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Posters

P01-A

How to make twins – Novel insights into axis formation in amniotes

Cantas Alev (RIKEN Center for Developmental Biology, Japan)
P02-A

Steroid hormone-dependent control of mating-induced germline stem cell proliferation in female Drosophila melanogaster

Tomotsune Ameku (University of Tsukuba, Japan)

P03-B
Understanding timing mechanisms for orderly neuronal connectivity in development and regeneration decline in aging

Chieh Chang (University of Illinois at Chicago, USA)

P04-B
A new model for Drosophila segmentation incorporating temporal regulation

Erik Clark (University of Cambridge, UK)

P05-A

Mechanics of leaf vein development

Jonathan E. Dawson (Max Planck Institute for Dynamics and Self-Organization, Göttingen, Germany)

P06-A
Robo1 regulates dendritic development of neocortical pyramidal neurons

Yuko Gonda (RIKEN Center for Developmental Biology, Japan)

P07-B

Madagascar ground gecko, a newly established animal for elucidation of morphological diversification in amniotes

Yuichiro Hara (RIKEN Center for Life Science Technologies, Japan)

P08-B
Comparative systems biology of dietary responses among Drosophila species
Yukako Hattori (Kyoto University, Japan)
P09-A

Timing of skeletal muscle development during primary body wall transformation in amniote embryos

Tatsuya Hirasawa (RIKEN, Japan)

P10-A
Optimal growth schedule of holometabolous insects

Ken-ichi Hironaka (RIKEN Quantitative Biology Center, Japan)

P11-B
Single-cell robustness of mammalian genetic oscillators revealed by optogenetic perturbation

Akihiro Isomura (Kyoto University, Japan)

P12-B

Nasal airflow entrains glomerulus-specific theta oscillations for phase odor coding

Ryo Iwata (RIKEN Center for Developmental Biology, Japan)

P13-A

Deubiquitinating enzymes regulate Hes1 stability and neuronal differentiation

Taeko Kobayashi (Kyoto University, Japan)

P14-A

Statistical constrains in micro-evolution

Tetsuya J. Kobayashi (The University of Tokyo, Japan)

P15-B

Spatial and temporal regulation of neural stem cell identity in the mammalian cerebral cortex by Dmrt family transcription factors

Daijiro Konno (RIKEN Center for Developmental Biology, Japan)

P16-B

Development and evolutionary origin of the neocortex

Takuma Kumamoto (RIKEN Center for Developmental Biology, Japan)

P17-A

Sequence informatics for evolution-aware molecular zoology

Shigehiro Kuraku (RIKEN Center for Life Science Technologies, Japan)

P18-A
Generation of a ciliary margin-like stem cell niche from self-organizing human retinal tissue

Atsushi Kuwahara (RIKEN Center for Developmental Biology, Japan)

P19-B

Chemical Mechanism of Cell Transmembrane Signal Transduction

Baoquan Liu (Dalian Nationalities University, China)

P20-B
Investigating the error correction mechanisms that enable precise developmental patterning

Zairan Liu (University of California, San Francisco, USA)

P21-A

Genesis of asymmetry through reconstituted lateral inhibition

Mitsuhiro Matsuda (RIKEN Quantitative Biology Center, Japan)

P22-A

Multiple roles of reelin in neuronal migration and layer formation:
beyond the simplistic view

Nieves Mingo-Moreno (University Medicine Göttingen, Germany)

P23-B

A theory on the timing of cell fate decision in developing organs

Yoshihiro Morishita (RIKEN Quantitative Biology Center, Japan)

P24-B

A metabolic profile of fasted mice

Eri Muta-Minamino (Kyoto University, Japan)

P25-A
miR-29: A molecular timer that accelerates the aging program

Ayumi Nakamura (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, USA)

P26-A
Novel mechanism for regulating BAF complex composition during neural development: unexpected roles of an E3 ubiquitin ligase
Ramanathan Narayanan (Universitätsmedizin Göttingen, Germany)
P27-B

Apcdd1 for epithelial rearrangements in molar development

Sanjiv Neupane (Kyungpook National University, Korea)

P28-B
Determination of pupation timing by biological timer in fat body during prepupal period in Drosophila melanogaster

Haruka Nishida (Okayama University, Japan)

P29-A

A catalytic step-specific transcriptional regulation of steroid hormone biosynthesis is essential for developmental timing in Drosophila melanogaster

Ryusuke Niwa (University of Tsukuba, Japan)

