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Epigenetic Mechanisms

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epigenetic mechanisms

Discover seminars, jobs, and research tagged with epigenetic mechanisms across World Wide.
11 curated items10 Seminars1 ePoster
Updated 12 months ago
11 items · epigenetic mechanisms
11 results
SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Cellular and genetic mechanisms of cerebral cortex folding

Víctor Borrell
Instituto de Neurociencias, Alicante
Jan 16, 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.

SeminarNeuroscience

Epigenomic (re)programming of the brain and behavior by ovarian hormones

Marija Kundakovic
Fordham University
May 1, 2023

Rhythmic changes in sex hormone levels across the ovarian cycle exert powerful effects on the brain and behavior, and confer female-specific risks for neuropsychiatric conditions. In this talk, Dr. Kundakovic will discuss the role of fluctuating ovarian hormones as a critical biological factor contributing to the increased depression and anxiety risk in women. Cycling ovarian hormones drive brain and behavioral plasticity in both humans and rodents, and the talk will focus on animal studies in Dr. Kundakovic’s lab that are revealing the molecular and receptor mechanisms that underlie this female-specific brain dynamic. She will highlight the lab’s discovery of sex hormone-driven epigenetic mechanisms, namely chromatin accessibility and 3D genome changes, that dynamically regulate neuronal gene expression and brain plasticity but may also prime the (epi)genome for psychopathology. She will then describe functional studies, including hormone replacement experiments and the overexpression of an estrous cycle stage-dependent transcription factor, which provide the causal link(s) between hormone-driven chromatin dynamics and sex-specific anxiety behavior. Dr. Kundakovic will also highlight an unconventional role that chromatin dynamics may have in regulating neuronal function across the ovarian cycle, including in sex hormone-driven X chromosome plasticity and hormonally-induced epigenetic priming. In summary, these studies provide a molecular framework to understand ovarian hormone-driven brain plasticity and increased female risk for anxiety and depression, opening new avenues for sex- and gender-informed treatments for brain disorders.

SeminarNeuroscience

Establishment and aging of the neuronal DNA methylation landscape in the hippocampus

Sara Zocher, PhD
German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (DZNE), Dresden
Apr 11, 2023

The hippocampus is a brain region with key roles in memory formation, cognitive flexibility and emotional control. Yet hippocampal function is impaired severely during aging and in neurodegenerative diseases, and impairments in hippocampal function underlie age-related cognitive decline. Accumulating evidence suggests that the deterioration of the neuron-specific epigenetic landscape during aging contributes to their progressive, age-related dysfunction. For instance, we have recently shown that aging is associated with pronounced alterations of neuronal DNA methylation patterns in the hippocampus. Because neurons are generated mostly during development with limited replacement in the adult brain, they are particularly long-lived cells and have to maintain their cell-type specific gene expression programs life-long in order to preserve brain function. Understanding the epigenetic mechanisms that underlie the establishment and long-term maintenance of neuron-specific gene expression programs, will help us to comprehend the sources and consequences of their age-related deterioration. In this talk, I will present our recent work that investigated the role of DNA methylation in the establishment of neuronal gene expression programs and neuronal function, using adult neurogenesis in the hippocampus as a model. I will then describe the effects of aging on the DNA methylation landscape in the hippocampus and discuss the malleability of the aging neuronal methylome to lifestyle and environmental stimulation.

SeminarNeuroscience

Neural epigenetic mechanisms of early life exercise interventions

Autumn Ivy
University of California Irvine
Mar 28, 2023
SeminarNeuroscience

Counteracting epigenetic mechanisms in autism spectrum disorders

Sofia Lizarraga
University of South Carolina
Oct 11, 2022
SeminarNeuroscience

Don't forget the gametes: Neurodevelopmental pathogenesis starts in the sperm and egg

Jill Escher
Jill Escher is founder of the Escher Fund for Autism, which funds research on non-genetic inheritance, as well as autism-related programs. She is a member of the governing council of the Environmental Mutagenesis and Genomics Society, where she is past chair of the Germ Cell and Heritable Effects special interest group. She also serves as president of the National Council on Severe Autism and past president of Autism Society San Francisco Bay Area. A former lawyer, she and her husband are the pa
Jul 5, 2022

