Jump to: Our sponsors Meeting Schedule Practical Session Venue and Travel Accommodation Meeting Support
The inaugural meeting has been a great success! Many thanks to our new president Elly Tanaka and her team in Vienna for hosting us. Among the excellent posters and talks our judges have made a selection for awarding cash prizes. These are as follows:
Poster prize winners:
Valentina Cigliola
Spinal cord repair is modulated by the neurogenic factor Hb-egf under direction of a regeneration-associated enhancer
Université Côte d’Azur
Jens Bager Christensen
Gene regulatory networks driving fate acquisition of cerebellar Nestin- expressing progenitors during development and regeneration
University of Cambridge
Julia Kolb
Small leucine-rich proteoglycans inhibit CNS regeneration by modifying the structural and mechanical properties of the lesion environment
Max Planck Institute for the Science of Light
Friederike Kessel
Dynamics of immune cell behaviour after spinal cord injury in zebrafish larvae
Center for Regenerative Therapies TU Dresden
Samuel H. Crossman
Mechanical forces regulate neural progenitor reactivation following spinal cord injury in Zebrafish
Monash University
Leonie Adelmann
Dissecting the hormonal modulation of adult regeneration in the bristle worm
Max Perutz Labs
Talk prize winners:
Çağrı Çevrim
A New Model of Menstruation and Uterine Regeneration
Harvard University
Anna Czarkwiani
De novo thymus regeneration in a vertebrate, the axolotl
Center for Regenerative Therapies TU Dresden
Daniel Osorio-Méndez
A voltage-gated sodium channel, scn8ab, as an essential driver in neurons for appendage regeneration
University of Wisconsin-Madison
Jing Lu
Performing de novo reconstruction of neuron networks in asexual planarian using 3D Tissue Imaging by tiling light sheet microscopy.
Westlake University
We look forward to seeing everyone again in Madison 2025!
GOLD SPONSORS:
SILVER SPONSORS:
BRONZE SPONSORS:
ADDITIONAL SPONSORS:
Saturday, September 2
Practical Course Day 1, Introduction to animal systems and instruction on injury models
Sunday, September 3
13:45 – 14:30 President’s Welcome and Scientific Vision, Ken Poss, Duke University School of Medicine, USA
Session 1: Models of regeneration sponsored by Morgridge Institute
Chair: Gilbert Weidinger, Ulm University
14:30 – 15:00 Peter Reddien, MIT, USA
Fate choice in planarian regeneration
15:00 – 15:15 T01 Marco De Leon, Institute of Organismic and Biology, Academica Sinica, Taiwan
How do regenerative animals sense the amputation position to regulate wound healing and
regeneration?
15:15 – 15:30 T02 Melanie Issigonis, Morgridge Institute for Research, University of Wisconsin
Madison, USA
A non-ribosomal peptide triggers germ cell regeneration and sexual development in the
planarian Schdmidtea mediterranea
15:30– 15:45 T03 Wouter Masselink, Research Institute of Molecular Pathology, Austria
The curious case of axolotl tail regeneration:vertebrae segmentation in the absence of somites
15:45 – 16:15 Karen Echeverri, Marine Biological Laboratory (MBL), USA
Molecular mechanisms of spinal cord regeneration: insights from axolotls
16:15 – 16:45 Coffee
Chair: Shawn Burgess, National Human Genome Research Institute
16:45 – 17:15 Ulrich Technau, University of Vienna, Austria
Self-organising regeneration in the sea anemone Nematostella vectensis
17:15 – 17:30 T04 Çağrı Çevrim, Harvard University, USA
A New Model of Menstruation and Uterine Regeneration
17:30 – 17:45 T05 Anna Czarkwiani, Center for Regenerative Therapies, TU Dresden, Germany
De novo thymus regeneration in a vertebrate, the axolotl
17:45 – 18:00 T06 Sumru Bayin, Gurdon Institute, University of Cambridge, UK
Divergent mechanisms of development and regeneration in the neonatal mouse cerebellum
18:00 – 18:30 Ashley Seifert, Univ of Kentucky, USA
Cell autonomous and extrinsic regulation of complex tissue regeneration in spiny mice
18:30 – 22:00 Welcome reception and Poster Session 1
Monday, September 4
Session 2: Stem cell models
Chair: Jonathan Slack, University of Bath
9:00 – 9:30 Hongkui Deng, Peking University, China
Chemical reprogramming: the path to the next generation of regenerative medicine
9:30 – 9:45 T07 Camille Curantz, University of Galway, Ireland
Whole-body regeneration from mixed reaggregated cells requires sphingosine signaling
