4 July 2025, 09:30
Physical transitions in developmental biology: some examples
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Speaker(s): Guillaume Salbreux, University of Geneva, Switzerland
Host: DB Unit
Place: Large Operon
External Faculty Speaker
EMBL Heidelberg
At EMBL, experts from institutes throughout the world speak on a wide range of scientific and technical topics
4 July 2025, 09:30
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Speaker(s): Guillaume Salbreux, University of Geneva, Switzerland
Host: DB Unit
Place: Large Operon
External Faculty Speaker
EMBL Heidelberg
7 July 2025, 09:30
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Speaker(s): Caren Norden, Gulbenkian Institute for Molecular Medicine, Portugal
Host: DB Unit
Place: Large Operon
Seminar given by an external postdoc
EMBL Heidelberg
14 July 2025, 11:00
AbstractMy lab has developed lightweight robust and interpretable deep learning models that can predict diverse biochemical profiles spanning transcription factor binding chromatin accessibility nascent transcription steady state transcription and reporter assays Our models 1 detect learn and correct cryptic experimental biases 2 reveal underlying causal sequence syntax and its... AbstractMy lab has developed lightweight, robust and interpretable deep learning models that can predict diverse biochemical profiles spanning transcription factor binding, chromatin accessibility, nascent transcription, steady state transcription and reporter assays. Our models (1) detect, learn and correct cryptic experimental biases, (2) reveal underlying causal sequence syntax and its pleiotropy across biochemical and cellular contexts, (3) encode biophysical parameters and (4) predict effects of regulatory genetic variants. Our models match or surpass the performance of massive, multi-task supervised models and self-supervised DNA language models across a battery of carefully curated benchmarks, including molecular QTLs from diverse cell contexts and ancestries, reporter assays, CRISPR-based genome editing experiments, and fine mapped GWAS variants. By systematically...
Speaker(s): Anshul Kundaje, Stanford University, USA
Place: Conf Room/Building 14
EMBL Distinguished Visitor Lecture
EMBL Rome
Abstract
My lab has developed lightweight, robust and interpretable deep learning models that can predict diverse biochemical profiles spanning transcription factor binding, chromatin accessibility, nascent transcription, steady state transcription and reporter assays. Our models (1) detect, learn and correct cryptic experimental biases, (2) reveal underlying causal sequence syntax and its pleiotropy across biochemical and cellular contexts, (3) encode biophysical parameters and (4) predict effects of regulatory genetic variants. Our models match or surpass the performance of massive, multi-task supervised models and self-supervised DNA language models across a battery of carefully curated benchmarks, including molecular QTLs from diverse cell contexts and ancestries, reporter assays, CRISPR-based genome editing experiments, and fine mapped GWAS variants. By systematically interpreting a foundational resource of ~5000 regulatory DNA sequence models trained on bulk and single cell datasets from diverse adult and fetal cellular contexts, we can begin unraveling the incredible complexity and context-specificity of regulatory sequence lexicons, syntax and genetic variation encoded in the human genome.
zoom details: https://www.embl.org/internal-information/updates/distinguished-visitor-lecture-anshul-kundaje/
15 July 2025, 15:00
AbstractTidyMass is a comprehensive computational framework for data processing and analysis of LC MS data using tidyverse principles It is developed by the Shen Lab at Nanyang Technological University Singapore About the speakerXiaotao develops TidyMass a modular and tidyverse friendly toolbox for mass spectrometry based metabolomics He ll introduce the ecosystem behind TidyMass and share his... AbstractTidyMass is a comprehensive computational framework for data processing and analysis of LC-MS data using tidyverse principles. It is developed by the Shen Lab at Nanyang Technological University, Singapore.About the speakerXiaotao develops TidyMass, a modular and tidyverse-friendly toolbox for mass spectrometry-based metabolomics. He’ll introduce the ecosystem behind TidyMass and share his perspective on building reproducible metabolomics workflows in R.Attachmentshttps://www.tidymass.org/Connection detailsZoom: https://embl-org.zoom.us/j/93966704170?pwd=UE5maWxYbTgvRkVvTU12dkdqUU5CZz09 (Meeting ID: 93966704170, Password: emblr)Please note that the talk will not be recorded.
Speaker(s): Xiaotao Shen, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore
Host: Eleonora Mastrorilli, Mike Smith, Federico Marotta
Place: Room 440
External Faculty Speaker
EMBL Heidelberg, Virtual
Abstract
TidyMass is a comprehensive computational framework for data processing and analysis of LC-MS data using tidyverse principles. It is developed by the Shen Lab at Nanyang Technological University, Singapore.
About the speaker
Xiaotao develops TidyMass, a modular and tidyverse-friendly toolbox for mass spectrometry-based metabolomics. He’ll introduce the ecosystem behind TidyMass and share his perspective on building reproducible metabolomics workflows in R.
