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This meeting took place in the past. Here is a list of meetings that are related:
Growing to Extremes: Cell Biology and Pathology of Axons (2013C4)
Synapses: Formation, Function and Misfunction (2010Z3)
Axonal Connections: Molecular Cues for Development and Regeneration (2009J6)
Axonal Connections: Molecular Cues for Development and Regeneration (2005C6)
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Web Desc
Axonal Connections: Molecular Cues for Development and Regeneration
Organizer(s): John G. Flanagan, Marc Tessier-Lavigne and Stephen M. Strittmatter
Date: February 13 - 17, 2003
Location: Keystone Resort, Keystone, CO, USA
Sponsored in part by The Director's Sponsor Fund
For important information on the coronavirus, please
click here
Summary of Meeting:
The functioning of the nervous system depends on its complex pattern of connections. Axonal connections are initially set up during development by cues, which guide axons along specific pathways, and then specify connection sites within the target region. In recent years, dramatic progress has been made in identifying such cues molecularly. Based on this progress, current studies are elucidating the molecular logic of extracellular signals that set up connectivity, as well as intracellular pathways that interpret these signals. In the adult central nervous system, damaged axonal connections do not regenerate, even though peripheral nerves can regenerate efficiently. This is due at least in part to CNS inhibitors, some of which have now been cloned. This meeting will bring together the fields of development and regeneration, with the goal of facilitating synergistic overlaps in techniques, molecules and biology. Topics will include basic research on molecular cues, and resulting new approaches toward therapeutic axon repair.
Discounted Abstract Deadline: October 14 2002
Discounted Registration Deadline: December 13 2002
We gratefully acknowledge the generous grant for this conference provided by:
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS)
Grant No. 1 R13 NS045340-01
We appreciate the organizations that provide Keystone Symposia with additional support, such as marketing and advertising:
Click here to view more of these organizations
Special thanks to the following for their support of Keystone Symposia initiatives to increase participation at this meeting by scientists from underrepresented backgrounds:
Click here to view more of these organizations
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