to guide stem cell migration in a Cnidarian
9:45 – 10:00 T08 Eleanor Clark, Northwestern University, USA
BMP Suppresses WNT to integrate patterning of orthogonal body axes in adult planarians
10:00 –10:15 T09 Clare Booth, National Cancer Institute, USA
Polarity Re-establishment is a Rate Limiting Factor in the Acquisition of Whole-Body
Regeneration Competence in Developing Planarians
10:15 – 10:30 T10 Suhong Xu, Zhejiang University
Epidermal wound response and repair in C. elegans
10:30 – 11:00 Coffee
Chair: Akira Satoh, Okayama University
11:00 – 11:30 Lifetime Achievement Award presentation and talk
Chair: Prayag Murawala, MDI Biological Laboratory
11:30 – 12:00 Rising Star presentation and talk
12:00 – 13:00 ISRB Business meeting
13:00 – 14:00 Lunch in the cafeteria
14:00 – 15:00 2 Parallel sessions:
ERC funding in regenerative biology area, Veronica Caraffini, ERC Executive Agency
IMP Lecture Hall
NIH funding in regenerative biology area, Mahua Mukhopadhyay, NIH/NICHD
Seminar Room 1.014/16
15:00-16:15 Break
Session 3: Musculoskeletal and limb regeneration
Chair: Nadia Froebisch, Humboldt University, Berlin
16:15 – 16:30 Tribute to David Stocum, Malcolm Maden, University of Florida
16:30 – 17:00 Elly Tanaka, IMP, Vienna, Austria
Keeping and setting positional memory in axolotl limb regeneration
17:00 – 17:15 T11 Alberto Rosello-Diez, Australian Regenerative Medicine Institute
Identifying mesenchymal cell populations that are essential to compensate for cartilage
perturbations and give rise to long-lived chondroprogenitors in the fetal mouse limb
17:15 – 17:30 T12 Tetsuo Kon, University of Vienna, Austria
Dynamic genome landscapes of the Hydra stem cells
17:30 – 17:45 T13 Sofia-Christina Papadopoulos, Medizinische Hochschule Hannover, Germany
Investigating axolotl metamorphosis and the role of the thyroid hormone pathway
during limb regeneration
17:45 – 18:00 T14 Rita Aires, Technische Universität Dresden, Germany
Osteoclast-mediated bone resorption is an amputation position- specific event in
axolotl appendage regeneration
18:00 – 18:15 T15 Luthfi Nurhidayat, Institute of Biology Leiden, Leiden University, Netherlands
Decoding Molecular Regulation in Tokay Gecko Tail Regeneration using Bulk and
Single-Cell Transcriptome
18:15 –18:30 T16 Daniel Osorio-Méndez, University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA
A voltage-gated sodium channel, scn8ab, as an essential driver in neurons for
appendage regeneration
18:30 – 22:00 Dinner and Poster Session 2
Tuesday, September 5
Session 4: Neural regeneration: eyes, brain, and spinal cord
Chair: Jan Kaslin, Monash University
9:00 – 9:30 Muriel Perron, CNRS, France
The drivers and blockers of retinal regeneration
9:30 – 9:45 T17 Anna Parsons, University of Birmingham, UK
A crush injury method to the adult Drosophila ventral nerve cord to discover molecular
mechanisms of CNS regeneration
9:45 – 10:00 T18 Jing Lu, & Hao Xu, Westlake University, China
Performing de novo reconstruction of neuron networks in asexual planarian using 3D
Tissue Imaging by tiling light sheet microscopy
10:00 – 10:15 T19 Yuxiao Xu, Washington University in St. Louis, USA
Mapping regenerative stem cells during innate spinal cord repair
New Technology focus: Spatial transcriptomics
Chair: Purushothama Rao Tata, Duke University School of Medicine
10:15 –10:35 Sara Milosevic, Science and Technology Advisor, 10x Genomics
Gain a deeper insight into Regenerative medicine with Multiomic single cell analysis and Spatial transcriptomics
10:35 –10:55 Dr. Yen-Yu Lin, Senior Application Scientist, STOmics Europe
Large Field of View-Spatially Resolved Transcriptomics at Nanoscale
10:55 –11:05 Dr. Dries Van Hemelen, Vizgen
In situ genomics at high spatial resolution
11:05 –11:15 GenoImmune Therapeutics
11:15 – 11:45 Coffee
Chair: Alessandro De Simone, University of Geneva
11:45 – 12:00 Tribute to Panagiotis Tsonis, Thomas Reh, University of Washington
12:00 – 12:15 T20 Alice Accorsi, Stowers Institute for Medical Research, USA
Apple snails: a new research organism to study complete camera-type eye regeneration
12:15 – 12:30 T21 Levi Todd, University of Washington, USA
Peripheral immune invasion suppresses mammalian retinal regeneration
12:30 – 12:45 T22 Katia Del Rio-Tsonis, Miami University, USA.