Attachments
https://www.tidymass.org/
Connection details
Zoom: https://embl-org.zoom.us/j/93966704170?pwd=UE5maWxYbTgvRkVvTU12dkdqUU5CZz09 (Meeting ID: 93966704170, Password: emblr)
Please note that the talk will not be recorded.
25 July 2025, 11:00
AbstractDrastic epigenetic reprogramming occurs during mammalian early embryogenesis Deciphering the molecular events underlying these processes is crucial for understanding how epigenetic information is transmitted between generations and how life really begins Probing these questions was previously hindered by the scarce experimental materials that are available in early development By... AbstractDrastic epigenetic reprogramming occurs during mammalian early embryogenesis. Deciphering the molecular events underlying these processes is crucial for understanding how epigenetic information is transmitted between generations and how life really begins. Probing these questions was previously hindered by the scarce experimental materials that are available in early development. By developing a set of ultra-sensitive chromatin analysis technologies, we investigated chromatin reprogramming during early mouse development for chromatin accessibility, histone modifications, and 3D architecture. These studies unveiled highly dynamic and non-canonical chromatin regulation during maternal-to-zygotic transition and zygotic genome activation (ZGA). However, how ZGA is kickstarted and how the early development program is progressively driven by transcription factors (TFs) remain...
Speaker(s): Wei Xie, School of Life Sciences, Tsinghua University,, China
Host: Ana Boskovic
Place: Conf Room/Building 14
EMBL Distinguished Visitor Lecture
EMBL Rome
Abstract
Drastic epigenetic reprogramming occurs during mammalian early embryogenesis. Deciphering the molecular events underlying these processes is crucial for understanding how epigenetic information is transmitted between generations and how life really begins. Probing these questions was previously hindered by the scarce experimental materials that are available in early development. By developing a set of ultra-sensitive chromatin analysis technologies, we investigated chromatin reprogramming during early mouse development for chromatin accessibility, histone modifications, and 3D architecture. These studies unveiled highly dynamic and non-canonical chromatin regulation during maternal-to-zygotic transition and zygotic genome activation (ZGA). However, how ZGA is kickstarted and how the early development program is progressively driven by transcription factors (TFs) remain enigmatic. Recently, we identified key TFs that act at the onset of ZGA, and those that connect ZGA to the first cell fate commitment. In this talk, I will discuss how TFs and epigenetic factors cooperatively establish embryonic program and restore the embryonic epigenomes when the life begins.
Zoom details: https://www.embl.org/internal-information/updates/distinguished-visitor-lecture-wei-xie/
12 September 2025, 16:00
AbstractLarge Language Models LLMs like ChatGPT are transforming the way we do science and very prominently how we analyse scientific data In this talk I will introduce the fundamentals of LLMs and their emerging multimodal extensions such as Vision Language Models VLMs Computer scientists seek to enable analysis of biological images using VLMs turning images into numbers and insights... AbstractLarge Language Models (LLMs) like ChatGPT are transforming the way we do science and very prominently how we analyse scientific data. In this talk, I will introduce the fundamentals of LLMs and their emerging multimodal extensions, such as Vision-Language Models (VLMs). Computer scientists seek to enable analysis of biological images using VLMs, turning images into numbers and insights ideally directly. I will discuss current capabilities and limitations of these models for bio-image analysis and highlight the unique potential of LLMs for automating data analysis workflows through code-generation. Emphasizing practical examples, I will demonstrate how LLM-driven code-generation accelerates data exploration, preprocessing, and quantitative analysis in bio-image data science.
Speaker(s): Robert Haase, Universität Leipzig, Germany
Host: Christian Tischer
Place: Small Operon
External Faculty Speaker
EMBL Heidelberg
Abstract
Large Language Models (LLMs) like ChatGPT are transforming the way we do science and very prominently how we analyse scientific data. In this talk, I will introduce the fundamentals of LLMs and their emerging multimodal extensions, such as Vision-Language Models (VLMs). Computer scientists seek to enable analysis of biological images using VLMs, turning images into numbers and insights ideally directly. I will discuss current capabilities and limitations of these models for bio-image analysis and highlight the unique potential of LLMs for automating data analysis workflows through code-generation. Emphasizing practical examples, I will demonstrate how LLM-driven code-generation accelerates data exploration, preprocessing, and quantitative analysis in bio-image data science.
