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Prof
New York University Grossman School of Medicine
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Schedule
Wednesday, July 1, 2020
2:00 PM Europe/Lisbon
Seminar location
No geocoded details are available for this content yet.
Format
Past Seminar
Recording
Not available
Host
Champalimaud Colloquia
Seminar location
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Maintaining posture is a vital challenge for all freely-moving organisms. As animals grow, their relationship to destabilizing physical forces changes. How does the nervous system deal with this ongoing challenge? Vertebrates use highly conserved vestibular reflexes to stabilize the body. We established the larval zebrafish as a new model system to understand the development of the vestibular reflexes responsible for balance. In this talk, I will begin with the biophysical challenges facing baby fish as they learn to swim. I’ll briefly review published work by David Ehrlich, Ph.D., establishing a fundamental relationship between postural stability and locomotion. The bulk of the talk will highlight unpublished work by Kyla Hamling. She discovered that a small (~50) population of molecularly-defined brainstem neurons called vestibulo-spinal cells act as a nexus for postural development. Her loss-of-function experiments show that these neurons contribute more to postural stability as animals grow older. I’ll end with brief highlights from her ongoing work examining tilt-evoked responses of these neurons using 2-photon imaging and the consequences of downstream activity in the spinal cord using single-objective light-sheet (SCAPE) microscopy
David Schoppik
Prof
New York University Grossman School of Medicine
neuro
neuro
The development of the iPS cell technology has revolutionized our ability to study development and diseases in defined in vitro cell culture systems. The talk will focus on Rett Syndrome and discuss t
neuro
Pluripotent cells, including embryonic stem (ES) and induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells, are used to investigate the genetic and epigenetic underpinnings of human diseases such as Parkinson’s, Alzhe