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X-WR-CALNAME:Bordeaux Neurocampus
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://www.bordeaux-neurocampus.fr/en/
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Bordeaux Neurocampus
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TZID:Europe/Paris
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TZNAME:CEST
DTSTART:20230326T010000
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DTSTART:20231029T010000
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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20230619
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20230707
DTSTAMP:20260410T234739
CREATED:20221118T145711Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230707T071418Z
UID:152891-1687132800-1688687999@www.bordeaux-neurocampus.fr
SUMMARY:Cajal lectures: Glial cells in health and diseases
DESCRIPTION:\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nVenue: CGFB \nOpen to everyone \n\nProgram\nJune 19 – 11:00am\nCourse directors talk:\nRagnhildur Thora Karadottir (Cambridge University\, UK)\, Cagla Eroglu (Duke University\, USA)\, Staci Bilbo (Duke University\, USA) and Jean-Christophe Delpech (NutriNeuro) \nJune 22 – 9:00am\nWiebke Moebius (Max-Planck Institute of Multidisciplinary Sciences\, Germany)\nExploring myelin biology with electron microscopy. \nJune 22 – 10:00am\n3 Brain : Presentation \nJune 22 – 11:00am\nAmit Agarwal (Heidelberg University\, Germany)\nDecoding calcium signals and mitochondrial dynamics in brain macroglia in vivo. \nJune 23 – 9:00am\nThomas Papouin (Washington University\, School of Medicine \, USA)\nMapping the Contribution of Astrocytes to the Effects of Neuromodulators on Synapses and Behavior. \nJune 23 – 11:00am (Virtual talk)\nMikael Simons (DZNE\, Germany)\nMechanisms of (re)myelination in the CNS. \nJune 24 – 9:00am\nCaroline Smith (Boston College\, USA)\nConducting rigorous behavioral testing in the context of neuro-immune interactions. \nJune 24 – 10:00am\nGiampaolo Milior (College de France\, France)\nGlial cells in the human brain: new insights and perspectives from work on human epileptic tissues. \nJune 26 – 9:00am\nKelly Monk (Vollume Institute\, USA)\nMolecular and genetic analysis of glial cell development. \nJune 26 – 11:00am\nMaarten Kole (Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience \, The Netherlands)\nNeuron-oligodendrocyte interactions in cortical circuits. \nJune 29 – 9:00am\nAddgene Presentation\nAddgene’s resources for neuroscience. \nJune 29 – 5:45pm (Virtual talk)\nDavid Rowitch (Cambridge University\, UK)\nHeterogenous origins of glia. \nJune 30 – 9:00am\nStéphane Oliet (Neurocentre Magendie\, Bordeaux University\, France)\nAstroglial contribution to NMDA receptor activity. \nJune 30 – 11:00am\nNathalie Rouach (Collège de France\, France)\nAstrocytes : the stars of brain plasticity. \nJuly 1 – 9:00am\nBart Eggen (UMCG/RUG\, The Netherlands)\nHuman microglia in development\, health and disease. \nJuly 3 – 9:00am\nSonia Garel (PSL University\, France)\nMicroglia in early brain wiring: from circuit assembly to tissue integrity \nJuly 3 – 11:00am\nEric Boué-Grabot (Bordeaux University\, France)\nSynaptic and microglial function of ATP P2X receptors in health and disease \nJuly 3 – 5:30pm (Virtual talk)\nPaola Arlotta (Harvard University\, USA)\nChanging neurons to shape glia: a tale of microglia and oligodendrocytes \nJuly 6 – 9:00am\nSoyong Hong (Dementia Research Institute\, University College London\, UK)\nMicroglia-synapse interactions: The triggers and the consequences. \nJuly 6 – 2:30pm\nDavid Belin (Cambridge Univeristy\, UK)\nRole of striatal astrocytes in the development of drug seeking habits \nJuly 6 – 4:00pm TDT Presentation  \nCourse Directors\nRagnhildur Thora Karadottir\, Cambridge University\, UK\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nCagla Eroglu\, Duke University\, US \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nStaci Bilbo\, Duke University\, US \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nJean-Christophe Delpech\, Bordeaux Neurocampus\, FR \nAbout the Cajal lectures\nThe Cajal lectures are organized in the frame of the Cajal courses\, located in the Bordeaux school of Neuroscience. They are open to everyone. \nMore details about this course:\nhttps://cajal-training.org/on-site/glial-and-astrocyte-cells-in-health-and-diseases/ \n  \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n
URL:https://www.bordeaux-neurocampus.fr/en/event/cajal-lectures-glial-cells-in-health-and-diseases/
