Andrea Hasenstaub, PhD
Professor
Otolaryngology
School of Medicine
andrea.hasenstaub@ucs.eu 415-502-7358
Andrea Hasenstaub, PhD, is an Associate Professor in the Coleman Memorial Laboratories in the Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery (OHNS) at the University of California, San Francisco. She received her BS in Mathematics and Engineering at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, California; a M.Phil.
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in Biological Anthropology from Cambridge University, England; and a PhD in Neurobiology at Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut, followed by a fellowship at the Salk Institute in La Jolla, California.
Dr. Hasenstaub’s research is focused on understanding the genetic, cellular, and network operation of specific cell types in the mouse and human auditory cortex. One line of research focuses on inhibitory microcircuitry in normal and diseased brains. Within the cortex, diverse types of local circuit inhibitory neuron play vital roles in regulating and timing activity, and are key mediators of long-term developmental plasticity. Central auditory processing disorders, such as hyperacusis or tinnitus, may result in part from failure of cortical inhibitory networks to properly control the strength, timing, or plasticity of excitatory activity. These neurons' dysfunction is also implicated in broader neurodevelopmental disorders including schizophrenia, autism, epilepsy, and bipolar disorder. Treatments for these common and devastating diseases will require both a conceptual understanding of cortical interneurons' circuit functions, and a mechanistic understanding of their interactions.
Exciting advances in optical and genetic technology now bring this understanding within reach, by allowing us to systematically measure and manipulate properties of specific cell populations to answer basic questions about their function. Under what conditions are different kind of cortical neuron engaged? What computations do different types of neurons enable? How does each type's activation affect input integration in its targets? How can long-range or neuromodulatory inputs dynamically regulate these interactions, and how does this match moment-to-moment changes in cognitive or behavioral requirements? And what can we infer about design principles common to all neural systems, by studying the biophysical strategies interneurons adopt to fill these circuit roles?
A second line of research focuses on electrophysiological and genetic studies of human cerebral cortex. The majority of our information about cortical microcircuitry has been derived from studies in model systems, particularly mice, rats, ferrets, and cats. These studies have provided fundamental insight into the many aspects of cortical organization which are conserved across species. However, human neocortex differs from that of model systems in numerous ways including the presence of additional neuron types, specializations in conserved neuron types, altered patterns of local and long-range connections, and the presence of additional cytoarchitectonic areas. These evolutionarily recent specializations underlie the differences in cognitive capacity in humans compared to other species. By studying temporal and frontal cortex acutely resected from human surgical patients, we gain direct access to the cellular mechanisms of human brain function and disease, including the numerous human-specific aspects of cortical organization which cannot be directly studied in model systems.
Our overall goal is to identify the conditions under which different kinds of cortical neuron are engaged, understand what computations they enable cortical networks to perform, and establish the biophysical and circuit mechanisms by which they allow these computations to occur. We hope that this will guide us in developing a low-level mechanistic understanding of how their plasticity in aging, hearing loss, and other types of brain injury underlies the functional losses observed in these conditions.
Specialty: Auditory physiology; central auditory processing
Expertise: In vivo and in vitro recordings, mouse neurophysiology, human neurophysiology
Professional interests: Hearing; auditory cortex; thalamus; cross-modal and modulatory influences; cell type specificity; comparative studies
Education:
- BS: California Institute of Technology, Mathematics and Engineering
- M. Phil.: Cambridge University, Biological Anthropology
- MS and PhD: Yale University, Neurobiology
Grants and Projects
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- Clustered protocadherin regulation of cortical interneuron survival circuit assembly and plasticity, NIH, 2020-2025
- Cortical circuitry supporting flexible audiovisual interactions and behaviors, NIH, 2020-2023
- Interneuron Precursors and the induction of cortical plasticity, NIH, 2014-2020
- Dynamic regulation of auditory context processing by cortical inhibition, NIH, 2014-2020
Publications (41)
Top publication keywords:
Time PerceptionAction PotentialsPyramidal CellsNeuronsInterneuronsAuditory CortexVasoactive Intestinal PeptideSaimiriSomatosensory CortexNeural InhibitionNerve NetOptogeneticsAuditory PerceptionAcoustic StimulationNeurogenesis
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Integration of Transplanted Interneurons Over a New Period of Ocular Dominance Plasticity in Adult Visual Cortex.
bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology 2025 Rakela B, Sun J, Marchetta P, Alvarez-Buylla A, Hasenstaub A, Stryker M -
Receptive-field nonlinearities in primary auditory cortex: a comparative perspective.
