Project acronym 3DBIOLUNG
Project Bioengineering lung tissue using extracellular matrix based 3D bioprinting
Researcher (PI) Darcy WAGNER
Host Institution (HI) LUNDS UNIVERSITET
Call Details Starting Grant (StG), LS9, ERC-2018-STG
Summary Chronic lung diseases are increasing in prevalence with over 65 million patients worldwide. Lung transplantation remains the only potential option at end-stage disease. Around 4000 patients receive lung transplants annually with more awaiting transplantation, including 1000 patients in Europe. New options to increase available tissue for lung transplantation are desperately needed.
An exciting new research area focuses on generating lung tissue ex vivo using bioengineering approaches. Scaffolds can be generated from synthetic or biologically-derived (acellular) materials, seeded with cells and grown in a bioreactor prior to transplantation. Ideally, scaffolds would be seeded with cells derived from the transplant recipient, thus obviating the need for long-term immunosuppression. However, functional regeneration has yet to be achieved. New advances in 3D printing and 3D bioprinting (when cells are printed) indicate that this once thought of science-fiction concept might finally be mature enough for complex tissues, including lung. 3D bioprinting addresses a number of concerns identified in previous approaches, such as a) patient heterogeneity in acellular human scaffolds, b) anatomical differences in xenogeneic sources, c) lack of biological cues on synthetic materials and d) difficulty in manufacturing the complex lung architecture. 3D bioprinting could be a reproducible, scalable, and controllable approach for generating functional lung tissue.
The aim of this proposal is to use custom 3D bioprinters to generate constructs mimicking lung tissue using an innovative approach combining primary cells, the engineering reproducibility of synthetic materials, and the biologically conductive properties of acellular lung (hybrid). We will 3D bioprint hybrid murine and human lung tissue models and test gas exchange, angiogenesis and in vivo immune responses. This proposal will be a critical first step in demonstrating feasibility of 3D bioprinting lung tissue.
Summary
Chronic lung diseases are increasing in prevalence with over 65 million patients worldwide. Lung transplantation remains the only potential option at end-stage disease. Around 4000 patients receive lung transplants annually with more awaiting transplantation, including 1000 patients in Europe. New options to increase available tissue for lung transplantation are desperately needed.
An exciting new research area focuses on generating lung tissue ex vivo using bioengineering approaches. Scaffolds can be generated from synthetic or biologically-derived (acellular) materials, seeded with cells and grown in a bioreactor prior to transplantation. Ideally, scaffolds would be seeded with cells derived from the transplant recipient, thus obviating the need for long-term immunosuppression. However, functional regeneration has yet to be achieved. New advances in 3D printing and 3D bioprinting (when cells are printed) indicate that this once thought of science-fiction concept might finally be mature enough for complex tissues, including lung. 3D bioprinting addresses a number of concerns identified in previous approaches, such as a) patient heterogeneity in acellular human scaffolds, b) anatomical differences in xenogeneic sources, c) lack of biological cues on synthetic materials and d) difficulty in manufacturing the complex lung architecture. 3D bioprinting could be a reproducible, scalable, and controllable approach for generating functional lung tissue.
The aim of this proposal is to use custom 3D bioprinters to generate constructs mimicking lung tissue using an innovative approach combining primary cells, the engineering reproducibility of synthetic materials, and the biologically conductive properties of acellular lung (hybrid). We will 3D bioprint hybrid murine and human lung tissue models and test gas exchange, angiogenesis and in vivo immune responses. This proposal will be a critical first step in demonstrating feasibility of 3D bioprinting lung tissue.
