Growth and regeneration during development and aging
Roscoff (Bretagne), France, May 22-26, 2023
Deadline for application: February 20, 2023
Chairperson: Claude Desplan
Silver Professor of Biology and Neuroscience, NYU Department of Biology, 24 Waverly Place, Waverly Bldg 6th Floor, New York, NY 10003, USA
Phone: +1 212 998 8218
Email: cd38@nyu.edu
Vice-chairperson: : Allison Bardin
Group Leader, Institut Curie, Department of Genetics and Developmental Biology, 26, rue d'Ulm, 75005 Paris, France
Email: allison.bardin@gmail.com
A series of “Conférences Jacques Monod” meetings, was held in 2012, 2015 and 2018 and focused on specific problems of developmental biology. The 2023 CJM conference that will be held May 22-26, 2023 in Roscoff, France will focus on later stages of development and explore fundamental aspects of regeneration, homeostasis of tissue and the mechanisms of aging, when these processes no longer function properly. The program of the conference will include six thematic sessions, each including speakers working in different model organisms with different approaches.
The CJM will cover the following broad topics in development biology and aging:
- Developmental control of Aging
- Transcription control and chromatin regulation of cell fate and aging
- Stem cells and their link with aging
- Regeneration
- Development of patterns
- Senescence and plasticity
We encourage the application of participants of diverse backgrounds working on a wide range of topics in developmental biology. Additional speakers and poster presentations will be selected based on abstracts to further enhance the diversity of the meeting, with opportunities for younger as well as established scientists.
Keywords: Development, stem cells, organoids, Cell fate, pattern formation, regeneration, aging, tissue growth, tissue homeostasis, morphogenesis, metabolism, modeling
Invited speakers
(provisional titles)
Michael Averof (IGF Lyon, France)
Does regeneration mirror development?
Allison Bardin (Institut Curie, Paris, France)
Genome stability of stem and progenitor cells during aging
Elvan Boke (CRG Barcelona, Spain)
Evading ageing: mitochondrial and proteostatic adaptations in oocytes
Giselle Cheung (ISTA Vienna, Austria)
Multipotent progenitors instruct ontogeny of the superior colliculus
Lionel Christiaen (SARS Bergen, Norway)
Cardiac development and whole heart regeneration in a simple chordate
Luisa Cochella (Johns Hopkins, Baltimore, USA)
Quantitative control of morphogenesis by a deeply conserved miRNA family
Claude Desplan (NYU, New York, USA)
Are longevity and reproduction compatible?
Fiona Doetsch (Biozentrum Basel, Switzerland)
Regulation and diversity of adult neural stem cells
Petra Hajkova (London Institute of Medical Sciences, United Kingdom)
Resetting and maintenance of epigenetic information in the context of mammalian germ line
Olivier Hamant (ENS Lyon, France)
How transcriptional noise and mechanical conflicts contribute to organ shape reproducibility
Guo Huang (UCSF, San Francisco, USA)
Neurohormonal control of organ regeneration: insights from platypus, anteaters, bats and whales
Robert Johnston (Johns Hopkins, Baltimore, USA)
Generating neuronal diversity in human retinal organoids
Bill Keyes (IGBMC, Strasbourg, France)
Cellular senescence in development and aging
Abderrahman Khila (IGF Lyon, France)
Molecular, ecological and evolutionary mechanisms of extreme growth variation in a water strider
Mounia Lagha (IGMM Montpellier, France)
Gene expression dynamics during the awakening of the zygotic genome
Patrick Lemaire (Institute of Biological Sciences, Montpellier, France)
Growth, apoptosis, regeneration, signalling gradients: everything the ascidian embryo can do without…
Fabienne Lescroart (Marseille Medical Genetics Center, Marseille, France)
Early specification of the cardiopharyngeal mesoderm: multiple roads to the heart and head muscles
Han Li (Institut Pasteur, Paris, France)
New tricks of an old player: senescence induced-cellular plasticity in health and disease
Hernan Lopez-Schier (Helmholtz Zentrum, Munich, Germany)
Long-term homeostasis of complex patterns in regenerating organs
Irene Miguel-Aliaga (Imperial College London, United-Kingdom)
Changing guts
Pura Muñoz Cànoves (Altos, San Diego, USA)
Promoting regeneration of aged muscles
Peter Reddien (Whitehead Institute, MIT Boston, USA)
Fate choice in planarian regeneration
Michael Rera (Institut de Biologie Paris Seine, France)
Two phases for better understanding ageing
Dario Riccardo Valenzano (Max Planck Institut, Cologne, Germany)
Evolution and ecology of aging
Pauline Speder (Institut Pasteur, Paris, France)
Building the neurogenic niche, one block at a time
Bjorn Schumacher (CECAD Cologne, Germany)
Genome stability in reproduction and aging: new insights from C. elegans
Dan Ohtan Wang (NYU Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates)
Reading the m6A RNA methylation signals in neurons and at synapses
Deadline for application: February 20, 2023
Registration fee (including board and lodging)
500 € for PhD students
700 € for other participants
Application for registration
The total number of participants is limited to 115 and all participants are expected to attend for the whole duration of the conference. Selection is made on the basis of the affinity of potential participants with the topics of the conference. Scientists and PhD Students interested in the meeting should deposit online before the deadline: https://cjm1-2023.sciencesconf.org
- their curriculum vitae
- the proof of their student status
- the list of their main publications for the 3 last years
- the abstract of their presentation:
The abstract must respect the following template:
- First line: title
- Second line: list of authors
- Third line: author's addresses
- Fourth line: e-mail of the presenting author
Abstract should not exceed 600 words. No figures.
After the deadline, the organizers will select the participants. Except in some particular cases approved by the Chairperson, it is recommended that all selected participants present their work during the conference, either in poster form or by a brief in- session talk. The organizers choose the form in which the presentations are made. No payment will be sent with application. Information on how and when to pay will be mailed in due time to those selected.