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January 01, 2013
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Date:27TuesdayJuly 2021Lecture
"IDP-membrane interactions in neurodegeneration and neuronal function”
More information Time 14:00 - 15:30Location Gerhard M.J. Schmidt Lecture HallLecturer Prof. David Eliezer
Weill Cornell Medicine Graduate School of Medical Sciences, NY, USAOrganizer Department of Chemical and Structural BiologyContact -
Date:04WednesdayAugust 2021Lecture
Principles of functional circuit connectivity: Insights from the zebrafish optic tectum
More information Time 10:30 - 10:30Location Gerhard M.J. Schmidt Lecture HallLecturer Prof. German Sumbre
École Normale Supérieure, FranceOrganizer Department of Brain SciencesContact Abstract Show full text abstract about Spontaneous neuronal activity in sensory brain regions is sp...» Spontaneous neuronal activity in sensory brain regions is spatiotemporally structured, suggesting that this ongoing activity may have a functional role. Nevertheless, the neuronal interactions underlying these spontaneous activity patterns, and their biological relevance, remain elusive. We addressed these questions using two-photon and light-sheet Ca2+ imaging of intact zebrafish larvae to monitor the fine structure of the spontaneous activity in the zebrafish optic tectum (the fish's main visual center. We observed that the spontaneous activity was organized in topographically compact assemblies, grouping functionally similar neurons rather than merely neighboring ones, reflecting the tectal retinotopic map. Assemblies represent all-or-none-like sub-networks shaped by competitive dynamics, mechanisms advantageous for visual detection in noisy natural environments. Furthermore, the spontaneous activity structure also emerged in “naive” tecta (tecta of enucleated larvae before the retina connected to the tectum). We thus suggest that the formation of the tectal network circuitry is genetically prone for its functional role. This capability is an advantageous developmental strategy for the prompt execution of vital behaviors, such as escaping predators or catching prey, without requiring prior visual experience.
Mutant zebrafish larvae for the mecp2 gene display an abnormal spontaneous tectal activity, thus representing an ideal control to shed light on the biological relevance of the tectal functional connectivity. We found that the tectal assemblies limit the span of the visual responses, probably improving visual spatial resolution.
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Date:05ThursdayAugust 2021Lecture
A tale of four tales and more
More information Time 14:00 - 15:00Lecturer Prof. Eytan Ruppin
Chief, Cancer Data Science Lab, NCI, NIHOrganizer Dwek Institute for Cancer Therapy ResearchContact -
Date:16MondayAugust 2021Lecture
Special seminar with Dr. Yaara Oren
More information Time 15:00 - 16:00Title Beyond Darwin: understanding cancer persister cellsLecturer Dr. Yaara Oren
The Broad Institute and Harvard Medical SchoolOrganizer Department of Molecular GeneticsContact Abstract Show full text abstract about Despite favorable initial response to therapy, a third of ca...» Despite favorable initial response to therapy, a third of cancer patients will develop recurrent disease and succumb to it within five years of diagnosis. While there has been much progress in characterizing the pathways that contribute to stable genetic drug resistance, the mechanisms underlying early reversible resistance, also known as persisters-driven resistance, remain largely unknown. It has long been believed that persisters represent a subset of cells that happen to be non-proliferating at the time of treatment, and therefore can survive drugs that preferentially kill rapidly proliferating cells. However, in my talk I will describe a rare persister population which, despite not harboring any resistance-conferring mutation, can maintain proliferative capacity in the presence of drug. To study this rare, transiently-resistant, cycling persister population, we developed Watermelon, a high-complexity expressed barcode lentiviral library for simultaneous tracing of each cell’s clonal origin and proliferative and transcriptional states. We combine single cell transcriptomics with imaging and metabolomics to show that cycling and non-cycling persisters arise from different cell lineages with distinct transcriptional and metabolic programs. Finally, I will describe how by studying persister cells we can gain critical insights on cellular memory, fate, and evolution, which can guide the development of better anti-cancer treatments. -
Date:02ThursdaySeptember 2021Conference
The Israeli Society for Developmental Biology %u2013IsSDB meeting ECM, cytoskeleton and migration
More information Time 08:00 - 08:00Chairperson Oren Schuldiner -
