The Varodayan Lab

Investigating the synaptic mechanisms and neurocircuitry underlying alcohol use disorder and comorbid neuropsychiatric diseases

Research Goals

The Varodayan lab's research program is focused on understanding how alcohol and stress impact brain synapses and circuits to promote alcohol use disorder. We are particularly interested in the medial prefrontal cortex region of the brain as it regulates mood, motivation and impulsivity, and its dysfunction plays a critical role in several psychiatric diseases. Specifically, individuals with alcohol use disorder have reduced cortical volumes and significant cognitive deficits (e.g. difficulties with emotional processing, riskier decision-making, less impulse control). One significant barrier to developing pharmacological treatments that address these cognitive deficits is that the precise actions of alcohol and stress on medial prefrontal cortex synapses and circuits are not well understood. The fact that medial prefrontal cortex activity can be modulated by many different neuropeptides, neurotransmitters and neuroimmune factors widens this information gap, but also provides an excellent opportunity to identify novel therapeutic targets for improving cognitive function after chronic alcohol exposure. Therefore, research in the Varodayan lab spans three major questions:

1) Which medial prefrontal cortex synapses and circuits are alcohol- and stress-sensitive?

2) How does cortical circuit/synaptic modulation by various neuropeptides, neurotransmitters and neuroimmune factors contribute to the cognitive deficits of alcohol use disorder?

3) What role do shared neural substrates in the medial prefrontal cortex play in the synergistic interaction between alcohol and stress?

Our ultimate goal is to translate our neurobiological findings into innovative therapeutic strategies to provide better treatment for patients suffering from alcohol- and anxiety/stress-related psychiatric diseases.

Research Interests

Research Techniques

© Copyright 2020 | Varodayan Laboratory | Department of Psychology | Binghamton University