Max ERC Funding
1 499 975 €
Duration
Start date: 2019-01-01, End date: 2023-12-31
Project acronym ADDICTIONCIRCUITS
Project Drug addiction: molecular changes in reward and aversion circuits
Researcher (PI) Nils David Engblom
Host Institution (HI) LINKOPINGS UNIVERSITET
Call Details Starting Grant (StG), LS5, ERC-2010-StG_20091118
Summary Our affective and motivational state is important for our decisions, actions and quality of life. Many pathological conditions affect this state. For example, addictive drugs are hyperactivating the reward system and trigger a strong motivation for continued drug intake, whereas many somatic and psychiatric diseases lead to an aversive state, characterized by loss of motivation. I will study specific neural circuits and mechanisms underlying reward and aversion, and how pathological signaling in these systems can trigger relapse in drug addiction.
Given the important role of the dopaminergic neurons in the midbrain for many aspects of reward signaling, I will study how synaptic plasticity in these cells, and in their target neurons in the striatum, contribute to relapse in drug seeking. I will also study the circuits underlying aversion. Little is known about these circuits, but my hypothesis is that an important component of aversion is signaled by a specific neuronal population in the brainstem parabrachial nucleus, projecting to the central amygdala. We will test this hypothesis and also determine how this aversion circuit contributes to the persistence of addiction and to relapse.
To dissect this complicated system, I am developing new genetic methods for manipulating and visualizing specific functional circuits in the mouse brain. My unique combination of state-of-the-art competence in transgenics and cutting edge knowledge in the anatomy and functional organization of the circuits behind reward and aversion should allow me to decode these systems, linking discrete circuits to behavior.
Collectively, the results will indicate how signals encoding aversion and reward are integrated to control addictive behavior and they may identify novel avenues for treatment of drug addiction as well as aversion-related symptoms affecting patients with chronic inflammatory conditions and cancer.
Summary
Our affective and motivational state is important for our decisions, actions and quality of life. Many pathological conditions affect this state. For example, addictive drugs are hyperactivating the reward system and trigger a strong motivation for continued drug intake, whereas many somatic and psychiatric diseases lead to an aversive state, characterized by loss of motivation. I will study specific neural circuits and mechanisms underlying reward and aversion, and how pathological signaling in these systems can trigger relapse in drug addiction.
Given the important role of the dopaminergic neurons in the midbrain for many aspects of reward signaling, I will study how synaptic plasticity in these cells, and in their target neurons in the striatum, contribute to relapse in drug seeking. I will also study the circuits underlying aversion. Little is known about these circuits, but my hypothesis is that an important component of aversion is signaled by a specific neuronal population in the brainstem parabrachial nucleus, projecting to the central amygdala. We will test this hypothesis and also determine how this aversion circuit contributes to the persistence of addiction and to relapse.
To dissect this complicated system, I am developing new genetic methods for manipulating and visualizing specific functional circuits in the mouse brain. My unique combination of state-of-the-art competence in transgenics and cutting edge knowledge in the anatomy and functional organization of the circuits behind reward and aversion should allow me to decode these systems, linking discrete circuits to behavior.
Collectively, the results will indicate how signals encoding aversion and reward are integrated to control addictive behavior and they may identify novel avenues for treatment of drug addiction as well as aversion-related symptoms affecting patients with chronic inflammatory conditions and cancer.
Max ERC Funding
1 500 000 €
Duration
Start date: 2010-10-01, End date: 2015-09-30
Project acronym AfricanNeo
Project The African Neolithic: A genetic perspective
Researcher (PI) Carina SCHLEBUSCH
Host Institution (HI) UPPSALA UNIVERSITET
Call Details Starting Grant (StG), SH6, ERC-2017-STG
Summary The spread of farming practices in various parts of the world had a marked influence on how humans live today and how we are distributed around the globe. Around 10,000 years ago, warmer conditions lead to population increases, coinciding with the invention of farming in several places around the world. Archaeological evidence attest to the spread of these practices to neighboring regions. In many cases this lead to whole continents being converted from hunter-gatherer to farming societies. It is however difficult to see from archaeological records if only the farming culture spread to other places or whether the farming people themselves migrated. Investigating patterns of genetic variation for farming populations and for remaining hunter-gatherer groups can help to resolve questions on population movements co-occurring with the spread of farming practices. It can further shed light on the routes of migration and dates when migrants arrived.