Date:12SundaySeptember 2021Academic Events
Scientific Council meeting
More information Time 14:00 - 16:00Location The David Lopatie Conference CentreContact -
Date:14TuesdaySeptember 2021Lecture
PhD defense seminar - Spatial Heterogeneity in the Mammalian Liver
More information Time 09:00 - 10:30Location Wolfson Building for Biological ResearchLecturer Shani Ben Moshe (Shalev Itzkovitz Lab)
https://weizmann.zoom.us/j/93617408621?pwd=c1hzNzRjUFlhNytLWUdiK0hWR2ZsUT09Organizer Department of Molecular Cell BiologyContact -
Date:19SundaySeptember 2021Lecture
Deciphering the role of brain- resident and infiltrating myeloid cells in Alzheimer’s disease
More information Time 14:00 - 15:30Lecturer Raz Dvir-Szternfeld (PhD Thesis Defense)
Prof. Michal Schwartz Lab, Dept of Neurobiology and Prof. Ido Amit Lab, Dept of Immunology, WISOrganizer Department of Brain SciencesContact Abstract Show full text abstract about Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is an age-related neurodegenerative...» Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is an age-related neurodegenerative disorder, which is the most common cause of dementia. Among the key hallmarks of AD are neurofibrillary tangles, abnormal amyloid beta (A) aggregation, neuroinflammation and neuronal loss; altogether manifested in progressive cognitive decline. Numerous attempts were made to arrest or slow disease progression by directly targeting these factors, with a limited successes in having a meaningful effect on cognition. In the recent years, the focus of AD research has been extended towards exploring the local and systemic immune response. Yet, the role of the two main myeloid populations, the central nerve system (CNS) resident immune cells, microglia and blood-borne monocyte-derived macrophages (MDM) remain unclear. In my PhD, together with members of the teams, using behavioral, immunological, biochemical and single-cell resolution molecular techniques, we deciphered the distinct role of microglia and MDM in transgenic mouse models of AD pathology. Using single cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq) in 5xFAD amyloidosis mouse model, we have identified a new state of microglia, which we named disease associated microglia (DAM) that were found in close proximity to A plaques. The full activation of these cells was found to be dependent on Triggering receptor expressed on myeloid cells 2 (TREM2), a well-known risk factor in late onset AD. To get an insight to the role of MDM relative to microglia, we used an experimental paradigm of boosting the systemic immunity by modestly blocking the inhibitory immune checkpoint pathway, PD-1/PD-L1, which was previously shown to be beneficial in ameliorating AD in 5xFAD mice, via facilitating homing of MDM to the brain. We found that the same treatment is efficient also in mouse model of tauopathy and that the MDM homing to the brain following the treatment expressed a unique set of scavenger molecules, including macrophage scavenger receptor 1 (MSR1). We found that MDM expressing MSR1 are essential for the disease modification. Using the same immune-modulatory treatment in a mouse model deficient in TREM2 (Trem2-/-5xFAD) and thus in DAM, allowed us to distinguish between the contribution to the disease modification of MDM and DAM. We found, that MDM display a Trem2-independent role in the cognitive improvement. In both Trem2-/-5xFAD and Trem2+/+5xFAD mice the treatment effect on behavior was accompanied by a reduction in the levels of hippocampal water-soluble Aβ1-42, a fraction of A that contains toxic oligomers. In Trem2+/+5xFAD mice, the same treatment seemed to activate additional Trem2-dependent mechanism, that could involve facilitation of removal of Aβ plaques by DAM or by other TREM2-expressing microglia. Collectively, our finding demonstrates the distinct role of activated microglia and MDM in therapeutic mechanism of AD pathology. They also support the approach of empowering the immune system to facilitate MDM mobilization as a common mechanism for treating AD, regardless of primary disease etiology and TREM2 genetic polymorphism.
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Date:20MondaySeptember 2021Lecture
Algebraic Geometry and Representation Theory Seminar
More information Time 11:20 - 11:20Title Criteria for the zero fiber of a moment map to have rational singularities and applicationsLecturer Gerald Schwarz
Brandeis UniversityOrganizer Faculty of Mathematics and Computer ScienceContact Abstract Show full text abstract about Let G be a complex reductive group with Lie algebra g and le...» Let G be a complex reductive group with Lie algebra g and let V be a G-module. There is a natural
moment mapping : V V ! g and we denote -
Date:30ThursdaySeptember 2021Lecture
SCANnTREAT: photodynamic therapy triggered by spectral scanner CT: an new tool for cancer treatment?
