Title

Timothy Cope

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Title/Position
Professor, Director of Neuroscience and Neurotechnology PhD Program
Areas of Research

Areas of Research

Neuroengineering
Contact

Contact

IBB 3308Georgia Tech
404.385.4293
Education

Education

  • Ph.D. Duke University, 1980
  • M.S. University of California, 1977
  • B.S. University of California, 1975
  • Postdoctoral Neuroscience Fellow, University of Washington, 1982
  • Postdoctoral Neuroscience Fellow, University of California, 1983
Research Interests

Research Interests

My teaching focuses on undergraduate- and graduate-level courses in fundamental and advanced neuroscience, including Principles of Neuroscience, Neural Systems, Networks, and Behavior, and Neurons in Action. I also actively engage both graduate and undergraduate students in my research program.

Teaching Interests

Teaching Interests

My research interests center on control of movement by sensorimotor integration in the mammalian spinal cord. Using predominantly electrophysiological methods applied in vivo, we study neural signaling by spinal motoneurons, somatosensory neurons, and their central synapses. Our primary analyses include electrical properties, synaptic function, and firing behavior of single neurons. We are actively examining how these neurons and synapses respond soon and long after peripheral nerve injury and regeneration. Our recent findings demonstrate that successful regeneration of damaged sensory axons does not prevent complex reorganization of their synaptic connections made within the spinal cord. In separate studies, we are examining novel mechanisms of sensory encoding and their impairment in rodents treated with anti-cancer drugs. Both nerve regeneration and chemotherapy projects are driven by the long-term goal of accurately identifying the neural mechanisms behind movement disorders. We also continue to explore fundamental operations of the normal adult nervous system. Our most recent studies focus on synaptic modulation of motoneuron firing and on interspecies comparisons of spinal circuits.
Publications

Publications

Rotterman TR, Haley-Johson Z, Pottorf TS, Chopra T, Chang E, Zhang S, McCallum WM, Fisher S, Franklin H, Alvarez M, Cope TC, Alvarez FJ (2024) Modulation of central synapse remodeling after remote peripheral injuries by CCL2-CCR2 axis and microglia. Cell Rep. 2024 Feb 27;43(2):113776 PMID; 38367237
Housley SN, Powers RK, Nardelli P, Lee S, Blum K, Bewick GS, Banks RW, Cope TC (2024) Biophysical model of muscle spindle encoding. Exp Physiol 2024 Jan;109(1):55-65 PMID:36966478
Rotterman TM, Garcia VV, Houlsey SN, Nardelli P, Sierra R, Fix CE, Cope TC. (2023) Structural preservation does not ensure function at sensory Ia-Motoneuron synapses following peripheral nerve injury and repair. J. Neurosci. 2023 Jun 14;43(24);4390-4404. PMID: 37127364
Rich MM, Housley SN, Nardelli P, Powers RK, Cope TC. Imbalanced subthreshold currents following sepsis and chemotherapy: a shared mechanism offering a new therapeutic target? (2022) Neuroscientist. Apr;28(2):103-120. doi: 10.1177/1073858420981866. PMID: 33345706
Housley SN, Nardelli P, Rotterman TM, Cope TC. (2021) Neural circuit mechanisms of sensorimotor disability in cancer treatment. Proc Natl Acad Sci. Dec 21;118(51): e2100428118. PMID: 34911753

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