Session Details
[1PS-07]【J】Opportunities for new discoveries by challenging the limits of temporal scale in biology
Wed. Nov 27, 2024 4:45 PM - 7:00 PM JST
Wed. Nov 27, 2024 7:45 AM - 10:00 AM UTC
Wed. Nov 27, 2024 7:45 AM - 10:00 AM UTC
Room 7(Fukuoka International Congress Center, 4F 413)
Organizer: Takaomi Sakai (Tokyo Metroporitan University), Naruhiko Sahara (National Institutes for Quantum Science and Technology)
Biological phenomena can occur across vast temporal scales, such as neural transmission occurring in milliseconds to memory loss occurring over years. Current approaches either capture biological events at high frequency but only for a brief period or capture biological events across long period but with sparse measurements. In this symposium, we highlight new approaches that attempt to break the barrier of temporal scale in biology by capturing events in their entirety through high-frequency and long-term measurements and new insights gained through such approaches.
Introduction
[1PS-07-01]An optogenetic tool for controlling tau dynamics and time manipulation
○Hiroko Bannai1 (1. Waseda University)
[1PS-07-02]Dissecting the relationship between mitochondrial stress response and neurodegeneration through the lens of time axis
○Toshimori Kitami1 (1. RIKEN Center for Integrative Medical Sciences (IMS))
[1PS-07-03]In vivo mouse brain imaging for creating comprehensive lifetime atlases
○Rin Yanai1, Naruhiko Sahara1 (1. National Institutes for Quantum and Radiological Science and Technology)
[1PS-07-04(1P-695)]Challenges in revealing neural basis of formulating and testing a hypothesis via longitudinal imaging of neural activity
○Chika Nishimura1, Yuki Hashizume1, Haruto Ueno1, Kohei Morimoto3, Makoto Fukushima2, Seiya Mizuno4, Hiroki Yagi1, Satoshi Yawata1, Ken Kobayashi1, Dai Watanabe1 (1. Grad Sch Med, Kyoto University, Japan, 2. Grad Sch Adv Sci, Hiroshima Univ, Hiroshima, Japan, 3. Grad Sch Inf, Kyoto Univ, Kyoto, Japan, 4. Institute of Medicine, University of Tsukuba)
[1PS-07-05]Accelerating mechanistic analyses on cancer through lifetime analyses
○Masahiro Sonoshita1 (1. Hokkaido University)
[1PS-07-06]The Role of Dopamine in Memory Formation and the Mechanism of On-Demand Release in Drosophila
○Kohei Ueno1, Shintaro Naganos1, Minoru Saitoe1 (1. Tokyo Metropolitan Institute of Medical Science)
[1PS-07-07]Individual differences in nematode populations: the need for a novel research approach
○Michiyo Suzuki1 (1. National Institutes for Quantum Science and Technology (QST))
[1PS-07-08(1P-664)]A new approach using continuous and prolonged measurements reveals new mechanisms in the Drosophila body temperature rhythm.
○Tadahiro Goda1, Fumika Hamada1 (1. UC Davis)