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Developmental Biology

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developmental biology

Discover seminars, jobs, and research tagged with developmental biology across World Wide.
7 curated items7 Seminars
Updated 6 months ago
7 items · developmental biology
7 results
SeminarNeuroscience

Developmental and evolutionary perspectives on thalamic function

Dr. Bruno Averbeck
National Institute of Mental Health, Maryland, USA
Jun 10, 2025

Brain organization and function is a complex topic. We are good at establishing correlates of perception and behavior across forebrain circuits, as well as manipulating activity in these circuits to affect behavior. However, we still lack good models for the large-scale organization and function of the forebrain. What are the contributions of the cortex, basal ganglia, and thalamus to behavior? In addressing these questions, we often ascribe function to each area as if it were an independent processing unit. However, we know from the anatomy that the cortex, basal ganglia, and thalamus, are massively interconnected in a large network. One way to generate insight into these questions is to consider the evolution and development of forebrain systems. In this talk, I will discuss the developmental and evolutionary (comparative anatomy) data on the thalamus, and how it fits within forebrain networks. I will address questions including, when did the thalamus appear in evolution, how is the thalamus organized across the vertebrate lineage, and how can the change in the organization of forebrain networks affect behavioral repertoires.

SeminarPhysics of Life

Retinal neurogenesis and lamination: What to become, where to become it and how to move from there!

Caren Norden
Instituto Gulbenkian de Ciência
Mar 24, 2022

The vertebrate retina is an important outpost of the central nervous system, responsible for the perception and transmission of visual information. It consists of five different types of neurons that reproducibly laminate into three layers, a process of crucial importance for the organ’s function. Unsurprisingly, impaired fate decisions as well as impaired neuronal migrations and lamination lead to impaired retinal function. However, how processes are coordinated at the cellular and tissue level and how variable or robust retinal formation is, is currently still underexplored. In my lab, we aim to shed light on these questions from different angles, studying on the one hand differentiation phenomena and their variability and on the other hand the downstream migration and lamination phenomena. We use zebrafish as our main model system due to its excellent possibilities for live imaging and quantitative developmental biology. More recently we also started to use human retinal organoids as a comparative system. We further employ cross disciplinary approaches to address these issues combining work of cell and developmental biology, biomechanics, theory and computer science. Together, this allows us to integrate cell with tissue-wide phenomena and generate an appreciation of the reproducibility and variability of events.

SeminarNeuroscience

Evolving Neural Networks

Paul Cisek, Tony Zador, Ida Momennejad, Dayu Lin, Robert Yang
Jun 16, 2021

Evolution has shaped neural circuits in a very specific manner, slowly and aimlessly incorporating computational innovations that increased the chances to survive and reproduce of the newly born species. The discoveries done by the Evolutionary Developmental (Evo-Devo) biology field during the last decades have been crucial for our understanding of the gradual emergence of such innovations. In turn, Computational Neuroscience practitioners modeling the brain are becoming increasingly aware of the need to build models that incorporate these innovations to replicate the computational strategies used by the brain to solve a given task. The goal of this workshop is to bring together experts from Systems and Computational Neuroscience, Machine Learning and the Evo-Devo field to discuss if and how knowing the evolutionary history of neural circuits can help us understand the way the brain works, as well as the relative importance of learned VS innate neural mechanisms.

SeminarNeuroscience

Adult neurogenesis in mouse hippocampus

Aixa V. Morales
Cajal Institute
May 6, 2021

Dr. Aixa V. Morales has been working for more than 20 years in the field of Developmental Biology and from 2005, she is the PI of the laboratory on “Molecular Control of Neurogenesis” at Cajal Institute. Along these years, she has contributed to understanding the control of neurogenesis during development, the dorsoventral specification of neural progenitors, and the temporal control of the migration of neural crest cells. More recently, her lab interest moved towards understanding modulation of adult neurogenesis. Her lab current interest is the control of quiescence, as a mechanism of long-term neural stem cell maintenance in adult niches.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Synthetic Developmental Biology - Cross-species comparison and manipulation of organoids

Miki Ebisuya
RIKEN Center for Biosystems Dynamics Research
Apr 21, 2021
SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Sparks, flames, and inferno: epileptogenesis in the glioblastoma microenvironment

Jeff Noebels
Baylor College of Medicine
Oct 6, 2020

Glioblastoma cells trigger pharmacoresistant seizures that may promote tumor growth and diminish the quality of remaining life. To define the relationship between growth of glial tumors and their neuronal microenvironment, and to identify genomic biomarkers and mechanisms that may point to better prognosis and treatment of drug resistant epilepsy in brain cancer, we are analyzing a new generation of genetically defined CRISPR/in utero electroporation inborn glioblastoma (GBM) tumor models engineered in mice. The molecular pathophysiology of glioblastoma cells and surrounding neurons and untransformed astrocytes are compared at serial stages of tumor development. Initial studies reveal that epileptiform EEG spiking is a very early and reliable preclinical signature of GBM expansion in these mice, followed by rapidly progressive seizures and death within weeks. FACS-sorted transcriptomic analysis of cortical astrocytes reveals the expansion of a subgroup enriched in pro-synaptogenic genes that may drive hyperexcitability, a novel mechanism of epileptogenesis. Using a prototypical GBM IUE model, we systematically define and correlate the earliest appearance of cortical hyperexcitability with progressive cortical tumor cell invasion, including spontaneous episodes of spreading cortical depolarization, innate inflammation, and xCT upregulation in the peritumoral microenvironment. Blocking this glutamate exporter reduces seizure load. We show that the host genome contributes to seizure risk by generating tumors in a monogenic deletion strain (MapT/tau -/-) that raises cortical seizure threshold. We also show that the tumor variant profile determines epilepsy risk. Our genetic dissection approach sets the stage to broadly explore the developmental biology of personalized tumor/host interactions in mice engineered with novel human tumor mutations in specified glial cell lineages.

SeminarNeuroscience

The recruitment of spatial cells in large-scale space & an AI approach to neural discovery

Caswell Barry
University College London
Jun 16, 2020

Prof Caswell Barry, Professorial Research Fellow, Cell & Developmental Biology, Division of Biosciences, University College London. He and his team are trying to understand how the brain works - how it creates that experience of being human, and more specifically, how the brain creates, stores, and updates memories for places and events. They are trying to answer this is by studying areas of the brain linked to memory, the hippocampus and associated sections of cortex – by recording the activity of neurons in these areas we can visualise and hopefully understand the processes the trigger memory formation and retrieval.