The spread of farming to Europe has been thoroughly investigated in the fields of archaeology, linguistics and genetics, while on other continents these events have been less investigated. In Africa, mainly linguistic and archaeological studies have attempted to elucidate the spread of farming and herding practices. I propose to investigate the movement of farmer and pastoral groups in Africa, by typing densely spaced genome-wide variant positions in a large number of African populations. The data will be used to infer how farming and pastoralism was introduced to various regions, where the incoming people originated from and when these (potential) population movements occurred. Through this study, the Holocene history of Africa will be revealed and placed into a global context of migration, mobility and cultural transitions. Additionally the study will give due credence to one of the largest Neolithic expansion events, the Bantu-expansion, which caused a pronounced change in the demographic landscape of the African continent
Summary
The spread of farming practices in various parts of the world had a marked influence on how humans live today and how we are distributed around the globe. Around 10,000 years ago, warmer conditions lead to population increases, coinciding with the invention of farming in several places around the world. Archaeological evidence attest to the spread of these practices to neighboring regions. In many cases this lead to whole continents being converted from hunter-gatherer to farming societies. It is however difficult to see from archaeological records if only the farming culture spread to other places or whether the farming people themselves migrated. Investigating patterns of genetic variation for farming populations and for remaining hunter-gatherer groups can help to resolve questions on population movements co-occurring with the spread of farming practices. It can further shed light on the routes of migration and dates when migrants arrived.
The spread of farming to Europe has been thoroughly investigated in the fields of archaeology, linguistics and genetics, while on other continents these events have been less investigated. In Africa, mainly linguistic and archaeological studies have attempted to elucidate the spread of farming and herding practices. I propose to investigate the movement of farmer and pastoral groups in Africa, by typing densely spaced genome-wide variant positions in a large number of African populations. The data will be used to infer how farming and pastoralism was introduced to various regions, where the incoming people originated from and when these (potential) population movements occurred. Through this study, the Holocene history of Africa will be revealed and placed into a global context of migration, mobility and cultural transitions. Additionally the study will give due credence to one of the largest Neolithic expansion events, the Bantu-expansion, which caused a pronounced change in the demographic landscape of the African continent
Max ERC Funding
1 500 000 €
Duration
Start date: 2017-11-01, End date: 2022-10-31
Project acronym BrainInBrain
Project Neural circuits underlying complex brain function across animals - from conserved core concepts to specializations defining a species’ identity
Researcher (PI) Stanley HEINZE
Host Institution (HI) LUNDS UNIVERSITET
Call Details Starting Grant (StG), LS5, ERC-2016-STG
Summary The core function of all brains is to compute the current state of the world, compare it to the desired state of the world and select motor programs that drive behavior minimizing any mismatch. The circuits underlying these functions are the key to understand brains in general, but so far they are completely unknown. Three problems have hindered progress: 1) The animal’s desired state of the world is rarely known. 2) Most studies in simple models have focused on sensory driven, reflex-like processes, and not considered self-initiated behavior. 3) The circuits underlying complex behaviors in vertebrates are widely distributed, containing millions of neurons. With this proposal I aim at overcoming these problems using insects, whose tiny brains solve the same basic problems as our brains but with 100,000 times fewer cells. Moreover, the central complex, a single conserved brain region consisting of only a few thousand neurons, is crucial for sensory integration, motor control and state-dependent modulation, essentially being a ‘brain in the brain’. To simplify the problem further I will focus on navigation behavior. Here, the desired and actual states of the world are equal to the desired and current headings of the animal, with mismatches resulting in compensatory steering. I have previously shown how the central complex encodes the animal’s current heading. Now I will use behavioral training to generate animals with highly defined desired headings, and correlate neural activity with the animal’s ‘intentions’ and actions - at the level of identified neurons. To establish the involved conserved core circuitry valid across insects I will compare species with distinct lifestyles. Secondly, I will reveal how these circuits have evolved to account for each species’ unique ecology. The proposed work will provide a coherent framework to study key concepts of fundamental brain functions in unprecedented detail - using a single, conserved, but flexible neural circuit.
