Cell Biological Basis of Epithelial Physiology
Organized by Jennifer Lippincott-Schwartz (Janelia), Michael Caplan (Yale) and Patrick Chitwood (Janelia), this is one in a series of planning workshops that will help identify where Janelia can make the most impact with a new 15-lab, 15-year research program.
In October, Janelia announced 4D Cellular Physiology as a new research area, complementing our first research area, Mechanistic Cognitive Neuroscience and two core areas, Molecular Tools and Imaging and Computation and Theory. 4D Cellular Physiology aims to understand the function, structure and communication mechanisms of cells within and across organ systems. We aim to develop and deploy creative new approaches that will improve our ability to study cellular function in intact tissues, in living animals.
This workshop will focus on the critical physiological roles that epithelia play in forming mechanical and chemical barriers in many tissues. Differentiated cell types of each epithelial tissue and organ acquire unique structures and subcellular specializations that endow them with the capacity to perform their physiological functions. For the vast majority of epithelial cell types, the essential cellular and physiological cues that produce their exquisite architectural and biochemical tissue-specific adaptations are not fully understood. Our goal in this meeting is to identify the most pressing questions and exciting directions pertaining to the interface between epithelial cell biology and physiology throughout the body.
The virtual format will include 4-5 hours of short talks and discussion each day. All talks will be open to the broad scientific community. Presentations by invited speakers will focus on current challenges in the field and exciting new directions that could lead to transformative advances. If you wish to attend any of the sessions, click the "sign up" button on this page to receive the meeting agenda and zoom link to join when they become available.
This workshop will serve an important role in shaping Janelia’s ongoing research program, providing critical background for a new approach to collaboratively tackle some of the most important problems in modern biomedical research.
Early career researchers, including graduate students and postdocs, are invited to submit an abstract for consideration for a 10-minute talk focused on how the development of new tools and approaches in the area of epithelial physiology could drive your research forward.
Applications are closed for this workshop.
Organizers
Michael Caplan, Yale University
Patrick Chitwood, HHMI-Janelia Research Campus
Jennifer Lippincott-Schwartz, HHMI-Janelia Research Campus
Speakers
Frances Ashcroft, University of Oxford
Dennis Brown, Harvard University
David Bryant, Beatson Institute for Cancer Research
Michael Caplan, Yale University
Colbie Chinowsky, Vanderbilt University
Seham Ebrahim, NIH
Adam Edwinson, Mayo Clinic
Anne Eichmann, Yale School of Medicine
Elaine Fuchs, HHMI/Rockefeller University
Zev Gartner, University of California, San Francisco
Gunnar Hansson, University of Gothenburg
Lily Jan, HHMI/University of California, San Francisco
Kristin Knouse, Whitehead Institute
Elena Layunta, University of Gothenburg
Thomas Lecuit, Aix-Marseille University/CNRS
Richard Lifton, HHMI/Rockefeller University
Helen McNeill, Washington University School of Medicine
Janos Peti-Peterdi, University of Southern California
Abby Sarkar, Stanford University
Catherine Schrankel, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, UCSD
Cory Simpson, University of Pennsylvania
Ora Weisz, University of Pittsburgh
James Wells, Cincinnati Children's Hospital
Allison Zajac, University of Chicago
Jennifer Zallen, HHMI/Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center
Marino Zerial, Max-Planck Institute of Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics
Discussion Leaders
Sylvie Breton, Massachusetts General Hospital/Harvard Medical School
David Clapham, HHMI/Janelia Research Campus
Kathy Green, Northwestern University
Prisca Liberali, Friedrich Miescher Institute for Biomedical Research
L. Mahadevan, Harvard University
Wallace Marshall, University of California, San Francisco
Jitu Mayor, NCBS Bangalore
Juanita Merchant, University of Arizona College of Medicine
Denise Montell, University of California, Santa Barbara
Carolyn Ott, Janelia Research Campus/HHMI
Manu Prakash, Stanford University
Prabuddha Sengupta, Janelia Research Campus/HHMI
Ron Vale, Janelia Research Campus/HHMI
Webinar Recording
Watch the recording of this webinar on our YouTube channel!
All times are in EDT (GMT -4)
Image courtesy of Dr. Melinda Engevik (Baylor College of Medicine)
"The villi of adult mouse jejunum projecting up into the lumen of the intestine. The apical membrane of the epithelium is marked by DPPIV (white), the individual cells are identified by the adhesion p120 (blue), mucin producing goblet cells are denoted by MUC2 (pink) and the nuclei as shown by DAPI (teal)."