TopicNeuroscience
Content Overview
7Total items
4ePosters
3Seminars

Latest

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Cellular and genetic mechanisms of cerebral cortex folding

Víctor Borrell
Instituto de Neurociencias, Alicante
Jan 17, 2024

One of the most prominent features of the human brain is the fabulous size of the cerebral cortex and its intricate folding, both of which emerge during development. Over the last few years, work from my lab has shown that specific cellular and genetic mechanisms play central roles in cortex folding, particularly linked to neural stem and progenitor cells. Key mechanisms include high rates of neurogenesis, high abundance of basal Radial Glia Cells (bRGCs), and neuron migration, all of which are intertwined during development. We have also shown that primary cortical folds follow highly stereotyped patterns, defined by a spatial-temporal protomap of gene expression within germinal layers of the developing cortex. I will present recent findings from my laboratory revealing novel cellular and genetic mechanisms that regulate cortex expansion and folding. We have uncovered the contribution of epigenetic regulation to the establishment of the cortex folding protomap, modulating the expression levels of key transcription factors that control progenitor cell proliferation and cortex folding. At the single cell level, we have identified an unprecedented diversity of cortical progenitor cell classes in the ferret and human embryonic cortex. These are differentially enriched in gyrus versus sulcus regions and establish parallel cell lineages, not observed in mouse. Our findings show that genetic and epigenetic mechanisms in gyrencephalic species diversify cortical progenitor cell types and implement parallel cell linages, driving the expansion of neurogenesis and patterning cerebral cortex folds.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Organoid-based single-cell spatiotemporal gene expression landscape of human embryonic development and hematopoiesis

Yiming Chao
University of Hong Kong
May 25, 2023
SeminarNeuroscience

Development and evolution of neuronal connectivity

Alain Chédotal
Vision Institute, Paris, France
Sep 28, 2022

In most animal species including humans, commissural axons connect neurons on the left and right side of the nervous system. In humans, abnormal axon midline crossing during development causes a whole range of neurological disorders ranging from congenital mirror movements, horizontal gaze palsy, scoliosis or binocular vision deficits. The mechanisms which guide axons across the CNS midline were thought to be evolutionary conserved but our recent results suggesting that they differ across vertebrates.  I will discuss the evolution of visual projection laterality during vertebrate evolution.  In most vertebrates, camera-style eyes contain retinal ganglion cell (RGC) neurons projecting to visual centers on both sides of the brain. However, in fish, RGCs are thought to only innervate the contralateral side. Using 3D imaging and tissue clearing we found that bilateral visual projections exist in non-teleost fishes. We also found that the developmental program specifying visual system laterality differs between fishes and mammals. We are currently using various strategies to discover genes controlling the development of visual projections. I will also present ongoing work using 3D imaging techniques to study the development of the visual system in human embryo.

ePosterNeuroscience

Integration of human embryonic stem cell-induced neurons in ischemic injured cortex

Raquel Martinez Curiel, Sara Palma Tortosa, Linda Jansson, Mazin Hajy, Berta Coll San Martin, Daniel Capitan Leo, Oleg Tsupykov, Galyna Skibo, Emanuela Monni, Olle Lindvall, Zaal Kokaia
ePosterNeuroscience

Landmarks of human embryonic development inscribed in somatic mutations

Sara Bizzotto, Yanmei Dou, Javier Ganz, Ryan N. Doan, Minseok Kwon, Craig L. Bohrson, Sonia N. Kim, Taejeong Bae, Alexej Abyzov, Peter J. Park, Christopher A. Walsh
ePosterNeuroscience

Tridimensional analysis of neuromuscular circuit development in human embryos

Raphael Blain, Gérard Couly, Yorick Gitton, Alain Chédotal
ePosterNeuroscience

The role of the ASD-associated 16p11.2 gene QPRT during differentiation of human embryonic stem cell-derived cerebral organoids

Clara Droell, Julia Schwarzpaul, Silvia Lindlar, Afsheen Kumar, Andreas G. Chiocchetti, Denise Haslinger

FENS Forum 2024

human embryo coverage

7 items

ePoster4
Seminar3

Share your knowledge

Know something about human embryo? Help the community by contributing seminars, talks, or research.

Contribute content
Domain spotlight

Explore how human embryo research is advancing inside Neuroscience.

Visit domain

Cookies

We use essential cookies to run the site. Analytics cookies are optional and help us improve World Wide. Learn more.