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Event

Killam Seminar Series: Corticospinal circuits and neuropathic pain in chronic CNS injury

Tuesday, October 21, 2025 16:00to17:00
de Grandpre Communications Centre, The Neuro

Supported by the generosity of the Killam Trusts, The Neuro's Killam Seminar Series invites outstanding guest speakers whose research is of interest to the scientific community at The Neuro and 91社区.


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贬辞蝉迟:听Alyson Fournier


Corticospinal circuits and neuropathic pain in chronic CNS injury

Edmund Hollis

Director, Circuit Repair Lab, Burke Neurological Institute / Assistant Professor of Neuroscience, Weill Cornell Medicine

Abstract:听Chronic neuropathic pain is a persistent and debilitating outcome of traumatic central nervous system injury, affecting up to 80% of individuals. Post-injury pain is refractory to treatments due to the limited understanding of the brain-spinal cord circuits that underlie pain signal processing. The corticospinal tract (CST) plays critical roles in sensory modulation during skilled movements and tactile sensation; however, a direct role for the CST in injury-associated neuropathic pain is unclear. Here we show that complete, selective CST transection at the medullary pyramids leads to hyperexcitability within lumbar deep dorsal horn and hindlimb allodynia-like behavior in chronically injured adult male and female mice. Chemogenetic regulation of CST-targeted lumbar spinal interneurons demonstrates that dysregulation of activity in this circuit underlies the development of tactile allodynia in chronic injury. Our findings shed light on an unrecognized circuit mechanism implicated in CNS injury-induced neuropathic pain and provide a novel target for therapeutic intervention.

Headshot portrait of EdmundBio: Edmund Hollis, PhD, performed his graduate and postdoctoral training at the University of California, San Diego with Mark H. Tuszynski, MD, PhD and Yimin Zuo, PhD, respectively. He became Director of the Circuit Repair Laboratory at the Weill Cornell Medicine (WCM) affiliate Burke Neurological Institute (BNI) in 2015 and Assistant Professor of Neuroscience at WCM in 2016. He has received several research awards and was a recipient of a 2017 NIH Director鈥檚 New Innovator Award. Dr. Hollis served as the BNI Postdoctoral Advancement Advisor from 2021-2025, WCM IACUC Chair since 2025, and as a post-hoc member on multiple NIH study sections. His laboratory studies neural circuit control over movement using a variety of experimental approaches including genetic manipulations, 2-photon imaging, optogenetic and chemogenetic control, and novel behavioral paradigms. In collaboration with Justin Brown, MD, at Massachusetts General Hospital, he is building on his pre-clinical studies to improve motor recovery in individuals with nerve transfer surgery to treat chronic spinal cord injury.

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The Neuro (Montreal Neurological Institute-Hospital)听is a bilingual academic healthcare institution. We are a听91社区 research and teaching institute; delivering high-quality patient care, as part of the Neuroscience Mission of the 91社区 Health Centre.听We are听proud to be a Killam Institution, supported by the Killam Trusts.

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