The 61st Annual Meeting of the Biophysical Society of Japan

Session information

Academic Events » Symposium

2SMA Quantitative analysis of cellular mechanics to dissect dynamics of biological systems

Wed. Nov 15, 2023 8:50 AM - 11:20 AM Room M (Conference Room 431+432 (Bldg. 4, 3F))

Organizers: Shintaku Hirofumi (RIKEN)、Maki Koichiro (Kyoto Univ.)

共催:JST/JCREST「多細胞」

The mechanical phenotype of cells is a key biophysical property that arises from the intracellular states at the molecular level and is associated with cellular function. In multiple cellular contexts, the mechanical phenotypes are coordinated for autonomous morphogenesis and functional maturation. In this symposium, we invite researchers from various fields, including engineering, computational biology, and basic biology, and showcase research attempts that focus on the mechanical phenotype for diagnosis purposes and for dissecting the dynamics of biological systems.

8:50 AM - 9:20 AM

〇Kazunori Sunadome11,12, Alek G Erickson1, Delf Kah2, Ben Fabry2, Csaba Adori3, Shigeaki Kanatani4, Polina Kameneva5, Louis Faure5, Marketa Kaucka6, Ivar Dehnisch Ellström7, Marketa Tesarova8, Tomas Zikmund8, Jozef Kaiser8, Steven Edwards9, Koichiro Maki10, Taiji Adachi10, Takuya Yamomoto11,12, Kaj Fried3, Igor Adameyko1,5 (1.Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, Karolinska Institutet, 2.Department of Physics, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, 3.Department of Neuroscience, Karolinska Institutet, 4.Department of Medical Biochemistry and Biophysics, Division of Molecular Neurobiology, Karolinska Institutet, 5.Department of Neuroimmunology, Center for Brain Research, Medical University Vienna, 6.Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Biology, 7.Spinalis Foundation, 8.Central European Institute of Technology, Brno University of Technology, 9.KTH Royal Institute of Technology, 10.Department of Biosystems Science, Institute for Life and Medical Sciences, Kyoto University, 11.Institute for the Advanced Study of Human Biology (ASHBi), Kyoto University, 12.Center for iPS Cell Research and Application, Kyoto University)