Function and Dysfunction of Synucleins – Membranes Matter
This seminar will be held online. Please email opdc.administrator@dpag.ox.ac.uk for more details.
After completing her PhD in biochemistry in 2006, Dr Jacqueline Burré joined the laboratory of Dr. Thomas C. Südhof at University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, and later at Stanford University, California. In 2014, Dr. Burré joined the Brain and Mind Research Institute at Weill Cornell Medicine in New York.
The Burré lab aims to understand molecular mechanisms underlying neurological diseases at the synapse. They are currently concentrating on synucleins in Parkinson’s disease, on Munc18-1/STXBP1 in childhood encephalopathies, and on SNAP-25 in epilepsy. They employ a variety of technologies, including biochemistry, cell biology, and imaging, combined with in vitro studies of purified proteins, C. elegans and mouse models of neuropathology.
Date:
22 September 2020, 14:00 (Tuesday, -2nd week, Michaelmas 2020)
Venue:
This seminar will be held online. Please email opdc.administrator@dpag.ox.ac.uk for more details.
Speaker:
Dr Jacqueline Burré (Brain and Mind Research Institute at Weill Cornell Medicine, New York)
Organising department:
Department of Physiology, Anatomy and Genetics (DPAG)
Organiser:
Lorraine Dyson (University of Oxford)
Host:
Professor Richard Wade-Martins (Professor of Molecular Neuroscience, University of Oxford)
Part of:
OPDC Seminar Series (DPAG)
Booking required?:
Not required
Audience:
Public
Editor:
Lorraine Dyson