![]() |
University of Cambridge > Talks.cam > Cambridge University Biological Society > Hallucinating Mice, Neural Circuits and Immunity - Towards Mechanistic Treatments for Psychosis
Hallucinating Mice, Neural Circuits and Immunity - Towards Mechanistic Treatments for PsychosisAdd to your list(s) Download to your calendar using vCal
If you have a question about this talk, please contact Lawrence Ng. Psychosis is a core feature of severe mental illness, yet its biological basis remains poorly understood. This talk presents a cross-species research programme combining behavioural paradigms, computational modelling, circuit neuroscience and immunology to identify mechanistic treatment targets. We developed a paradigm to measure hallucination-like perception in both humans and mice, revealing key roles for dopamine and acetylcholine. We also established a novel mouse model of autoimmune psychosis, showing how brain-reactive antibodies can disrupt circuits and behaviour and how antipsychotic drugs modulate autoimmune processes. Ongoing work in humans and mice investigates how neural and immune mechanisms interact to drive psychosis and shape perception. Bio: Katharina Schmack received her medical and doctoral degrees from Charité, Berlin in 2009. She then completed her postdoctoral training, clinical scientist fellowship and psychiatry specialization at Charité, Berlin. In 2018, she was awarded a research fellowship from the German National Academy of Sciences, Leopoldina, and joined Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, New York, as a research investigator. In September 2021, she opened her own lab at the Francis Crick Institute, London. As a Group Leader, her appointment is shared with the Division of Psychiatry of University College London and the North London NHS Foundation Trust. Her research focuses on psychosis. Her group investigates the neural circuits and immune processes giving rise to hallucinations and other psychotic symptoms. Using a cross-species approach, they study both patients and mice with behavioural tests, computational models, and in-vivo measures and manipulations. This talk is part of the Cambridge University Biological Society series. This talk is included in these lists:Note that ex-directory lists are not shown. |
Other listsThis is us now Out-of-plane charge transport anomalies in layered transition metal dichalcogenides Wolfson College Lunchtime Seminar Series - Wednesdays of Full TermOther talksImaging Black Holes from ground and space Mergers all the way down: simulating the origin of globular clusters in a galactic context Biophysics and Life in the Universe Efficient LCU Block Encodings through Dicke State Preparation Upper bounds for the second nonzero eigenvalue of the Laplacian via folding and conformal volume Foundation models for biology, across scales and modalities |