CATEGORIES:Cajal Lectures,For scientists,home-event
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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20230706T140000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20230706T160000
DTSTAMP:20260410T234739
CREATED:20230620T133559Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230628T213450Z
UID:160763-1688652000-1688659200@www.bordeaux-neurocampus.fr
SUMMARY:Joint seminars - Dr. Kelly Clemens and Dr. Nathan Holmes (UNSW)
DESCRIPTION:Venue: Centre Broca \nInvited by Shauna Parkes (INCIA) \n\n \nKelly Clemens\nSenior Lecturer and Scientia Fellow \nUniversity of New South Wales (Australia) \nTitle \n‘Epigenetic mechanisms underlying the persistence of nicotine memories’. \nAbstract \nSmoking continues to be a major health risk and globally is the leading cause of preventable illness and death. Although nicotine has relatively weak reinforcing efficacy\, it is one of the hardest drugs to quit. This is linked to the persistence of cravings many weeks\, month or years after cessation\, which render the user susceptible to relapse over extended periods of time. How nicotine can enable the persistence of these drug memories is poorly understood. Here I discuss the role of epigenetic changes in the persistence of nicotine-seeking\, and whether targeting these processes may offer a new avenue for therapeutic intervention. \nBio \nDr. Kelly Clemens is a Senior Lecturer and Scientia Fellow in the School of Psychology at the University of New South Wales (UNSW\, Sydney\, Australia). She has studied at the University of Otago (New Zealand) and University of Sydney (Australia)\, with postdoctoral experience at the Université de Bordeaux (France) and Macquarie University (Sydney). In 2012\, she established her own laboratory at UNSW. \n\n\nNathan Holmes\nSenior Scientia Lecturer and ARC Future Fellow \n University of New South Wales (Australia) \nTitle \n‘How does the brain integrate sensory and emotional information?’ \nAbstract: \nAnimals and people integrate information acquired at different times when responding to novel situations or problems. For example\, after being attacked by a boy at school\, a child may become fearful of places where the boy had been previously encountered; and after learning the relationship between a particular sound and danger\, an animal may become fearful of places where it had previously heard that sound. In the laboratory\, this type of integration can be studied using sensory preconditioning protocols in which animals (rats) integrate innocuous sensory information acquired at time 1 (e.g.\, a sound is paired with a light) with emotional information acquired at time 2 (e.g.\, the light is paired with brief but aversive foot shock) and\, thus\, express fear to a stimulus that was never paired with danger at time 3 (e.g.\, the sound). The project that I will describe uses sensory preconditioning protocols to examine how the brain integrates sensory and emotional information. Specifically\, I will present a series of experiments which show that the way in which rats integrate sensory and emotional information depends on characteristics of the stimuli to which they are exposed (e.g.\, their familiarity) and has consequences for learning about the danger. These experiments are part of a larger research program which aims to advance our understanding of how fear is processed in the mammalian brain. The findings will be discussed with respect to this program and different theories of information processing. \nBio: \nDr. Nathan Holmes is an Australian Research Council Future Fellow and Senior Scientia Lecturer in the School of Psychology at the University of New South Wales. He is interested in how the mammalian brain processes different types of information; and how motivational states\, like fear\, change the way the brain processes information. Specifically\, Nathan examines how fear influences the processing of innocuous information (e.g.\, the relation between a sound and a light); how fear spreads across a network of linked memories; and how an established fear memory is updated to include new information. The aim of his research is to develop a theory of how fear influences information processing in the brain\, with a particular focus on cells and circuits of the medial temporal lobe. \n  \n
URL:https://www.bordeaux-neurocampus.fr/en/event/joint-seminars-dr-kelly-clemens-and-dr-nathan-holmes-unsw/
CATEGORIES:For scientists,home-event,Impromptu seminar
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