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Comprendre les mécanismes développementaux régulant la formation du cortex cérébral (description en anglais)

Stage Master 2 - Equipe "Système nerveux central : du développement à la régénération"

Stage / Eq H.Nawabi

Objectifs

The project aims to characterize the molecular and cellular mechanisms regulating the brain development during mammalian and human embryogenesis. More specifically, we focus on the development of the cerebral cortex to shed light on the etiology of neurodevelopmental disorders.

Résumé

The cerebral cortex is a six-layered brain structure that ensures higher motor, sensory and cognitive functions. Its laminar organization reflects the fine regulation of developmental processes which, if altered, can lead to malformations of cortical development. These malformations are associated with clinical manifestations combining intellectual and/or motor deficits. Therefore, understanding how the cortex develops in utero is a sine qua non condition for deciphering neurodevelopmental disorders and their associated pathophysiological mechanisms. The cortical layers, holding a well-defined number and subtype of excitatory neurons, arise the sequential differentiation of progenitors into neurons that subsequently migrate to reach their final location. Using a combination of multi-scale approaches, we aim to study the developmental mechanisms that regulate the acquisition of neuronal identity and the orderly build-up of cortex.

Méthodes

Murine lines (genotyping), histology (embryonic and post-natal brain sectioning), in utero electroporation, primary culture (embryonic brain slices, cortical neuroprogenitor cells), immunohisto- and cytochemistry, confocal microscopy, image analyses and molecular biology techniques.

Référence

Wennagel D, et al. Huntingtin coordinates dendritic spine morphology and function through cofilin-mediated control of the actin cytoskeleton. Cell Rep. (2022). 40(9):111261

Barnat M, et al. Huntington's disease alters human neurodevelopment. Science (2020). 369(6505):787-793

Barnat M, et al. Huntingtin-mediated multipolar-bipolar transition of newborn cortical neurons is critical for their postnatal neuronal morphology. Neuron (2017). 93(1):99-114

Domaines d'expertise requis

Neurobiology, Cortical development, Cellular biology, Cell adhesion and dynamics, Molecular biology

Contact

Monia Barnat, Inserm researcher
Email : monia.barnatatuniv-grenoble-alpes.fr
Téléphone : +33 (0)4 56 52 05 33

Télécharger

Offre stage M2 2025-2026 MBarnat (PDF, 101.84 Ko)

Contacts

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Publié le 23 juin 2025

Mis à jour le 23 juin 2025