Cerebral cortex (New York, N.Y. : 1991) 2024 Homma NY, See JZ, Atencio CA, Hu C, Downer JD, Beitel RE, Cheung SW, Najafabadi MS, Olsen T, Bigelow J, Hasenstaub AR, Malone BJ, Schreiner CE -
Sst- and Vip-Cre mouse lines without age-related hearing loss.
bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology 2024 Foss CT, Olsen T, Bigelow J, Hasenstaub AR -
Basic Properties of Coordinated Neuronal Ensembles in the Auditory Thalamus.
The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 2024 Hu C, Hasenstaub AR, Schreiner CE -
The clustered gamma protocadherin PcdhγC4 isoform regulates cortical interneuron programmed cell death in the mouse cortex.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2024 Leon WRM, Steffen DM, Dale-Huang FR, Rakela B, Breevoort A, Romero-Rodriguez R, Hasenstaub AR, Stryker MP, Weiner JA, Alvarez-Buylla A
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The h-current controls cortical recurrent network activity through modulation of dendrosomatic communication.
bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology 2023 Shu Y, Hasenstaub A, McCormick DA -
On the Role of Theory and Modeling in Neuroscience.
The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 2023 Levenstein D, Alvarez VA, Amarasingham A, Azab H, Chen ZS, Gerkin RC, Hasenstaub A, Iyer R, Jolivet RB, Marzen S, Monaco JD, Prinz AA, Quraishi S, Santamaria F, Shivkumar S, Singh MF, Traub R, Nadim F… -
The Clustered Gamma Protocadherin Pcdhγc4 Isoform Regulates Cortical Interneuron Programmed Cell Death in the Mouse Cortex.
bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology 2023 Leon WRM, Steffen DM, Dale-Huang F, Rakela B, Breevoort A, Romero-Rodriguez R, Hasenstaub AR, Stryker MP, Weiner JA, Alvarez-Buylla A -
Offset Responses in the Auditory Cortex Show Unique History Dependence.
The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 2022 Olsen T, Hasenstaub AR -
Audiovisual task switching rapidly modulates sound encoding in mouse auditory cortex.
eLife 2022 Morrill RJ, Bigelow J, DeKloe J, Hasenstaub AR -
Visual modulation of firing and spectrotemporal receptive fields in mouse auditory cortex.
Current research in neurobiology 2022 Bigelow J, Morrill RJ, Olsen T, Hasenstaub AR -
Nests of dividing neuroblasts sustain interneuron production for the developing human brain.
Science (New York, N.Y.) 2022 Paredes MF, Mora C, Flores-Ramirez Q, Cebrian-Silla A, Del Dosso A, Larimer P, Chen J, Kang G, Gonzalez Granero S, Garcia E, Chu J, Delgado R, Cotter JA, Tang V, Spatazza J, Obernier K, Ferrer Lozano … -
Clustered gamma-protocadherins regulate cortical interneuron programmed cell death.
eLife 2020 Mancia Leon WR, Spatazza J, Rakela B, Chatterjee A, Pande V, Maniatis T, Hasenstaub AR, Stryker MP, Alvarez-Buylla A -
Movement and VIP Interneuron Activation Differentially Modulate Encoding in Mouse Auditory Cortex.
eNeuro 2019 Bigelow J, Morrill RJ, Dekloe J, Hasenstaub AR -
Transplanted Cells Are Essential for the Induction But Not the Expression of Cortical Plasticity.
The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 2019 Hoseini MS, Rakela B, Flores-Ramirez Q, Hasenstaub AR, Alvarez-Buylla A, Stryker MP -
Vesicular GABA Transporter Is Necessary for Transplant-Induced Critical Period Plasticity in Mouse Visual Cortex.
The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 2019 Priya R, Rakela B, Kaneko M, Spatazza J, Larimer P, Hoseini MS, Hasenstaub AR, Alvarez-Buylla A, Stryker MP -
Secretagogin is Expressed by Developing Neocortical GABAergic Neurons in Humans but not Mice and Increases Neurite Arbor Size and Complexity.
Cerebral cortex (New York, N.Y. : 1991) 2018 Raju CS, Spatazza J, Stanco A, Larimer P, Sorrells SF, Kelley KW, Nicholas CR, Paredes MF, Lui JH, Hasenstaub AR, Kriegstein AR, Alvarez-Buylla A, Rubenstein JL, Oldham MC -
Visual Information Present in Infragranular Layers of Mouse Auditory Cortex.
