| Principal Investigators
Heather Cameron, Ph.D. |
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Dr.
Cameron received her B.S. from Yale University and her
Ph.D. from the Rockefeller University, where she worked
with Bruce McEwen and Elizabeth Gould examining neurogenesis
in the adult rat dentate gyrus. During a postdoctoral
fellowship with Ron McKay at NINDS, she determined the
magnitude of adult neurogenesis in the dentate gyrus and
investigated the effects of stress hormones on neurogenesis
in the aging rat hippocampus. Dr. Cameron joined the Mood
and Anxiety Disorders Program at NIMH as an
Investigator in 2001. |
Research Interests |
The dentate gyrus is one of only two brain regions that continue to produce large numbers of new neurons during adulthood. The goal of our research is to understand the function of adult neurogenesis by studying the regulation of granule cell birth, the properties of the new neurons, and the behavioral consequences of altering neurogenesis.
One focus of our work is understanding the basic developmental processes that continue in the dentate gyrus throughout adulthood. Many factors, including hormones, neurotransmitters, growth factors, and granule cell death regulate granule cell precursor proliferation, but we still do not have a complete picture of how these factors converge to regulate the opposing processes of cell birth and cell death. Understanding the dynamics of the granule cell population may provide clues to the function of the new neurons, e.g., whether they replace old granule cells or increase the size of the population. This work might also suggest ways to encourage neurogenesis in other brain regions.
Another aspect of our work involves exploring the effects of corticosteroids on the hippocampus. Psychosocial stress and corticosteroids, hormones released from the adrenal in response to stress, inhibit neurogenesis in the developing and adult dentate gyrus. We have found that corticosteroids are responsible for the inhibition of neurogenesis observed in very old rats; removing corticosteroids from aged rats restores the rate of neurogenesis to that seen in young adults. We plan to investigate whether restoring neurogenesis resolves the memory deficits of aged rats. This work is likely to have implications for benign senescent memory loss in humans, as well other conditions associated with high corticosteroid levels and structural changes in the hippocampus, including chronic stress, major depression, and therapeutic use of corticosteroid medications.
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Representative Selected Recent Publications: |
- Snyder JS, Glover L, Sanzone KM, Kamhi JF, Cameron HA: The effects of exercise and stress on the survival and maturation of adult-generated granule cells, Hippocampus. Hippocampus, In Press, 2009.
- Snyder JS, Radik R, Wojtowicz JM, Cameron HA: Septo-temporal gradients of neurogenesis and activity in 13-month-old rats, Neurobiol Aging. Neurobiol Aging, In Press, 2009.
- Snyder JS, Radik R, Wojtowicz JM, Cameron HA: Anatomical gradients of adult neurogenesis and activity: young neurons in the ventral dentate gyrus are activated by water maze training. Hippocampus, 19, 360-370 2009.
- Cameron HA, Dayer AG : New interneurons in the adult neocortex: small, sparse, but significant?. Biological Psychiatry, 2008.
- Olariu A, Cleaver KM, Cameron HA: Decreased neurogenesis in aged rats results from loss of granule cell precursors without lengthening of the cell cycle. J Comp Neurol, ,501, 659-667, 2007.
- Karten YJ, Jones MA, Jeurling SI, Cameron HA: GABAergic signaling in young granule cells in the adult rat and mouse dentate gyrus. Hippocampus, 16, 312-320, 2006.
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Address:
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Dr. Heather A. Cameron Mood and Anxiety Disorders Program, NIMH Porter Neuroscience Research Center Building 35, Room 3C-915 35 Lincoln Drive, MSC 3718 Bethesda, MD 20892-3718
Telephone: (office), (301) 480-4564 (fax)
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Phone: |
301-496-3814 |
Email Dr. Cameron |
Fax: |
301-480-4564 |
Lab Web Site: |
http://neuroscience.nih.gov/Lab.asp?Org_ID=411 |
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