Events

Room: Seminar room 1 Location: Max Planck Institute for Molecular Genetics

Nanocourse: Functional Genomics Data Analysis

Fourth nanocourse of the IMPRS-BAC. Lectures followed by the opportunity to gain hands-on experience. [more]

Nanocourse: Phase Separation

Third nanocourse of the IMPRS-BAC. Introductory lecture on phase separation followed by interactive part. [more]

Susan Gasser: Stabilizing the genome and cell-type specific gene expression through heterochromatin

Elly Tanaka: Cell position and identity during successful and unsuccessful limb regeneration

Dahlem Colloquium
This nanocourse will take place on 28 February, 7 March and 14 March, starting at 9 am. During the first session, you will get an introduction to the philosophy of science and ethics. The second session will focus on the beginning of human life. There will be an introduction to reproductive and therapeutic cloning followed a discussion. The third session will deal with genetic diagnostics, i.e. the use of modern techniques before implantation in artificial insemination as well as diagnostics on the embryo and the born human being, followed by a discussion. [more]

Nanocourse: How the brain is built, how it can break, and how to see inside it

Nanocourses consist of lectures followed by the opportunity to gain hands-on experience. The brain is the foundation for our most advanced mental functions. It is among the most complex and dynamic biological systems. How the brain is built during development is a major open question at the forefront of current scientific research. A better understanding of brain development, how its circuits are wired and synapses are connected, will create a “blueprint” for understanding its normal function, and abnormalities in disorders like autism and schizophrenia. This course will contain a series of discussions on the current big picture questions and key details of brain development, structure, function, and associated disorders. Students will critically analyze foundational experiments and recent literature, with creative exercises in designing future experiments to tackle outstanding questions in the field. The course will also contain hands-on training in high resolution brain imaging and image analysis at multiple scales. [more]
The Welcome Week is an introduction week for new IMPRS doctoral students recruited at the beginning of the year. It lays the groundwork, introduce the breadth of our research and fosters direct interaction between new doctoral students and IMPRS faculty members. [more]

Hemai Parthasarathy : On building a better future, powered by science

Dahlem Colloquium

Nanocourse: Cancer Genomics

“ Portraits of a tumor: cancer cells and their microenvironment or building a new world in a tissue” [more]

Mikko Taipale: Functional proteomics by induced proximity

Dahlem Colloquium

Meritxell Huch: Human organoids to model disease

Dahlem Colloquium

Joe Nadeau: Developmental plasticity, the missing dimension of phenotypic variation and disease risk

Dahlem Colloquium

Prisca Liberali: Design principles of tissue organization

Dahlem Colloquium

Douglas Higgs: Dissecting and rebuilding a super-enhancer

Dahlem Colloquium

Petra Hajkova: Erasure, stability, and maintenance of the epigenetic information in vivo

Dahlem Colloquium

Barbara Treutlein: Understanding brain development and regeneration using single-cell genomics

Dahlem Colloquium

Dylan Taatjes: Understanding transcription regulation through transcriptomics and biochemical reconstitution

Dahlem Colloquium

Michael Levine: Organization and function of the regulatory genome in the Drosophila embryo and brain

Dahlem Colloquium

Judith Zaugg: How do cells integrate extrinsic signals and intrinsic state? A systems epigenetics approach

Dahlem Colloquium

Katharina Sonnen: Signaling dynamics in the control of embryonic development and tissue homeostasis

Dahlem Colloquium

Kevin Chalut: Extracellular matrix mechanics and its regulation of regeneration

Dahlem Colloquium

Argyris Papantonis: 3D genome organisation transitions between homeostasis, ageing, and malignancy

Dahlem Colloquium
The Welcome Week is an introduction week for new doctoral candidates who started their doctorate this year. It lays the groundwork, introduce the breadth of our research and fosters direct interaction between new doctoral candidates and faculty members. [more]

Marc Timmers: Basal transcription factor TFIID in neurodevelopment and neurodegeneration

Dahlem Colloquium

Sanja Vickovic: Describing tissue pathogenesis with spatial sequencing

Dahlem Colloquium

Elvan Böke: Mitochondrial and proteostatic adaptations in oocytes

Dahlem Colloquium

Mia Levine: Intra-genomic conflict and the evolution of the genome integrity

Dahlem Colloquium

Alex Schier: Reconstructing development

Dahlem Colloquium
Go to Editor View