Summary
The core function of all brains is to compute the current state of the world, compare it to the desired state of the world and select motor programs that drive behavior minimizing any mismatch. The circuits underlying these functions are the key to understand brains in general, but so far they are completely unknown. Three problems have hindered progress: 1) The animal’s desired state of the world is rarely known. 2) Most studies in simple models have focused on sensory driven, reflex-like processes, and not considered self-initiated behavior. 3) The circuits underlying complex behaviors in vertebrates are widely distributed, containing millions of neurons. With this proposal I aim at overcoming these problems using insects, whose tiny brains solve the same basic problems as our brains but with 100,000 times fewer cells. Moreover, the central complex, a single conserved brain region consisting of only a few thousand neurons, is crucial for sensory integration, motor control and state-dependent modulation, essentially being a ‘brain in the brain’. To simplify the problem further I will focus on navigation behavior. Here, the desired and actual states of the world are equal to the desired and current headings of the animal, with mismatches resulting in compensatory steering. I have previously shown how the central complex encodes the animal’s current heading. Now I will use behavioral training to generate animals with highly defined desired headings, and correlate neural activity with the animal’s ‘intentions’ and actions - at the level of identified neurons. To establish the involved conserved core circuitry valid across insects I will compare species with distinct lifestyles. Secondly, I will reveal how these circuits have evolved to account for each species’ unique ecology. The proposed work will provide a coherent framework to study key concepts of fundamental brain functions in unprecedented detail - using a single, conserved, but flexible neural circuit.
Max ERC Funding
1 500 000 €
Duration
Start date: 2017-01-01, End date: 2021-12-31
Project acronym COGOPTO
Project The role of parvalbumin interneurons in cognition and behavior
Researcher (PI) Eva Marie Carlen
Host Institution (HI) KAROLINSKA INSTITUTET
Call Details Starting Grant (StG), LS5, ERC-2013-StG
Summary Cognition is a collective term for complex but sophisticated mental processes such as attention, learning, social interaction, language production, decision making and other executive functions. For normal brain function, these higher-order functions need to be aptly regulated and controlled, and the physiology and cellular substrates for cognitive functions are under intense investigation. The loss of cognitive control is intricately related to pathological states such as schizophrenia, depression, attention deficit hyperactive disorder and addiction.
Synchronized neural activity can be observed when the brain performs several important functions, including cognitive processes. As an example, gamma activity (30-80 Hz) predicts the allocation of attention and theta activity (4-12 Hz) is tightly linked to memory processes. A large body of work indicates that the integrity of local and global neural synchrony is mediated by interneuron networks and actuated by the balance of different neuromodulators.
However, much knowledge is still needed on the functional role interneurons play in cognitive processes, i.e. how the interneurons contribute to local and global network processes subserving cognition, and ultimately play a role in behavior. In addition, we need to understand how neuro-modulators, such as dopamine, regulate interneuron function.
The proposed project aims to functionally determine the specific role the parvalbumin interneurons and the neuromodulator dopamine in aspects of cognition, and in behavior. In addition, we ask the question if cognition can be enhanced.
We are employing a true multidisciplinary approach where brain activity is recorded in conjunctions with optogenetic manipulations of parvalbumin interneurons in animals performing cognitive tasks. In one set of experiments knock-down of dopamine receptors specifically in parvalbumin interneurons is employed to probe how this neuromodulator regulate network functions.
Summary
Cognition is a collective term for complex but sophisticated mental processes such as attention, learning, social interaction, language production, decision making and other executive functions. For normal brain function, these higher-order functions need to be aptly regulated and controlled, and the physiology and cellular substrates for cognitive functions are under intense investigation. The loss of cognitive control is intricately related to pathological states such as schizophrenia, depression, attention deficit hyperactive disorder and addiction.
