Session Details
[1S03m]AMED-CREST/PRIME “Stress” area symposium: New trends in stress research toward mechanistic understanding of stress responses and pathogenesis
Mon. Mar 17, 2025 8:30 AM - 10:20 AM JST
Mon. Mar 17, 2025 11:30 PM - 1:20 AM UTC
Mon. Mar 17, 2025 11:30 PM - 1:20 AM UTC
Room 3
Oranizers :Kazuhiro Nakamura (Nagoya University) and Takahiro Masuda (Kyushu University)
Joint Session : The Japan Neuroscience Society,
Sponsored by : AMED-CREST/PRIME “Stress” area,
PSJ : Cooperation with Other Societies Committee
Sponsored by : AMED-CREST/PRIME “Stress” area,
PSJ : Cooperation with Other Societies Committee
Various types of stress on living organisms, such as psychological, physical, and biochemical stress, cause diverse responses. Any intense stress can lead to pathological conditions, and the prevalence of stress-related diseases has become a social issue. Currently, stress research has entered a new era by involving broad life science fields and employing new manipulation and measurement techniques. It has also become possible to analyze molecular and cellular responses to stress along with whole-body responses, and thus various studies are being conducted to understand the mechanisms of whole-body stress responses and pathogenesis. In this symposium, researchers using cutting-edge approaches to elucidate the mechanisms of stress responses and pathogenesis will present their latest findings and discuss the future of stress research.
[1S03m-1]DNA damage induced by mechanical stress during brain development and its impact on lifelong disease risk
Zhejing Zhang1, Andres Canela1, Peilin Zou1, Noriko Takeda1, Yusuke Kishi2, Takahiro Furuta3, Hiroyuki Sasanuma1, ○Mineko Kengaku1 (1.Kyoto University, 2.Univ. of Tokyo, 3.Osaka University)
[1S03m-2]Understanding of stress responses at brain border and its potential
○Takahiro Masuda (Division of Molecular Neuroimmunology, Medical Institute of Bioregulation, Kyushu University)
[1S03m-3]Imaging various stress-induced brain metabolic alterations using hyperpolarized 13C metabolic MRI
○Shingo Matsumoto (Hokkaido Univ.)
[1S03m-4]Lighting up extracellular signaling dynamics using new genetically-encoded fluorescent sensors
○Daisuke Ino (Department of Pharmacology, Graduate School of Medicine, Osaka University)
[1S03m-5]Central psychosomatic neural pathway linking psychological stress and cardiovascular diseases
○Kazuhiro Nakamura1, Yuji Suzuki1, Naoya Kataoka1,2 (1.Department of Integrative Physiology, Nagoya University Graduate School of Medicine, 2.Nagoya University Institute for Advanced Research)