Ralph DiLeone, PhD
Professor of Psychiatry and of NeuroscienceCards
About
Research
Overview
Broadly, our research seeks to define the molecular and neural basis of behavior. Most of the work focused on neurocircuitry underlying responses to natural rewards (i.e. food) as well as drugs of abuse. We investigate the regulation and integration of these circuits with the longer term goal of understanding their relevance in disease, as well as the role that these circuits played in evolution. It is notable that the motivation to ingest food, though highly adaptive during most of our natural history, has proven to be incompatible with the current state of excess food supply. Similar circuits likely underlie our motivation for physical activity, including exercise. Understanding the motivational systems that control feeding and activity will give us insight into the molecular mechanisms of a complex behavior, and will ultimately serve to better define the etiology of obesity and eating disorders.
Our current translational studies on opioid use disorder are focused at evaluating specific therapeutics for their mechanisms as well as their efficacy in animal models of dependence and drug seeking.
Our experiments and progress depend upon our ability to effectively monitor and manipulate neurons within the adult brain. We are active in using viral and transgenic techniques for conditional genetic analysis of neural function and behavior. The lab also leverages conditional viral approaches to evaluate activity (via fiber photometry) or to manipulate (via optogenetics) specific circuits and neuronal types during behavior.
Medical Research Interests
Academic Achievements & Community Involvement
News & Links
News
- October 16, 2024Source: Biological Psychiatry
Vitamin D’s Capacity to Increase Amphetamine-Induced Dopamine Release in Healthy Humans: A Clinical Translational [11C]-PHNO Positron Emission Tomography Study
- October 01, 2019
Yale Investigators Receive NIH HEAL Grants to Study Solutions to the Opioid Crisis
- May 12, 2016
The Future is Now
- March 03, 2015
Eleven Yale faculty honored by Connecticut Academy of Science and Engineering