticulospinal and spinal neurons and circuits generate startle behavior? And, how are gate transitions due to the physics of movement mediated neurally? To address these questions I examine reticulospinal and spinal interneuron morphology and function in zebrafish and examine comparatively species that differ in components of their startle neural circuits. A third area of research examines the evolution of neural circuits and behaviors. Through this work I am addressing the general question: How are neural circuits and behaviors modified evolutionarily? I examine the startle neural circuit in fishes comparatively within a phylogenetic context. In addition, mutant and transgenic zebrafish are providing new ways of addressing evolutionary questions such as this. My approaches to these questions include using zebrafish as a model as well as comparative work on actinopterygian fishes. Larval zebrafish, in addition to being an excellent genetic system, are transparent which makes optical imaging of neuron morphology and activity as well as targeted neuron ablations possible in whole, in vivo preparations. With these techniques, we are able to combine functional imaging studies of neurons with behavior. In order to look simultaneously at neuron activity and fish movement, we label cells with calcium sensitive dyes and simultaneously image neurons firing with confocal microscopy and axial movements with high-speed video. With a complementary set of techniques, we kill neurons with cell targeted laser ablations and can compare behavior before and after the cells are removed. Because with such ablations we are able to very specifically remove cells without collateral damage, these techniques allow fine manipulation of the system.
One or more keywords matched the following items that are connected to Hale, Melina E
Item TypeName
Concept Biological Evolution
Concept Evolution, Molecular
Concept Musculoskeletal Development
Concept Evolution, Chemical
Academic Article Evolution of behavior and neural control of the fast-start escape response.
Academic Article Repression of the hindbrain developmental program by Cdx factors is required for the specification of the vertebrate spinal cord.
Academic Article Neural development of the zebrafish (Danio rerio) pectoral fin.
Academic Article Neuroscience. Vertebrate vocalizations.
Academic Article Development of zebrafish (Danio rerio) pectoral fin musculature.
Academic Article Duplication events and the evolution of segmental identity.
Academic Article First description of a musculoskeletal linkage in an adipose fin: innovations for active control in a primitively passive appendage.
Academic Article Evolution of the Mauthner axon cap.
Academic Article Behavioral evidence for the evolution of walking and bounding before terrestriality in sarcopterygian fishes.
Academic Article Onset and dynamic expression of S100 proteins in the olfactory organ and the lateral line system in zebrafish development.
Academic Article Alternative forms of axial startle behaviors in fishes.
Academic Article Developmental change in the function of movement systems: Transition of the pectoral fins between respiratory and locomotor roles in zebrafish
Academic Article NSF workshop report: discovering general principles of nervous system organization by comparing brain maps across species.
Academic Article NSF workshop report: discovering general principles of nervous system organization by comparing brain maps across species.
Academic Article Developmental change in the function of movement systems: transition of the pectoral fins between respiratory and locomotor roles in zebrafish.
Academic Article Mechanosensation in an adipose fin.
Academic Article Mechanosensation is evolutionarily tuned to locomotor mechanics.
Academic Article Adipose fin development and its relation to the evolutionary origins of median fins.
Academic Article Evolution of touch and proprioception of the limbs: Insights from fish and humans.
Search Criteria
  • Development
  • Evolution