Synchronized neural activity can be observed when the brain performs several important functions, including cognitive processes. As an example, gamma activity (30-80 Hz) predicts the allocation of attention and theta activity (4-12 Hz) is tightly linked to memory processes. A large body of work indicates that the integrity of local and global neural synchrony is mediated by interneuron networks and actuated by the balance of different neuromodulators.
However, much knowledge is still needed on the functional role interneurons play in cognitive processes, i.e. how the interneurons contribute to local and global network processes subserving cognition, and ultimately play a role in behavior. In addition, we need to understand how neuro-modulators, such as dopamine, regulate interneuron function.
The proposed project aims to functionally determine the specific role the parvalbumin interneurons and the neuromodulator dopamine in aspects of cognition, and in behavior. In addition, we ask the question if cognition can be enhanced.
We are employing a true multidisciplinary approach where brain activity is recorded in conjunctions with optogenetic manipulations of parvalbumin interneurons in animals performing cognitive tasks. In one set of experiments knock-down of dopamine receptors specifically in parvalbumin interneurons is employed to probe how this neuromodulator regulate network functions.
Max ERC Funding
1 400 000 €
Duration
Start date: 2014-02-01, End date: 2019-01-31
Project acronym ENDOSWITCH
Project Network Principles of Neuroendocrine Control:
Tuberoinfundibular Dopamine (TIDA) Oscillations and the Regulation of Lactation
Researcher (PI) Carl Christian Broberger
Host Institution (HI) KAROLINSKA INSTITUTET
Call Details Starting Grant (StG), LS5, ERC-2010-StG_20091118
Summary The hypothalamus is essential for our survival and orchestrates every vital function of the body, from defence against predators and energy metabolism to reproduction. Yet, the network mechanisms underlying these actions remain largely hidden in a black box . Here, we will focus on the hypothalamic neuroendocrine system, where we have identified a novel robust network oscillation in the tuberoinfundibular dopamine (TIDA) neurons that control prolactin release. This oscillation is synchronized between neurons via gap junctions, and phasic firing is transformed into tonic discharge by compounds that functionally oppose neuroendocrine dopamine actions. Using this novel preparation, we will investigate the 1) the cellular (conductance) and network (connectivity) mechanisms underlying TIDA rhythmicity; 2) how TIDA activity is affected by hormones and transmitters that affect lactation; 3) the functional significance of phasic vs. tonic discharge in the regulation of dopamine release and lactation; and 4) the generality of TIDA cellular and network properties to other parvocellular neuron populations. These questions will be addressed through several in vitro and in vivo electrophysiological techniques, including slice whole-cell recording, extracellular in vivo recording, voltammetry and optical recording. These experiments will provide novel insight into the link between network interactions and behaviour, and have important clinical implications for e.g. endocrine and reproductive disorders.
Summary
The hypothalamus is essential for our survival and orchestrates every vital function of the body, from defence against predators and energy metabolism to reproduction. Yet, the network mechanisms underlying these actions remain largely hidden in a black box . Here, we will focus on the hypothalamic neuroendocrine system, where we have identified a novel robust network oscillation in the tuberoinfundibular dopamine (TIDA) neurons that control prolactin release. This oscillation is synchronized between neurons via gap junctions, and phasic firing is transformed into tonic discharge by compounds that functionally oppose neuroendocrine dopamine actions. Using this novel preparation, we will investigate the 1) the cellular (conductance) and network (connectivity) mechanisms underlying TIDA rhythmicity; 2) how TIDA activity is affected by hormones and transmitters that affect lactation; 3) the functional significance of phasic vs. tonic discharge in the regulation of dopamine release and lactation; and 4) the generality of TIDA cellular and network properties to other parvocellular neuron populations. These questions will be addressed through several in vitro and in vivo electrophysiological techniques, including slice whole-cell recording, extracellular in vivo recording, voltammetry and optical recording. These experiments will provide novel insight into the link between network interactions and behaviour, and have important clinical implications for e.g. endocrine and reproductive disorders.