3 October 2025, 11:00
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Speaker(s): Cyril Henry, University of Bordeaux, France
Host: Cornelius Gross
Place: Conf Room/Building 14
External Faculty Speaker
EMBL Rome
7 October 2025, 11:00
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Speaker(s): Magdalena Götz, Helmholtz Zentrum München, Germany
Place: Conf Room/Building 14
EMBL Distinguished Visitor Lecture
EMBL Rome
17 October 2025, 11:00
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Speaker(s): Antonella Riccio, UCL Laboratory for Molecular Cell Biology, United Kingdom
Place: Sapienza Università di Roma - Aula Odeion - Museo dell'Arte Classica - P.le Aldo Moro, 5 - Roma
EMBL - Sapienza Lecture
EMBL Rome
24 October 2025, 11:00
AbstractMemory formation relies on a bidirectional interplay between synaptic plasticity and nucleus templated transcriptional programs but how precisely this interplay is orchestrated by epigenetic mechanisms remains to a large extent unknown In this talk I will showcase our recent efforts to better understand this aspect from two angles First we have found that chromatin plasticity in the... AbstractMemory formation relies on a bidirectional interplay between synaptic plasticity and nucleus-templated transcriptional programs, but how precisely this interplay is orchestrated by epigenetic mechanisms remains to a large extent unknown. In this talk, I will showcase our recent efforts to better understand this aspect from two angles. First, we have found that chromatin plasticity in the mouse brain is a key determinant for memory allocation, the process by which neurons become recruited into the memory trace: When we increased chromatin plasticity by enzymatic overexpression of histone acetyl transferases (HATs), neurons with elevated histone acetylation were preferentially recruited into the encoding ensemble and memory retention was enhanced, while optogenetic silencing of the epigenetically altered neurons prevented memory expression. Second, we have found that after...
Speaker(s): Johannes Graff, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), Switzerland
Place: Conf Room/Building 14
External Faculty Speaker
EMBL Rome
Abstract
Memory formation relies on a bidirectional interplay between synaptic plasticity and nucleus-templated transcriptional programs, but how precisely this interplay is orchestrated by epigenetic mechanisms remains to a large extent unknown. In this talk, I will showcase our recent efforts to better understand this aspect from two angles. First, we have found that chromatin plasticity in the mouse brain is a key determinant for memory allocation, the process by which neurons become recruited into the memory trace: When we increased chromatin plasticity by enzymatic overexpression of histone acetyl transferases (HATs), neurons with elevated histone acetylation were preferentially recruited into the encoding ensemble and memory retention was enhanced, while optogenetic silencing of the epigenetically altered neurons prevented memory expression. Second, we have found that after learning, the epigenetic make-up of a single locus in the encoding ensemble is necessary and sufficient to bidirectionally alter memory performance across different phases of memory consolidation. Together, these findings stipulate that before and after memory encoding, epigenetic mechanisms play a pivotal role as molecular memory aids.
7 November 2025, 11:00
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Speaker(s): Stavros Lomvardas, Columbia University, USA
Place: Conf Room/Building 14
EMBL Distinguished Visitor Lecture
EMBL Rome
14 November 2025, 11:00
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Speaker(s): Andrea Ganna, Institute for Molecular Medicine Finland (FIMM), Finland
Place: Sapienza Università di Roma - Aula Odeion - Museo dell'Arte Classica - P.le Aldo Moro, 5 - Roma
EMBL - Sapienza Lecture
EMBL Rome
21 November 2025, 11:00
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Speaker(s): Hongkui Zeng, Allen Institute for Brain Science, USA
Place: Conf Room/Building 14
EMBL Distinguished Visitor Lecture
EMBL Rome
4 December 2025, 14:30
Abstract Text for abstract About the speaker Biographical information about the speaker Meet the speakerTo meet with the speaker informally after the talks sign up here add link We especially encourage predocs and postdocs to take advantage of this opportunity Attachments Link to a file for example a pdf of the seminar s programme the file can be uploaded on the intranet Connection... Abstract[Text for abstract].About the speaker[Biographical information about the speaker].Meet the speakerTo meet with the speaker informally after the talks,sign up here [add link]. We especially encourage predocs and postdocs to take advantage of this opportunity.Attachments[Link to a file (for example a pdf of the seminar’s programme) - the file can be uploaded on the intranet]Connection detailsZoom*: [https://embl-org.zoom.us/j/96374261689?pwd=TnNxRWtQY2lyc2pSa2JpY3NGcDlhZz09] (Meeting ID: [963 7426 1689], Password: [DBU])Please note that the talk will yes/not be recorded.*For the FAQ section, as a zoom participant, please use either the chat function (the host will read out your question) or the “raise your hand” function and turn on your microphone.
Speaker(s): Irene Miguel Aliaga, The Francis Crick Institute, United Kingdom
Place: Small Operon
External Faculty Speaker
EMBL Heidelberg
Abstract
[Text for abstract].
About the speaker
[Biographical information about the speaker].
Meet the speaker
To meet with the speaker informally after the talks,sign up here [add link]. We especially encourage predocs and postdocs to take advantage of this opportunity.
Attachments
[Link to a file (for example a pdf of the seminar’s programme) - the file can be uploaded on the intranet]
Connection details
Zoom*: [https://embl-org.zoom.us/j/96374261689?pwd=TnNxRWtQY2lyc2pSa2JpY3NGcDlhZz09] (Meeting ID: [963 7426 1689], Password: [DBU])
Please note that the talk will yes/not be recorded.
*For the FAQ section, as a zoom participant, please use either the chat function (the host will read out your question) or the “raise your hand” function and turn on your microphone.
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