The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 2018 Morrill RJ, Hasenstaub AR -
Amplitude modulation coding in awake mice and squirrel monkeys.
Journal of neurophysiology 2018 Hoglen NEG, Larimer P, Phillips EAK, Malone BJ, Hasenstaub AR -
Cortical Interneurons Differentially Regulate the Effects of Acoustic Context.
Cell reports 2017 Phillips EAK, Schreiner CE, Hasenstaub AR -
Diverse effects of stimulus history in waking mouse auditory cortex.
Journal of neurophysiology 2017 Phillips EAK, Schreiner CE, Hasenstaub AR -
Development and long-term integration of MGE-lineage cortical interneurons in the heterochronic environment.
Journal of neurophysiology 2017 Larimer P, Spatazza J, Stryker MP, Alvarez-Buylla A, Hasenstaub AR -
Asymmetric effects of activating and inactivating cortical interneurons.
eLife 2016 Phillips EA, Hasenstaub AR -
Caudal Ganglionic Eminence Precursor Transplants Disperse and Integrate as Lineage-Specific Interneurons but Do Not Induce Cortical Plasticity.
Cell reports 2016 Larimer P, Spatazza J, Espinosa JS, Tang Y, Kaneko M, Hasenstaub AR, Stryker MP, Alvarez-Buylla A -
Inhibitory Actions Unified by Network Integration.
Neuron 2015 Seybold BA, Phillips EAK, Schreiner CE, Hasenstaub AR -
Strategies for optical control and simultaneous electrical readout of extended cortical circuits.
Journal of neuroscience methods 2015 Ledochowitsch P, Yazdan-Shahmorad A, Bouchard KE, Diaz-Botia C, Hanson TL, He JW, Seybold BA, Olivero E, Phillips EA, Blanche TJ, Schreiner CE, Hasenstaub A, Chang EF, Sabes PN, Maharbiz MM -
Cell Type-Specific Control of Spike Timing by Gamma-Band Oscillatory Inhibition.
Cerebral cortex (New York, N.Y. : 1991) 2015 Hasenstaub A, Otte S, Callaway E -
Contrast dependence and differential contributions from somatostatin- and parvalbumin-expressing neurons to spatial integration in mouse V1.
The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 2013 Nienborg H, Hasenstaub A, Nauhaus I, Taniguchi H, Huang ZJ, Callaway EM -
Paint it black (or red, or green): optical and genetic tools illuminate inhibitory contributions to cortical circuit function.
Neuron 2010 Hasenstaub AR, Callaway EM -
Metabolic cost as a unifying principle governing neuronal biophysics.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2010 Hasenstaub A, Otte S, Callaway E, Sejnowski TJ -
Cell type-specific control of neuronal responsiveness by gamma-band oscillatory inhibition.
The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 2010 Otte S, Hasenstaub A, Callaway EM -
State changes rapidly modulate cortical neuronal responsiveness.
The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 2007 Hasenstaub A, Sachdev RN, McCormick DA -
Enhancement of visual responsiveness by spontaneous local network activity in vivo.
Journal of neurophysiology 2007 Haider B, Duque A, Hasenstaub AR, Yu Y, McCormick DA -
Neocortical network activity in vivo is generated through a dynamic balance of excitation and inhibition.
The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 2006 Haider B, Duque A, Hasenstaub AR, McCormick DA -
Modulation of intracortical synaptic potentials by presynaptic somatic membrane potential.
Nature 2006 Shu Y, Hasenstaub A, Duque A, Yu Y, McCormick DA -
Inhibitory postsynaptic potentials carry synchronized frequency information in active cortical networks.
Neuron 2005 Hasenstaub A, Shu Y, Haider B, Kraushaar U, Duque A, McCormick DA -
Barrages of synaptic activity control the gain and sensitivity of cortical neurons.
The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 2003 Shu Y, Hasenstaub A, Badoual M, Bal T, McCormick DA -
Persistent cortical activity: mechanisms of generation and effects on neuronal excitability.
Cerebral cortex (New York, N.Y. : 1991) 2003 McCormick DA, Shu Y, Hasenstaub A, Sanchez-Vives M, Badoual M, Bal T -
Turning on and off recurrent balanced cortical activity.
Nature 2003 Shu Y, Hasenstaub A, McCormick DA -
Brains, maturation times, and parenting.
Neurobiology of aging 1999 Allman J, Hasenstaub A -
Parenting and survival in anthropoid primates: caretakers live longer.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 1998 Allman J, Rosin A, Kumar R, Hasenstaub A