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Seminar✓ Recording AvailableNeuroscience

Neuroscience Investigations in the Virgin Lands of African Biodiversity

James O Olopade

Prof

University of Ibadan

Schedule
Friday, May 22, 2020

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Schedule

Friday, May 22, 2020

4:00 PM Europe/London

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Host: SONA

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Recording provided by the organiser.

Event Information

Domain

Neuroscience

Original Event

View source

Host

SONA

Duration

70 minutes

Abstract

Africa is blessed with a rich diversity and abundance in rodent and avian populations. This natural endowment on the continent portends research opportunities to study unique anatomical profiles and investigate animal models that may confer better neural architecture to study neurodegenerative diseases, adult neurogenesis, stroke and stem cell therapies. To this end, African researchers are beginning to pay closer attention to some of her indigenous rodents and birds in an attempt to develop spontaneous laboratory models for homegrown neuroscience-based research. For this presentation, I will be showing studies in our lab, involving cellular neuroanatomy of two rodents, the African giant rat (AGR) and Greater cane rat (GCR), Eidolon Bats (EB) and also the Striped Owl (SO). Using histological stains (Cresyl violet and Rapid Golgi) and immunohistochemical biomarkers (GFAP, NeuN, CNPase, Iba-1, Collagen 2, Doublecortin, Ki67, Calbindin, etc), and Electron Microscopy, morphology and functional organizations of neuronal and glial populations of the AGR , GCR, EB and SO brains have been described, with our work ongoing. In addition, the developmental profiles of the prenatal GCR brains have been chronicled across its entire gestational period. Brains of embryos/foetuses were harvested for gross morphological descriptions and then processed using immunofluorescence biomarkers to determine the pattern, onset, duration and peak of neurogenesis (Pax6, Tbr1, Tbr2, NF, HuCD, MAP2) and the onset and peak of glial cell expressions and myelination in the prenatal GCR. The outcome of these research efforts has shown unique neuroanatomical expressions and networks amongst Africa’s rich biodiversity. It is hopeful that continuous effort in this regard will provide sufficient basic research data on neural developments and cellular neuroanatomy with subsequent translational consequences.

Topics

Eidolon BatsStriped Owladult neurogenesisafrican giant ratglial populationsgreater cane ratimmunohistochemistryneuroanatomyneurodegenerationneurodegenerative diseasesneurogenesis

About the Speaker

James O Olopade

Prof

University of Ibadan

Contact & Resources

Personal Website

sonafrica.org

@SONAorg

Follow on Twitter/X

twitter.com/SONAorg

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