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/sent on behalf of

Sharon McCartney,
Spinal Cord Research Centre

 

 

 

Gentle reminder of the following lecture tomorrow:

Department of Physiology & Pathophysiology
Division of Neuroscience and Spinal Cord Injury


Assistant Professor Candidate Research Lecture

Dr. Jeremy Chopek, PhD
University College London
Sobell Department of Motor Neuroscience and Movement Disorders

TOPIC: “What goes down, must come up: understanding cellular communication between spinal cord and brainstem circuits during movement"

Thursday, May 31, 2018| Noon-1:00 pm
Physiology Seminar Room 431, Basic Medical Sciences Building

All are welcome to attend

Research Profile: Dr. Jeremy Chopek received his MSc (2009) in Kinesiology and PhD (2014) in the Department of Physiology & Pathophysiology, University of Manitoba under the supervision of Dr. Phillip Gardiner, in the Spinal Cord Research Centre.  His work examined how motor circuits were affected following spinal cord injury and exercise by examining alterations in motoneuron biophysical properties, stretch reflexes, gene expression and sensitivity to pharmacological agents. Currently, he is a post-doctoral fellow at Dalhousie University (2014-), Department of Medical Neuroscience working with both Dr. Zhang and Dr. Brownstone at University College London.  His work has began to characterize and understand microcircuit formation in both the medulla reticular formation, a centre vital for the initiation of movement and the lumbar spinal cord, the area in which movement is produced. To achieve this, he uses a combination of transgenic mouse lines, optogenetic or photo-manipulation of single cell or whole cell populations, in-vitro electrophysiology, viral tracers and 2P and confocal microscopy. To date, he has subdivided the chx10 neuronal population in the brainstem into two distinct cell populations based on their morphology, biophysical properties, connectivity and projection patterns.  In addition, he has also found a novel connectivity pattern of the spinal V3 interneuron population, which in addition to forming commissural connections also synapse locally with ipsilateral motoneurons.

Lecture notice attached

For more information please contact Dr. Brent Fedirchuk, 204-789-3762 or Sharon McCartney, sharon@scrc.umanitoba.ca
--
Spinal Cord Research Centre
University of Manitoba
Department of Physiology & Pathophysiology
409 - 745 Bannatyne Avenue
Winnipeg, Manitoba
Canada R3E 0J9
204-789-3770

 

 

 

 

Kelly Jorundson
Coordinator, Membership & Operations
Manitoba Neuroscience Network
                                                     

Email:  kjorund@sbrc.ca 
Tel: 204.235.3939 
Fax: 204.237.4092

 

St. Boniface Hospital Albrechtsen Research Centre
Room R4046 - 351 Taché  Avenue,  Winnipeg, MB  R2H 2A6  CANADA

 

 



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