Proper development of the nervous system depends not only on the inherited DNA sequence, but also on proper regulation of gene expression, as controlled in part by epigenetic mechanisms present in the parental gametes. In this presentation an internationally recognized research advocate explains why researchers concerned about the origins of increasingly prevalent neurodevelopmental disorders such as autism and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder should look beyond genetics in probing the origins of dysregulated transcription of brain-related genes. The culprit for a subset of cases, she contends, may lie in the exposure history of the parents, and thus their germ cells. To illustrate how environmentally informed, nongenetic dysfunction may occur, she focuses on the example of parents' histories of exposure to common agents of modern inhalational anesthesia, a highly toxic exposure that in mammalian models has been seen to induce heritable neurodevelopmental abnormality in offspring born of exposed germline.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Transcriptional and Epigenetic Mechanisms of Addiction

Eric Nestler
Mount Sinai
Oct 6, 2021
SeminarNeuroscience

Integration of „environmental“ information in the neuronal epigenome

Geraldine Zimmer-Bensch
Functional Epigenetics in the Animal Model, Institute of Biology II, RWTH Aachen, Aachen, Germany
Aug 24, 2021

The inhibitory actions of the heterogeneous collection of GABAergic interneurons tremendously influence cortical information processing, which is reflected by diseases like autism, epilepsy and schizophrenia that involve defects in cortical inhibition. Apart from the regulation of physiological processes like synaptic transmission, proper interneuron function also relies on their correct development. Hence, decrypting regulatory networks that direct proper cortical interneuron development as well as adult functionality is of great interest, as this helps to identify critical events implicated in the etiology of the aforementioned diseases. Thereby, extrinsic factors modulate these processes and act on cell- and stage-specific transcriptional programs. Herein, epigenetic mechanisms of gene regulation, like DNA methylation executed by DNA methyltransferases (DNMTs), histone modifications and non-coding RNAs, call increasing attention in integrating “environmental information” in our genome and sculpting physiological processes in the brain relevant for human mental health. Several studies associate altered expression levels and function of the DNA methyltransferase 1 (DNMT1) in subsets of embryonic and adult cortical interneurons in patients diagnosed with schizophrenia. Although accumulating evidence supports the relevance of epigenetic signatures for instructing cell type-specific development, only very little is known about their functional implications in discrete developmental processes and in subtype-specific maturation of cortical interneurons. Similarly, little is known about the role of DNMT1 in regulating adult interneurons functionality. This talk will provide an overview about newly identified and roles DNMT1 has in orchestrating cortical interneuron development and adult function. Further, this talk will report about the implications of lncRNAs in mediating site-specific DNA methylation in response to discrete external stimuli.

SeminarNeuroscience

Careers in neuroscience (and beyond!)

Emma Soopramanien
Queen Mary University London
Jul 20, 2021

Join us to hear about degrees and careers in neuroscience, what it’s like to be a neuroscientist, the wide range of career options open to you after a neuroscience degree, first-hand examples of career paths in neuroscience, and some tips and thoughts to help you in your own careers. This free and friendly webinar will give you the chance to ask questions from people with different experiences in neuroscience: - Emma Soopramanien, the BNA Committee Representative for Students and Early Career Researchers – Emma has just completed her undergraduate course in neuroscience, and will be hosting the webinar. - Professor Anthony Isles, BNA Trustee – Anthony is a professor at Cardiff University, where he researches epigenetic mechanisms of brain and behaviour and how they contribute to neurodevelopmental and neuropsychiatric disorders, as well as teaching undergraduate and postgraduate students. He will talk about how he came to be a neuroscientist researcher and ways into neuroscience. - Dr Anne Cooke, BNA Chief Executive – Anne studied physiology and neuroscience at university and carried out research into neuronal communication, before then following a career path with roles in academia and industry, and now as CE at the BNA. Anne will describe her own career in neuroscience, as well as some of the many other options open to you after a neuroscience degree.

ePoster

Epigenetic mechanisms of information storage in the onset of drug addiction

Luna Zea Redondo, Vedran Franke, Christoph Thieme, Warren Winick-Ng, Eleanor J. Paul, Laura Arguedas, Ibai Irastorza-Azcarate, Alexander Kukalev, Oscar Marin, Altuna Akalin, Mark A. Ungless

FENS Forum 2024