More information Time 14:00 - 15:00Lecturer Prof. Philippe DOUEK
Diagnostic and Therapeutic Imaging Department Creatis CNRS UMR 5220 INSERM U 1294 Louis Pradel Cardio-Vascular and Pneumatological HospitalOrganizer Dwek Institute for Cancer Therapy ResearchContact -
Date:04MondayOctober 2021Lecture
Protein Folding and Dynamics webinar
More information Time 18:00 - 19:00Title Role of dynamic protein disorder in the regulation of cellular signalingLocation ZOOMLecturer Peter Wright
The Scripps Research InstituteOrganizer Department of Chemical and Biological PhysicsContact -
Date:05TuesdayOctober 2021Lecture
To be announced
More information Time 12:30 - 12:30Lecturer Matteo Carandini
UCLOrganizer Department of Brain SciencesContact -
Date:05TuesdayOctober 2021Lecture
Merging of cues and hunches by the mouse cortex
More information Time 12:30 - 13:00Lecturer Prof. Matteo Carandini
University College LondonOrganizer Department of Brain SciencesContact Abstract Show full text abstract about Everyday decisions are often based on both external cues and...» Everyday decisions are often based on both external cues and internal hunches. How does the brain put these together? We addressed this question in mice trained to make decisions based on combinations of sensory cues and history of reward value or probability. While mice made these decisions, we recorded from thousands of neurons throughout the brain and causally probed the roles of cortical areas. The results are not what we thought based on textbook notions of how the brain works. This talk is based on work led by Nick Steinmetz, Peter Zatka-Haas, Armin Lak, and Pip Coen, in the laboratory I share with Kenneth Harris.
Zoom link:
https://weizmann.zoom.us/j/95406893197?pwd=REt5L1g3SmprMUhrK3dpUDJVeHlrZz09
Meeting ID: 954 0689 3197
Password: 750421
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Date:05TuesdayOctober 2021Lecture
Special Guest Seminar - Dr. Tslil Ast
More information Time 15:00 - 16:30Title "Looking behind the iron curtain: Illuminating iron-sulfur cluster biology”Lecturer Dr. Tslil Ast
Broad Institute of MIT and HarvardOrganizer Department of Molecular Cell BiologyHomepage Contact -
Date:07ThursdayOctober 2021Lecture
NPOD at LUXE, new physics search with optical dump
More information Time 11:00 - 11:00Location https://weizmann.zoom.us/j/98467609943?pwd=NjFrTThQeE8xcFRaM2tNSC9qcnNlUT09Lecturer Prof. Gilad Perez
Weizmann Institute of ScienceOrganizer Department of Particle Physics and AstrophysicsContact Abstract Show full text abstract about We propose a novel way to search for feebly interacting mass...» We propose a novel way to search for feebly interacting massive particles, exploiting two properties of systems involving collisions between high energy electrons and intense laser pulses. The first property is that the electron-intense-laser collision results in a large flux of hard photons, as the laser behaves effectively as a thick medium. The second property is that the emitted photons free-stream inside the laser and thus for them the laser behaves effectively as a very thin medium. Combining these two features implies that the electron-intense-laser collision is an apparatus which can efficiently convert UV electrons to a large flux of hard, co-linear photons. We further propose to direct this unique large and hard flux of photons onto a physical dump which in turn is capable of producing feebly interacting massive particles, in a region of parameters that has never been probed before. We denote this novel apparatus as ``optical dump'' or NPOD (new physics sea! rch with optical dump). The proposed LUXE experiment at Eu.XFEL has all the required basic ingredients of the above experimental concept. We discuss how this concept can be realized in practice by adding a detector after the last physical dump of the experiment to reconstruct the two-photon decay product of a new spin-0 particle. We show that even with a relatively short dump, the search can still be background-free. Remarkably, even with a 40 TW laser, which corresponds to the initial run, and definitely with a 350 TW laser, of the main run with one year of data taking, LUXE-NPOD will be able to probe uncharted territory of both models of pseudo-scalar and scalar fields, and in particular probe natural of scalar theories for masses above 100 MeV. -
Date:07ThursdayOctober 2021Lecture
Modeling and targeting cancer aneuploidy
More information Time 14:00 - 15:00Lecturer Prof. Uri Ben-David
Department of Human Molecular Genetics and Biochemistry, Faculty of Medicine, Tel Aviv UniversityOrganizer Dwek Institute for Cancer Therapy ResearchContact -
Date:07ThursdayOctober 2021Lecture
Episodic Memory from First Principles
More information Time 14:00 - 15:00Lecturer Michelangelo Naim (PhD Oral Defense)
Prof. Misha Tsodyks Lab Dept of NeurobiologyOrganizer Department of Brain SciencesContact Abstract Show full text abstract about Our everyday conscious memories are an intricate network of ...» Our everyday conscious memories are an intricate network of images and associations, constituting a record of our personal experiences that is continuously updated through an active organization of new information within the context of previous experience. Recollection is similarly recreative, and the course of remembering is determined by the nature of our memory organization. This type of memory is called episodic memory, and is therefore a multifaceted process involving a synthesis of episodic representations with our framework of general semantic knowledge that mediates our capacity for recollection. It is therefore typically considered to be too complex to be described by physics-style universal mathematical laws. In this thesis we characterize some of the processes governing episodic recall and point out the basic principles behind them. More specifically, we propose a search process governing recall of unconnected events, mathematically computed recall capacity and tested the resulting relationship in dedicated experiments. Next, we proposed how structured information may be encoded in the human brain and compared model predictions with available experimental data. In both cases experimental data were consistent with proposed mechanisms. Since time is an essential part of episodic memory we also studied the interaction between absolute and ordinal time representation in the brain. We found that ordinal information take precedence in the inference about absolute event times. Overall, the results presented in this thesis opens opportunity that complicated cognitive processes can be described by universal mathematical laws.
