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Mar 24, 2025

Fundamental Principles during the Egg-to-Embryo Transition

Date: March 24, 2025 | 11:30 am – 12:30 pm
Speaker: Andrea Pauli, IMP
Location: Raiffeisen Lecture Hall
Language: English

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Life of sexually reproducing organisms starts with the fusion of two highly specialized cells, the egg and the sperm, which gives rise to a single cell, the zygote. Fertilization initiates the egg-to-embryo transition, one of the most dramatic developmental transition resulting in the transformation of the egg from a dormant state into regulatorily and functionally distinct embryonic cells. While this transition has been studied extensively in respect to zygotic genome activation, the molecular mechanisms that mediate sperm-egg binding and fusion during fertilization and regulate the maintenance of dormancy in the egg and re-activation in the embryo remain poorly understood. The vision of the Pauli lab is to gain mechanistic insights into the egg-to-embryo transition, with a specific focus on the molecular control of fertilization and developmentally programmed dormancy and re-activation.

Andrea (Andi) Pauli will talk about recent findings from her lab related to their work towards uncovering the mechanism of vertebrate fertilization and translational regulation during the egg-to-embryo transition. By combining genetic, molecular, cellular, biochemical, structural and genomics approaches in their main model organism, the zebrafish, the long-term vision of the Pauli lab is to unravel new concepts and molecular mechanisms governing this fascinating developmental transition that marks the beginning of life.

More Information:

Date:
March 24, 2025
11:30 am – 12:30 pm

Speaker:
Andrea Pauli, IMP

Location:
Raiffeisen Lecture Hall

Language:
English

Contact:

Diana Gruber

Email:
Diana.Gruber@ista.ac.at

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