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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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- 2025 Prize Winner Dr. Cheng Lyu
2025 Prize Winner Dr. Cheng Lyu
University Stanford, California, USA
Cheng Lyu earned his bachelor’s and master’s degrees in physics from Peking University and completed his Ph.D. in Gaby Maimon’s lab at Rockefeller University, where he studied the neural basis of path integration in Drosophila. He is currently a postdoctoral researcher in Liqun Luo’s lab at Stanford University, investigating how neural circuits are precisely assembled during development. Supported by the Stanford Science Fellows and the Gatsby Foundation, his work has shown that rewiring specific groups of olfactory neurons in flies can alter their behavioral responses to the same odors. Cheng will soon establish his own laboratory at Westlake University, where he aims to further explore how developmental changes in neural circuits shape animal behavior in ethologically meaningful ways. Essay: “Respecifying partners”
How do neural circuits assemble with remarkable precision during brain development, and how can changes in this process alter behavior? Using the fruit fly olfactory system—where ~50 types of sensory neurons connect 1-to-1with ~50 types of partner neurons—our research uncovered how the fly olfactory circuit reduces a seemingly intractable 3D wiring problem into simpler 1D choices. By systematically tracing, quantifying, and perturbing neuron development across many cell types, we revealed that partner selection occurs along constrained trajectories, greatly simplifying the molecular codes for specificity. Building on this framework, we demonstrated that by tuning the combinatorial balance of attraction and repulsion, it is possible to rewire single neuron types to form alternative connections. These rewired circuits not only altered neural activity patterns but also reshaped social behaviors, such as male courtship. Together, our work links genetic variation to circuit assembly, function, and behavior, providing a foundation for understanding how developmental variations influence brain evolution and neurodevelopmental disease.
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Research on rewiring neural circuit in fruit flies wins 2025 Eppendorf & Science Prize
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Cheng Lyu
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