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职称:Professor
所属学校:University of Michigan-Ann Arbor
所属院系:Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology
所属专业:Molecular Biology
联系方式:734.647.4040
The major interest in my lab is to study the regulation of synaptic connections during development, maturity and aging. One major approach is to use state-of-the-art imaging methods to study the dynamics of synaptic proteins at single synapses in living animals. We are using a variety of fluorescent proteins (YFP,GFP) transgenic and synaptic proteins deficient mice to study the regulation of synaptic dynamics at simple and accessible synapse like the neuromuscular junction. In addition to new optical imaging tools, we are using innovative molecular techniques to eventually better understand the cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying synaptic plasticity at single synapses in normal and pathological situations. Dr. Akaaboune received his DEA and Ph.D. from the University of Pierre and Marie Curie (Paris 6) in Paris, France. He was postdoctoral fellow in Lichtman's laboratory at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, Missouri. Research Interests: Synaptic development and synaptic plasticity, postsynaptic proteins dynamics, and neuromuscular diseases. He has been awarded the highly prestigious Human Frontier Science Program Postdoctoral Fellowship, and he was a finalist in the 1999 James L. O'Leary Prize Competition in Neuroscience. He was also an NIH and French Medical Research Fellow.
The major interest in my lab is to study the regulation of synaptic connections during development, maturity and aging. One major approach is to use state-of-the-art imaging methods to study the dynamics of synaptic proteins at single synapses in living animals. We are using a variety of fluorescent proteins (YFP,GFP) transgenic and synaptic proteins deficient mice to study the regulation of synaptic dynamics at simple and accessible synapse like the neuromuscular junction. In addition to new optical imaging tools, we are using innovative molecular techniques to eventually better understand the cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying synaptic plasticity at single synapses in normal and pathological situations. Dr. Akaaboune received his DEA and Ph.D. from the University of Pierre and Marie Curie (Paris 6) in Paris, France. He was postdoctoral fellow in Lichtman's laboratory at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, Missouri. Research Interests: Synaptic development and synaptic plasticity, postsynaptic proteins dynamics, and neuromuscular diseases. He has been awarded the highly prestigious Human Frontier Science Program Postdoctoral Fellowship, and he was a finalist in the 1999 James L. O'Leary Prize Competition in Neuroscience. He was also an NIH and French Medical Research Fellow.