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Pattern Formation

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pattern formation

Discover seminars, jobs, and research tagged with pattern formation across World Wide.
4 curated items2 Seminars2 ePosters
Updated almost 4 years ago
4 items · pattern formation
4 results
SeminarNeuroscience

How does a neuron decide when and where to make a synapse?

Peter R. Hiesinger
Free University, Berlin, Germany
Feb 15, 2022

Precise synaptic connectivity is a prerequisite for the function of neural circuits, yet individual neurons, taken out of their developmental context, readily form unspecific synapses. How does genetically encoded brain wiring deal with this apparent contradiction? Brain wiring is a developmental growth process that is not only characterized by precision, but also flexibility and robustness. As in any other growth process, cellular interactions are restricted in space and time. Correspondingly, molecular and cellular interactions are restricted to those that 'get to see' each other during development. This seminar will explore the question how neurons decide when and where to make synapses using the Drosophila visual system as a model. New findings reveal that pattern formation during growth and the kinetics of live neuronal interactions restrict synapse formation and partner choice for neurons that are not otherwise prevented from making incorrect synapses in this system. For example, cell biological mechanisms like autophagy as well as developmental temperature restrict inappropriate partner choice through a process of kinetic exclusion that critically contributes to wiring specificity. The seminar will explore these and other neuronal strategies when and where to make synapses during developmental growth that contribute to precise, flexible and robust outcomes in brain wiring.

SeminarPhysics of LifeRecording

On being the right size: Is the search for underlying physical principles a wild-goose chase?

Workshop, Multiple Speakers
Emory University
Oct 28, 2020

When was the last time you ran into a giant? Chances are never. Almost 100 years ago, JBS Haldane posed an outwardly simple yet complex question – what is the most optimal size (for a biological system)? The living world around us contains a huge diversity of organisms, each with its own characteristic size. Even the size of subcellular organelles is tightly controlled. In absence of physical rulers, how do cells and organisms truly “know” how large is large enough? What are the mechanisms in place to enforce size control? Many of these questions have motivated generations of scientists to look for physical principles underlying size control in biological systems. In the next edition of Emory's Theory and Modeling of Living Systems (TMLS) workshop series, our panel of speakers will take a close look at these questions, across the entire scale - from the molecular, all the way to the ecosystem.

ePoster

Chemogenetically induced Gq signaling is involved in the dendritic and axonal pattern formation of cortical neurons

Ina Köhler, Lisa-Marie Rennau, Adriana Rehm, Petra Wahle

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

Hindlimb muscle synergies during split-belt locomotion in the cat: Implications for CPG pattern formation organization

Boris Prilutsky, Alexander Klishko, Claire Hanson, Jonathan Harnie, Ilya Rybak, Alain Frigon

FENS Forum 2024