P30-A
Evolution of transcriptional regulations underlying species-specific neuronal diversities in amniote brains

Tadashi Nomura (Kyoto Prefectural University of Medicine, Japan)

P31-B

Multiple developmental pathways to the wingless aphids: adaptive significance of the timing for histolysis and developmental suppression

Kota Ogawa (National Institute for Basic Biology, Japan)

P32-B

Signaling relay and feedback mechanisms control the nutrient-dependent production of insulin-like peptides

Naoki Okamoto (RIKEN Center for Developmental Biology, Japan)

P33-A

Evolution of the vertebrate head through a heterotopic shift in ancestral mesodermal patterning

Takayuki Onai (RIKEN, Japan)

P34-A

An event during metamorphic process is triggered by steroid hormone independently from developmental timeline in Drosophila melanogaster

Hajime Ono (Kyoto University, Japan)

P35-B
Exploring the development and evolution of the crustacean eye

Ana Patricia Ramos (Institut de Génomique Fonctionnelle de Lyon, École Normale Supérieure de Lyon, France)

P36-B

Periodic regulation of embryonic body axis elongation revealed by quantitative live imaging and mathematical modeling

Takashi Saitou (Ehime University Hospital, Japan)

P37-A

Bivalent separation into univalents is the major cause of age-related meiosis I errors in oocytes

Yogo Sakakibara (RIKEN Center for Developmental Biology, Japan)

P38-B

Trancriptome profiling of a key morphological innovation: the propelling fan of the water walking bug Rhagovelia obesa

M. Emília Santos (Institut de Génomique Fonctionnelle de Lyon, France)

P39-B
Neural Tube Pattern Formation by the Timing of Inductive Signals

Noriaki Sasai (MRC, National Institute for Medical Research, UK)

P40-A

The endoplasmic reticulum chaperones control canalization of animal development under environmental stress

Atsuko Sato (Ochanomizu University, Japan)

P41-A

Mathematical modeling and genetic analysis of  the wave of differentiation in the Drosophila visual center

Makoto Sato (Kanazawa University, Japan)

P42-B

Serotonergic neurons respond to nutrients and regulate the timing of steroid hormone biosynthesis in Drosophila melanogaster

Yuko Shimada-Niwa (University of Tsukuba, Japan)

P43-B

Pace control of neurogenesis regulated by transient retention of the apical endfoot of differentiating cells via Notch signaling

Kenji Shimamura (Kumamoto University, Japan)

P44-A

Dynamic expression of Notch ligand Dll1 during development

Hiromi Shimojo (Kyoto University, Japan)

P45-B

How leaf mimicry in butterfly wing patterns evolved?

Takao K Suzuki (National Institute of Agrobiological Sciences, Japan)

P46-B

miR-29 is essential for brain maintenance but not its development

Vijay Swahari (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, USA)

P47-A

Conversion of temporal periodicity into spatial pattern during somitegenesis

Shinji Takada (National Institute for Basic Biology, Japan)

P48-A

A two-step regulatory mechanism determines the timing of upper-layer neurogenesis in the cerebral cortex

Kenichi Toma (RIKEN Center for Developmental Biology, Japan)

P49-B

Interorgan communication controlling size of neuronal dendritic arbors in response to nutritional restriction

Tadashi Uemura (Kyoto University, Japan)

P50-B

Sp1/3 sustain self-renewal of Embryonic stem cell through regulating core Klf circuitry

Hiroki Ura (RIKEN Center for Developmental Biology, Japan)

P51-A

Synchronization of coupled genetic oscillators promoted by collective cell movement

Koichiro Uriu (RIKEN, Japan)

P52-A

A damped oscillator governs posterior gap gene patterning in Drosophila melanogaster

Berta Verd (Centre for Genomic Regulation, Spain)

P53-B

Dynamics of Shh interpretation and response by single neural progenitors in vivo

Fengzhu Xiong (Harvard Medical School, USA)

P54-B

How fish clock makes somite

Taijiro Yabe (National Institute for Basic Biology, Japan)

P55-A

Random matrix theory analysis of time development of macromolecule

Masanori Yamanaka (Nihon University, Japan)

P56-A

Complex evolutionary trajectories of sex chromosomes across bird taxa

Qi Zhou (University of California, Berkeley, USA)

P57-B

Programs for Junior Scientists at RIKEN

Yunike Shimizu (RIKEN Global Relations and Research Coordination Office, Japan)

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