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- Challenges and Chances: A Review of the 1st Stem Cell Community Day
- Summertime, and the Livin’ Is Easy…
- Follow-on-Biologics – More than Simple Generics
- Bacteria Versus Body Cells: A 1:1 Tie
- Behind the Crime Scene: How Biological Traces Can Help to Convict Offenders
- Every 3 Seconds Someone in the World Is Affected by Alzheimer's
- HIV – It’s Still Not Under Control…
- How Many Will Be Convicted This Time?
- Malaria – the Battle is Not Lost
- Physicians on Standby: The Annual Flu Season Can Be Serious
- At the Forefront in Fighting Cancer
- Molecular Motors: Think Small and yet Smaller Again…
- Liquid Biopsy: Novel Methods May Ease Cancer Detection and Therapy
- They Are Invisible, Sneaky and Disgusting – But Today It’s Their Special Day!
- How Many Cells Are in Your Body? Probably More Than You Think!
- What You Need to Know about Antibiotic Resistance – Findings, Facts and Good Intentions
- Why Do Old Men Have Big Ears?
- The Condemned Live Longer: A Potential Paradigm Shift in Genetics
- From Research to Commerce
- Chronobiology – How the Cold Seasons Influence Our Biorhythms
- Taskforce Microbots: Targeted Treatment from Inside the Body
- Eyes on Cancer Therapy
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- 2023 Award Finalist Dr. Adel Al Jord
2023 Award Finalist Dr. Adel Al Jord
Of Syrian and Russian origins, Adel Al Jord grew up in Dubai where he attended an American High-School before moving to his now adoptive France for university studies. He trained at the Manga-Orlow laboratory of New York University, before obtaining a PhD in Cell & Developmental Biology with Alice Meunier & Nathalie Spassky at the Ecole Normale Supérieure in Paris. Recently, Adel was an EMBO New Venture Fellow with Lucas Pelkmans at the University of Zurich. He is currently a Collège de France Research Fellow in Paris, working with Marie-Hélène Verlhac & Marie-Emilie Terret at the Center for Interdisciplinary Research in Biology, and will soon transition to a group leader position. Adel’s cross-disciplinary research investigates mechanisms of organelle remodeling in cells that, on an organism scale, sustain health or promote disease.
Synopsis of research
Organisms develop as cells proliferate and differentiate. These universal processes depend notably on cytoplasmic reorganization driven by the cytoskeleton and force-generating motors. Their activity generates active force fluctuations that stir the cytoplasm, agitating, displacing, and penetrating the nucleus. With an interdisciplinary approach, we investigated the unknown impact of these forces on the nucleus interior in female germ cells, named oocytes. We found that oocytes deploy cytoplasmic forces to timely impose critical changes in the internal organization of the nucleus for the success of ensuing oocyte divisions that drive female fertility. By agitating the nucleus, the forces remodel nuclear organelles known as biomolecular condensates, thereby mechanically regulating their key function: RNA processing. Cytoplasmic forces are thus functional remodelers of the oocyte nucleus, ensuring transcript quality for optimal oocyte development. Beyond reproductive biology, this study ventured into unexplored grounds of mechanobiology, revealing a new function for the cytoskeleton and a new mechanism of condensate mechano-regulation. This grants fresh perspectives on condensate-linked pathologies like cancer, neurodegeneration, and viral infections, which intriguingly also associate with cytoskeletal changes.
Synopsis of research
Organisms develop as cells proliferate and differentiate. These universal processes depend notably on cytoplasmic reorganization driven by the cytoskeleton and force-generating motors. Their activity generates active force fluctuations that stir the cytoplasm, agitating, displacing, and penetrating the nucleus. With an interdisciplinary approach, we investigated the unknown impact of these forces on the nucleus interior in female germ cells, named oocytes. We found that oocytes deploy cytoplasmic forces to timely impose critical changes in the internal organization of the nucleus for the success of ensuing oocyte divisions that drive female fertility. By agitating the nucleus, the forces remodel nuclear organelles known as biomolecular condensates, thereby mechanically regulating their key function: RNA processing. Cytoplasmic forces are thus functional remodelers of the oocyte nucleus, ensuring transcript quality for optimal oocyte development. Beyond reproductive biology, this study ventured into unexplored grounds of mechanobiology, revealing a new function for the cytoskeleton and a new mechanism of condensate mechano-regulation. This grants fresh perspectives on condensate-linked pathologies like cancer, neurodegeneration, and viral infections, which intriguingly also associate with cytoskeletal changes.
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