Zoom link to join:
https://weizmann.zoom.us/j/99774936375?pwd=QUhMTG56UkJkd3l1bUJ1ZDhhTTlEUT09
Meeting ID: 997 7493 6375
Password: 402616
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Date:11MondayOctober 202113WednesdayOctober 2021Academic Events
Minerva Annual Meeting 2021
More information Time All dayTitle Minerva Committee interviews of scientists who submitted full proposals in all facultiesHomepage Contact Abstract Show full text abstract about If you require further information, please contact Chaya Moy...» If you require further information, please contact Chaya Moykopf (4048) -
Date:11MondayOctober 2021Colloquia
Emergence of Complexity in Chiral Nanostructures
More information Time 11:00 - 12:00Location https://weizmann.zoom.us/j/98063488104?pwd=N3VqTC9sU1A4RHVDZ1dhOGVxbU1iUT09Lecturer Prof. Nicholas A. Kotov
University of MichiganOrganizer Faculty of ChemistryContact Abstract Show full text abstract about The structural complexity of composite biomaterials and biom...» The structural complexity of composite biomaterials and biomineralized particles arises from the hierarchical ordering of inorganic building blocks over multiple scales. While empirical observations of complex nanoassemblies are abundant, physicochemical mechanisms leading to their geometrical complexity are still puzzling, especially for non-uniformly sized components. These mechanisms are discussed in this talk taking an example of hierarchically organized particles with twisted spikes and other morphologies from polydisperse Au-Cys nanoplatelets [1]. The complexity of these supraparticles is higher than biological counterparts or other complex particles as enumerated by graph theory (GT). Complexity Index (CI) and other GT parameters are applied to a variety of different nanoscale materials to assess their structural organization. As the result of this analysis, we determined that intricate organization Au-Cys supraparticles emerges from competing chirality-dependent assembly restrictions that render assembly pathways primarily dependent on nanoparticle symmetry rather than size. These findings open a pathway to a large family of colloids with complex architectures and unusual chiroptical and chemical properties.
The GT-based design principles for complex chiral nanoassemblies are extended to engineer drug discovery platforms for Alzheimer syndrome [3], materials for chiral photonics, vaccines, and antivirals. Developed GT methods were applied to the design of complex biomimetic composites for energy and robotics applications [2,4] will be shown as a nucleus for discussions.
References
[1] W. Jiang, Z.-B. et al, Emergence of Complexity in Hierarchically Organized Chiral Particles, Science, 2020, 368, 6491, 642-648.
[2] Wang, M.; Vecchio, D.; et al Biomorphic Structural Batteries for Robotics. Sci. Robot. 2020, 5 (45), eaba1912. https://doi.org/10.1126/scirobotics.aba1912.
[3] Jun Lu, et al, Enhanced optical asymmetry in supramolecular chiroplasmonic assemblies with long-range order,
Science, 2021, 371, 6536, 1368
[4] D. Vecchio et al, Structural Analysis of Nanoscale Network Materials Using Graph Theory, ACS Nano 2021, 15, 8, 12847–12859. -
Date:11MondayOctober 2021Lecture
Relaxion review and updates
More information Time 12:30 - 12:30Location Edna and K.B. Weissman Building of Physical SciencesLecturer Abhishek Banerjee Organizer Department of Particle Physics and AstrophysicsContact
