11 December 2025, 14:30
The sex and geometry of organs
Description Abstract I am interested in how information is encoded at the multi organ level Working at the interface between physiology and developmental biology we have explored the continued development of adult organs We have sought to understand how and why organs such as the intestine grow shrink and are metabolically remodelled even in adult fully developed animals and how this plasticity differs between the sexes We have tackled these questions across biological scales initially in Drosophila and more recently in mice and humans Our worked has uncovered new mechanisms of sex differentiation as well as previously unrecognised communication between gut and gonads that impacts food intake gamete production and tumour susceptibility Some of our work has also investigated how the intestine senses and responds to nutrients we discovered an intestinal zinc sensor that promotes Tor signalling to sustain food intake and developmental growth I have now become very interested in the idea that there is a logic to the shape and arrangement of organs within the body cavity We have developed new methods to visualise and quantify organs in 3D in their natural environment We can now interrogate these multi organ configurations to ask how organ shape impacts organ function and that of its neighbours and whether organ geometry enables or confines communication across organs Connection detailsZoom https embl org zoom us j 96374261689 pwd TnNxRWtQY2lyc2pSa2JpY3NGcDlhZz09 Meeting ID 963 7426 1689 Password DBU... Abstract:I am interested in how information is encoded at the multi-organ level. Working at the interface between physiology and developmental biology, we have explored the “continued development” of adult organs. We have sought to understand how and why organs such as the intestine grow, shrink and are metabolically remodelled even in adult, fully developed animals, and how this plasticity differs between the sexes. We have tackled these questions across biological scales, initially in Drosophila and more recently in mice and humans. Our worked has uncovered new mechanisms of sex differentiation as well as previously unrecognised communication between gut and gonads that impacts food intake, gamete production and tumour susceptibility. Some of our work has also investigated how the intestine senses and responds to nutrients: we discovered an intestinal zinc sensor that promotes Tor...
Speaker(s): Irene Miguel Aliaga, The Francis Crick Institute, United Kingdom
Host: Nicoletta Petridou
Place: Large Operon
EMBL Heidelberg, Virtual
Additional information
Abstract:
I am interested in how information is encoded at the multi-organ level. Working at the interface between physiology and developmental biology, we have explored the “continued development” of adult organs. We have sought to understand how and why organs such as the intestine grow, shrink and are metabolically remodelled even in adult, fully developed animals, and how this plasticity differs between the sexes. We have tackled these questions across biological scales, initially in Drosophila and more recently in mice and humans. Our worked has uncovered new mechanisms of sex differentiation as well as previously unrecognised communication between gut and gonads that impacts food intake, gamete production and tumour susceptibility. Some of our work has also investigated how the intestine senses and responds to nutrients: we discovered an intestinal zinc sensor that promotes Tor signalling to sustain food intake and developmental growth. I have now become very interested in the idea that there is a logic to the shape and arrangement of organs within the body cavity. We have developed new methods to visualise and quantify organs in 3D in their natural environment. We can now interrogate these multi-organ configurations to ask how organ shape impacts organ function and that of its neighbours, and whether organ geometry enables or confines communication across organs.
Connection details
Zoom*: [https://embl-org.zoom.us/j/96374261689?pwd=TnNxRWtQY2lyc2pSa2JpY3NGcDlhZz09] (Meeting ID: [963 7426 1689], Password: [DBU])