Detlev Arendt
Detlev Arendt studied Biology at the University of Freiburg, Germany. In
1994, as an undergraduate, he revived the classical concept that vertebrates
inverted their dorsoventral axis during their evolution in a Scientific
Correspondence to Nature. He obtained his Ph.D. in zoology in 1998 from the University of Freiburg,
where he compared nervous system development of bilaterian animals. In
1999, he joined the lab of Joachim Wittbrodt at the European Molecular
Biology Laboratory (EMBL) in Heidelberg, Germany, where he worked on eye
development. After 3 years of postdoctoral training, he set up his laboratory
at the EMBL in 2003 as a Group Leader in the Developmental Biology Unit.
The Arendt laboratory has established the marine annelid Platynereis dumerilii,
a slow-evolving species, as a new marine molecular model for evolutionary
and neurobiological research. It has also recently pioneered the comparison
of cell types as a novel approach in the field of evolutionary developmental
biology. Major achievements include the identification of vertebrate-type
ciliary photoreceptors and of a hypothalamus-like territory in the annelid
brain. Also, the Arendt laboratory elucidated an ancient nervous circuit
driving phototaxis of the annelid larvae. In 2007, Detlev Arendt became
Senior Scientist at the EMBL and was awarded an honorary professorship
at the University of Heidelberg, Germany. In 2012, he was awarded an Advanced
Grant by the European Research Council.
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