Past Events
Category |
Seminar |
Date and Time |
2010-01-26 16:00 - 17:00 |
Venue |
Seminar Room A7F |
Speaker |
Guangshuo Ou |
Affiliation |
UCSF/HHMI |
Title |
Molecular and Cellular Mechanisms of C. elegans Q Neuroblast Development |
Poster |
click here to download(PDF) |
Host |
Shigeo Hayashi |
Summary |
A fundamental challenge in developmental biology and neuroscience is to understand how a neuroblast develops to neurons. We choose C. elegans Q neuroblasts as our experimental system to tackle this problem. Q neuroblasts generate sensory and inter neurons by asymmetric cell division, long distance migration, apoptosis and neuritogenesis during L1 larva stage. We have developed high resolution live Q cell imaging techniques to visualize all of the events above by spinning disk focal microscopy, placing us a unique position for such studies. Two recent discoveries will be reported; (1) we address molecular signatures of Q cell distinct migratory behavior and we find that up-regulation of a Rho family GTPase and down-regulation an integrin alpha subunit is associated with some Q descedants that migrate faster and further than others; (2) we address mechanisms of how Q cell asymmetric division make two daughter cells of different sizes and we find that Q cells achieve this by either spindle displacement or asymmetric assembly of contractile ring. Our work revealed that time-lapse analysis of C. elegans Q neuroblast development at subcellular or molecular level is technically feasible and can provide new information to their biology with a combination of genetic and biochemical approaches.
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