Max ERC Funding
1 493 958 €
Duration
Start date: 2011-01-01, End date: 2015-12-31
Project acronym GLOBALVISION
Project Global Optimization Methods in Computer Vision, Pattern Recognition and Medical Imaging
Researcher (PI) Fredrik Kahl
Host Institution (HI) LUNDS UNIVERSITET
Call Details Starting Grant (StG), PE5, ERC-2007-StG
Summary Computer vision concerns itself with understanding the real world through the analysis of images. Typical problems are object recognition, medical image segmentation, geometric reconstruction problems and navigation of autonomous vehicles. Such problems often lead to complicated optimization problems with a mixture of discrete and continuous variables, or even infinite dimensional variables in terms of curves and surfaces. Today, state-of-the-art in solving these problems generally relies on heuristic methods that generate only local optima of various qualities. During the last few years, work by the applicant, co-workers, and others has opened new possibilities. This research project builds on this. We will in this project focus on developing new global optimization methods for computing high-quality solutions for a broad class of problems. A guiding principle will be to relax the original, complicated problem to an approximate, simpler one to which globally optimal solutions can more easily be computed. Technically, this relaxed problem often is convex. A crucial point in this approach is to estimate the quality of the exact solution of the approximate problem compared to the (unknown) global optimum of the original problem. Preliminary results have been well received by the research community and we now wish to extend this work to more difficult and more general problem settings, resulting in thorough re-examination of algorithms used widely in different and trans-disciplinary fields. This project is to be considered as a basic research project with relevance to industry. The expected outcome is new knowledge spread to a wide community through scientific papers published at international journals and conferences as well as publicly available software.
Summary
Computer vision concerns itself with understanding the real world through the analysis of images. Typical problems are object recognition, medical image segmentation, geometric reconstruction problems and navigation of autonomous vehicles. Such problems often lead to complicated optimization problems with a mixture of discrete and continuous variables, or even infinite dimensional variables in terms of curves and surfaces. Today, state-of-the-art in solving these problems generally relies on heuristic methods that generate only local optima of various qualities. During the last few years, work by the applicant, co-workers, and others has opened new possibilities. This research project builds on this. We will in this project focus on developing new global optimization methods for computing high-quality solutions for a broad class of problems. A guiding principle will be to relax the original, complicated problem to an approximate, simpler one to which globally optimal solutions can more easily be computed. Technically, this relaxed problem often is convex. A crucial point in this approach is to estimate the quality of the exact solution of the approximate problem compared to the (unknown) global optimum of the original problem. Preliminary results have been well received by the research community and we now wish to extend this work to more difficult and more general problem settings, resulting in thorough re-examination of algorithms used widely in different and trans-disciplinary fields. This project is to be considered as a basic research project with relevance to industry. The expected outcome is new knowledge spread to a wide community through scientific papers published at international journals and conferences as well as publicly available software.
Max ERC Funding
1 440 000 €
Duration
Start date: 2008-07-01, End date: 2013-06-30
Project acronym GRASP
Project Overcoming plant graft incompatibility by modifying signalling and perception
Researcher (PI) Charles MELNYK
Host Institution (HI) SVERIGES LANTBRUKSUNIVERSITET
Call Details Starting Grant (StG), LS9, ERC-2018-STG
Summary For millennia, people have cut and joined together different plants through a process known as grafting. Plants tissues from different genotypes fuse, vasculature connects and a chimeric organism forms that combines desirable characteristics from different plants such as high yields or disease resistance. However, plants can only be grafted to closely related species and in some instances, they cannot be grafted to themselves. This phenomenon is referred to as graft incompatibility and the mechanistic basis is completely unknown. Our previous work on graft formation in Arabidopsis thaliana has uncovered genes that rapidly activate in grafted tissues to signal the presence of adjoining tissue and initiate a vascular reconnection process. These genes activate around the cut only during graft formation and present a powerful tool to screen large numbers of chemicals and genes that could promote tissue perception and vascular formation. With these sensors and our previously established grafting tools in the model plant Arabidopsis, we can address fundamental questions about grafting biology that have direct relevance to improving graft formation through:
1. Identifying genes required for the recognition response using forward and reverse genetic screens.
2. Determining and characterising signals that activate vascular induction using a chemical genetics screen.
3. Characterising the transcriptional basis for compatibility and incompatibility by analysing
tissues and species that graft and comparing these to tissues and species that do not graft.
