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Human Cortical Development

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Human Cortical Development

Discover seminars, jobs, and research tagged with Human Cortical Development across World Wide.
5 curated items3 Seminars2 ePosters
Updated over 1 year ago
5 items · Human Cortical Development
5 results
SeminarNeuroscience

Modeling human brain development and disease: the role of primary cilia

Kyrousi Christina
Medical School, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Athens, Greece
Apr 23, 2024

Neurodevelopmental disorders (NDDs) impose a global burden, affecting an increasing number of individuals. While some causative genes have been identified, understanding the human-specific mechanisms involved in these disorders remains limited. Traditional gene-driven approaches for modeling brain diseases have failed to capture the diverse and convergent mechanisms at play. Centrosomes and cilia act as intermediaries between environmental and intrinsic signals, regulating cellular behavior. Mutations or dosage variations disrupting their function have been linked to brain formation deficits, highlighting their importance, yet their precise contributions remain largely unknown. Hence, we aim to investigate whether the centrosome/cilia axis is crucial for brain development and serves as a hub for human-specific mechanisms disrupted in NDDs. Towards this direction, we first demonstrated species-specific and cell-type-specific differences in the cilia-genes expression during mouse and human corticogenesis. Then, to dissect their role, we provoked their ectopic overexpression or silencing in the developing mouse cortex or in human brain organoids. Our findings suggest that cilia genes manipulation alters both the numbers and the position of NPCs and neurons in the developing cortex. Interestingly, primary cilium morphology is disrupted, as we find changes in their length, orientation and number that lead to disruption of the apical belt and altered delamination profiles during development. Our results give insight into the role of primary cilia in human cortical development and address fundamental questions regarding the diversity and convergence of gene function in development and disease manifestation. It has the potential to uncover novel pharmacological targets, facilitate personalized medicine, and improve the lives of individuals affected by NDDs through targeted cilia-based therapies.

SeminarNeuroscience

Mechanisms of human cortical development and neuropsychiatric disease

Luis de la Torre-Ubieta
University of California Los Angeles
May 30, 2023
SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Species-specific mechanisms of the timing of human cortical development

Pierre Vanderhaeghen
VIB KULeuven Center for Brain & Disease Research
Jun 3, 2020

The human brain, in particular the cerebral cortex, has undergone rapid expansion and increased complexity during recent evolution. One striking feature of human corticogenesis is that it is highly protracted in time, from prenatal stages of neurogenesis (taking months instead of days in the mouse), to postnatal stages of neuronal maturation and circuit formation (taking years instead of weeks in the mouse). This prolonged development is thought to contribute in an important fashion to increased cortical size, but also enhanced circuit complexity and plasticity. Here we will discuss how the species-specific temporal patterning of corticogenesis is largely intrinsic to cortical progenitors and neurons, and involves human-specific genes and cell properties that underlie human brain evolution, as well as our selective sensitivity to certain brain diseases.

ePoster

Investigating the role of centrosome-cilia axis in human cortical development orchestration and malformations

Athanasia Rapti, Marta Labeur, George E. Baltatzis, Panagiotis Politis, Stavros Taraviras, Elisabeth B Binder, Silvia Cappello, Christina Kyrousi

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

A single-cell multiomic atlas of human cortical development in Down syndrome identifies candidate mechanisms underlying intellectual disability

Michael Lattke, Jon Conesa, Mickey Hughes, Vincenzo De Paola

FENS Forum 2024