A lens regeneration paradigm
12:45 – 13:15 Monica Sousa, University of Porto, Portugal
The power of exceptions to the rule: how to bridge spinal cord transection in Mammals
13:15 – 14:45 Lunch (cafeteria), with Career mentoring tables
14:45 – 15:30 Diversity in regeneration, led by Elly Tanaka, IMP Vienna, Austria
15:30 – 16:00 Coffee
Session 5: Development, aging, and regeneration
Chair: Jessica Whited, Harvard University
16:00 – 16:30 ISDB-Cells and Development Lecture by Aiko Sada, Kumamoto University, Japan
Stem cell dynamics underlying skin regeneration and resilience
16:30 – 16:45 T23 Kaitlyn Loubet-Senear, Harvard University, USA
Comparing the cellular contexts and regulatory logic underlying shared genetic
pathways during regeneration and development
16:45 – 17:00 T24 Jixing Zhong, EPFL, France
Multi-species atlas resolves an axolotl limb development and regeneration paradox
17:00 – 17:15 T25 Andreoni-Pham Rita, Institute for Research on Cancer and Aging, Nice, France
Whole body regeneration deploys a rewired embryonic gene regulatory network logic
17:15 – 17:45 Florian Raible, University of Vienna, Austria
Exploring a model system for the regulation of regenerative capacity
19:00 – 22:00 Dinner at Vienna City Hall
Wednesday, September 6
Session 6: Cardiovascular regeneration sponsored by Duke Regeneration Center
Chair: Yarui Diao, Duke University School of Medicine
9:00 – 9:15 T26 Jun-Ru Lee, Max Planck Institute for Multidisciplinary Sciences
Cell turnover in the planarian epidermis via internalazation and intestinal digestion of old cells
9:15 – 9:30 T27 Denise Posadas Pena, Ulm University, Germany
BMP/Smad signaling promotes zebrafish heart regeneration by resolving replication stress
9:30 –9:45 T28 Ke-Shiuan (Hsuan) Wei, Institute of biomedical sciences in Academia Sinica, Taiwan
Comparative single-cell profiling reveals distinct cardiac resident macrophages essential for
zebrafish heart regeneration
9:45 –10:00 T29 Guo Huang, University of California, San Francisco, USA
Novel insights from mammals of extreme longevity into organ regeneration
10:00 – 10:15 T30 Sema Elif Eski, IRIBHM, Université Libre de Bruxelles (ULB), Belgium
Do cellular cousins differ? Comparison between hepatocytes derived from self-renewal vs metaplasia
10:15 – 10:30 T31 Catriona Logan, Stanford University, USA
Deletion of a Wnt1/Wnt10b injury-responsive enhancer produces an adipogenesis phenotype in
injured muscle
10:30 – 11:00 Coffee
Chair: Anna Jazwinska, University of Fribourg
11:00 – 11:30 Lionel Christiaen, NYU
From deterministic cardiac development to regulative whole heart regeneration
11:30 – 12:00 Karina Yaniv, Weizmann Institute
Vascular control of organ growth and regeneration
12:00 – 12:30 Filipa Simoes, University of Oxford
Decoding spatial heterogeneity in the regenerating heart
12:30 – 13:00 Eldad Tzahor, Weizmann Institute
Cardiac regeneration from animals to patients
13:00 – 13:20 Closing remarks for Main conference
13:20 – 14:00 Lunch for practical course only
14:00 – 18:00 Practical course continues, analysis of injuries
Additional satellite workshop (click here to download the proposed schedule)
Course organizers: Elly Tanaka, Ulrich Technau, Florian Raible, Ken Poss
Spanning the inaugural meeting, the ISRB is organizing a practical course for trainees (undergraduate to postdoc) who want to gain hands-on experience in regeneration model organisms. The course will demonstrate some key experiments using Nematostella, Platenereis, and axolotl such as regeneration from reaggregated cells in Nematostella, and grafting, and electroporation before spinal cord regeneration in axolotl. In addition, lectures on planaria, and zebrafish taken place.