4. Overcoming graft incompatibility and improving graft formation by applying the knowledge obtained from the three previous objectives.
We thus aim to broaden our fundamental understanding of the processes associated with grafting including wound healing, vascular formation and tissue regeneration, while at the same time, use this information to improve graft formation and expand the range of grafted species.
Summary
For millennia, people have cut and joined together different plants through a process known as grafting. Plants tissues from different genotypes fuse, vasculature connects and a chimeric organism forms that combines desirable characteristics from different plants such as high yields or disease resistance. However, plants can only be grafted to closely related species and in some instances, they cannot be grafted to themselves. This phenomenon is referred to as graft incompatibility and the mechanistic basis is completely unknown. Our previous work on graft formation in Arabidopsis thaliana has uncovered genes that rapidly activate in grafted tissues to signal the presence of adjoining tissue and initiate a vascular reconnection process. These genes activate around the cut only during graft formation and present a powerful tool to screen large numbers of chemicals and genes that could promote tissue perception and vascular formation. With these sensors and our previously established grafting tools in the model plant Arabidopsis, we can address fundamental questions about grafting biology that have direct relevance to improving graft formation through:
1. Identifying genes required for the recognition response using forward and reverse genetic screens.
2. Determining and characterising signals that activate vascular induction using a chemical genetics screen.
3. Characterising the transcriptional basis for compatibility and incompatibility by analysing
tissues and species that graft and comparing these to tissues and species that do not graft.
4. Overcoming graft incompatibility and improving graft formation by applying the knowledge obtained from the three previous objectives.
We thus aim to broaden our fundamental understanding of the processes associated with grafting including wound healing, vascular formation and tissue regeneration, while at the same time, use this information to improve graft formation and expand the range of grafted species.
Max ERC Funding
1 499 902 €
Duration
Start date: 2019-08-01, End date: 2024-07-31
Project acronym GRETPOL
Project Greening the Poles: Science, the Environment, and the Creation of the Modern Arctic and Antarctic
Researcher (PI) Peder ROBERTS
Host Institution (HI) KUNGLIGA TEKNISKA HOEGSKOLAN
Call Details Starting Grant (StG), SH6, ERC-2016-STG
Summary This project investigates how and why environmental concerns have become so important to our conceptions of the polar regions today. Through a historical study of both the Arctic and Antarctic from 1945 to the turn of the past century, the project explores the connections between how environments are described - particularly through the natural sciences and economics - and the judgments made about how those environments should be administered. The key hypothesis of this project is that the process of describing an environment cannot be separated from the process of controlling and managing it. Changing perceptions of concepts such as development, ecological fragility, and wilderness have provided frames for describing and understanding the polar regions. Why has natural resource extraction been deemed appropriate (or even necessary) in some contexts, and wholly forbidden in others? Why did the concept of sustainable development become important during the 1980s? Can we think of scientific research programs as instruments of colonialism? And why did national parks and conservation agreements become politically useful? GRETPOL will produce a new understanding of how far from being the passive frames for human action, environments (in the polar regions but indeed also beyond) are constructed by human agency. As anthropogenic climate change reduces polar ice extent and threatens the entire globe, the question has never been timelier.
