Functional Output of Sexual Dimorphism of Neuroimmune Cells
Tuesday April 09, 2019
8:00 am
-
10:00 am
Eastern Time (ET)
Room W206 A
BEH
CVP
NEU
Chair :
Luisa Torres
Cornell University
Stella Tsirka
Stony Brook University
Increasing evidence indicates that there is a broad and intricate repertoire of neuroimmune-related sex differences, which lead to differential physiological and pharmacological responses to neurological disorders. These dimorphic features are evident in physiological settings, including synapse remodeling and maturation, during postnatal development and have implications for a gender-specific brain wiring. Immune-competent microglia exhibit sex-specific changes in gene expression when activated, in the modulation of energy homeostasis and in neuropathological events. This new exciting line of research on microglia identifies them as critical modulators of plasticity and refinement in the CNS, and a new potential therapeutic target for neurological diseases.
Speakers
Wolfang Streit
- Univ. of Florida
Microglia in Health and Disease: A Historical Perspective
Maricedes Acosta-Martinez
- Stony Brook University
Jyoti Waters
- University of Wisconsin-Madison
Maternal Sleep Disordered Breathing During Pregnancy Has Sex-specific Effects on Microglial Inflammatory Gene Expression in Adult Offspring
Michael Salter
- SickKids Hospital
Sexual Dimorphism in Microglia in Pain