The course starts in the morning of 2 September. Students can examine samples during the meeting and on the afternoon of 6 September for wrap up.
Course restricted to 20 students
You will be notified of the outcome by early July. Cost for course is €100.
The Symposium will take place at the IMP and IMBA institutes on the Campus of the Vienna BioCenter. On arrival please come to the IMP building:
Research Institute of Molecular Pathology (IMP)
Campus-Vienna-Biocenter 1
1030 Vienna, AUSTRIA
The International Airport Schwechat (VIE) is just outside of Vienna. It serves most European Cities and has also several daily flights to America and Asia. A direct S-Bahn (S7) connects the airport to the Vienna Biocenter (station: St. Marx - 25min ride) (tickets are available directly at the train station).
An alternative airport is the Bratislava Airport (BTS) which is served by several much cheaper airlines. From there, a bus connects to Vienna (approximately 1 hour ride).
Look for the train offers from the oebb (Austrian Railways) which connect many European cities to Vienna.
Check the Eurolines website for connections to many European Cities.
Please note that accommodation is not included in the conference registration fee.
Below you find our partner hotels in the vicinity of IMP or that are very convenient to reach by foot or public transportation.
Landstrasser Hauptstrasse 165, 1030 Vienna
To reserve please contact: office(at)hotel-gabriel.at
https://www.hotel-gabriel.at/en/
Location: Vienna Posto 2 · Viehmarktgasse
Viehmarktgasse 4, 1030 Vienna
Single room rate: € 105/night excl. breakfast
Please send an e-mail with your booking request to: Vienna-posto2@rioca.eu
mentioning the booking code: VBC SYMPOSIUM
https://www.rioca.eu/en/viennaposto2/Rennweg 99 / Rinnböckstraße 1, 1030 Vienna
Single room rate: € 105/night incl. breakfast
Booking Link: https://reservations.travelclick.com/76356?groupID=3779397
https://www.austria-trend.at/en/hotels/doppioRennweg 16, 1030 Vienna
Single room rate: € 140/night incl. breakfast
Booking Link: https://reservations.travelclick.com/75044?groupID=3766340
https://www.austria-trend.at/en/hotels/savoyen
If our fund raising is successful, ISRB would like to offer grants to partially offset additional child care costs incurred by participants or speakers when participating at the upcoming inaugural meeting. Eligible costs include fees for a caregiver or child-care facility, travel costs for a caregiver, or travel costs for taking the child to the meeting etc. Please indicate on the registration form clickbox whether you would like to be considered for a grant. We expect to contact you by July 1 about our ability to provide funding and any further information we would need.
Update: The deadline for abstracts has now passed and the childcare requests will no longer be considered. We are now assessing the applications we have received and will be providing funding shortly.
Travel Assistance for Historically Marginalized Communities in the United States
We are pursuing funding to provide opportunities for members of historically marginalized communities who are graduate students, postdocs, and faculty in the US to receive funding assistance of a one-time grant of $500USD to attend the ISRB Inaugural Meeting in Vienna, Austria, September 3-6, 2023.
To apply for this travel grant, please fill out form by clicking the button below. Applicants who meet the above criteria are encouraged to apply early for a grant. Support is expected to be limited and would be available on a first-come, first-served basis. Final approval for travel assistance is contingent upon the application review by the conference organizers.
Meeting registration cancellation with partial refund must be requested in writing by midnight EDT August 1, 2023, by email to email@isrb.org, with “ISRB Inaugural Meeting Vienna cancellation” as subject title. A processing fee of £80 will be charged.