Summary
This project investigates how and why environmental concerns have become so important to our conceptions of the polar regions today. Through a historical study of both the Arctic and Antarctic from 1945 to the turn of the past century, the project explores the connections between how environments are described - particularly through the natural sciences and economics - and the judgments made about how those environments should be administered. The key hypothesis of this project is that the process of describing an environment cannot be separated from the process of controlling and managing it. Changing perceptions of concepts such as development, ecological fragility, and wilderness have provided frames for describing and understanding the polar regions. Why has natural resource extraction been deemed appropriate (or even necessary) in some contexts, and wholly forbidden in others? Why did the concept of sustainable development become important during the 1980s? Can we think of scientific research programs as instruments of colonialism? And why did national parks and conservation agreements become politically useful? GRETPOL will produce a new understanding of how far from being the passive frames for human action, environments (in the polar regions but indeed also beyond) are constructed by human agency. As anthropogenic climate change reduces polar ice extent and threatens the entire globe, the question has never been timelier.
Max ERC Funding
1 499 952 €
Duration
Start date: 2017-02-01, End date: 2022-01-31
Project acronym IN-BRAIN
Project IN VIVO REPROGRAMMING: A NOVEL ROUTE TO BRAIN REPAIR
Researcher (PI) Malin Parmar
Host Institution (HI) LUNDS UNIVERSITET
Call Details Starting Grant (StG), LS5, ERC-2012-StG_20111109
Summary Recent progress on direct re-programming into functional neurons provides a new approach towards cell-based therapy for neurodegenerative disorders. The induced neurons (iNs) are a novel type of cell resulting from rapid and remarkable conversion of somatic cells into subtype-specific functional neurons. Importantly they are non-proliferating which make them interesting alternatives to induced pluripotent (iPS) cells as sources of patient specific neurons for exogenous cell replacement therapy and disease modeling.
Another major advantage with direct conversion over iPS cells is that the reprogramming could be performed in vivo. While direct conversion has been successful in organs such as the pancreas, where exocrine cells can be directly converted into insulin producing cells by viral injections in vivo (Zhou et al., Nature, 2008), the method is yet to be explored in the brain. Once direct conversion of non-neuronal cells into subtype specific neurons directly in the brain is established, it provides a new strategy for cell based brain repair that do not depend on exogenous cells.
The overall goal of this project is to provide proof-of-principle that induced neurogenesis is achievable in the adult brain through guided transcription factor reprogramming of non-neuronal cells, to determine which cells are best suited as cellular substrate for in vivo neural conversion, and to compare this approach with transplantation of converted fibroblasts.
The ability to directly reprogram cell fate using defined combinations of transcription factors have already turned basic studies of stem cell differentiation and cell therapy into a new direction. Establishing this technique in vivo would be another paradigm-shifting finding that opens up for novel strategies for brain repair
Summary
Recent progress on direct re-programming into functional neurons provides a new approach towards cell-based therapy for neurodegenerative disorders. The induced neurons (iNs) are a novel type of cell resulting from rapid and remarkable conversion of somatic cells into subtype-specific functional neurons. Importantly they are non-proliferating which make them interesting alternatives to induced pluripotent (iPS) cells as sources of patient specific neurons for exogenous cell replacement therapy and disease modeling.
Another major advantage with direct conversion over iPS cells is that the reprogramming could be performed in vivo. While direct conversion has been successful in organs such as the pancreas, where exocrine cells can be directly converted into insulin producing cells by viral injections in vivo (Zhou et al., Nature, 2008), the method is yet to be explored in the brain. Once direct conversion of non-neuronal cells into subtype specific neurons directly in the brain is established, it provides a new strategy for cell based brain repair that do not depend on exogenous cells.
The overall goal of this project is to provide proof-of-principle that induced neurogenesis is achievable in the adult brain through guided transcription factor reprogramming of non-neuronal cells, to determine which cells are best suited as cellular substrate for in vivo neural conversion, and to compare this approach with transplantation of converted fibroblasts.
The ability to directly reprogram cell fate using defined combinations of transcription factors have already turned basic studies of stem cell differentiation and cell therapy into a new direction. Establishing this technique in vivo would be another paradigm-shifting finding that opens up for novel strategies for brain repair
Max ERC Funding
1 500 000 €
Duration
Start date: 2013-03-01, End date: 2018-02-28