[BIC-announce] FW: REMINDER: Dr. Chattarji, Killam lecture "Impact of Stress on the Amygdala", Tuesday Nov 25 - The fear of fear itself: Impact of stress on the amygdale
Jennifer Chew, Ms.
jennifer.chew at mcgill.ca
Tue Nov 25 09:45:33 EST 2008
PLEASE DISCARD IF THIS IS A DUPLICATE. THANK YOU. JENNIFER
Jennifer Chew
McConnell Brain Imaging Centre
MNI - WB317
3801 University Street
Montreal, Qc H3A 2B4
Telephone: 514-398-8554
Fax: 514-398-2975
________________________________
From: MNISTAFF - Montreal Neurological Institute Staff
[mailto:MNISTAFF at LISTS.MCGILL.CA] On Behalf Of Enza Ferracane, Ms.
Sent: Tuesday, November 25, 2008 9:37 AM
To: MNISTAFF at LISTS.MCGILL.CA
Subject: REMINDER: Dr. Chattarji, Killam lecture "Impact of Stress on
the Amygdala", Tuesday Nov 25
Please plan to attend the Killam lecture on Tuesday, November 25 at 4 pm
in the deGrandpre Centre
"The fear of fear itself: Impact of stress on the amygdale"
Dr. Sumantra Chattarji
National Centre for Biological Sciences
Tata Institute of Fundamental Research
Bangalore, India
Professor Sumantra Chattarji is a member of the faculty in the
Neurobiology Division of the National Centre for Biological Sciences in
Bangalore, India. He received his Master's degree in Physics in 1986
from the Indian Institute of Technology, Kanpur, India. He then went on
to do a PhD in Neuroscience (1993), under the supervision of Terry
Sejnowski, at the Johns Hopkins University and Salk Institute. After
post-doctoral research at Yale University and Massachusetts Institute of
Technology (MIT), he started his own laboratory at NCBS in 1999.
His laboratory studies the effects of stressful experiences on synapses,
and cells in the amygdala, by using a combination of behavioral,
neuroanatomical, genetic engineering and electrophysiological
techniques. His research has identified several novel neural correlates
of stress-induced plasticity in the amygdala, which are strikingly
different from those observed in the hippocampus. These findings suggest
that prolonged stress leaves its mark by enhancing both the
physiological and structural basis of synaptic connectivity in the
amygdala, thereby triggering the emotional symptoms observed in
stress-related psychiatric disorders.
More recently, he was part of an international team that used a mouse
model to reverse the symptoms of Fragile X Syndrome, the most common
form of heritable mental retardation and the leading identified cause of
autism. Since 1999 he is also a visiting scientist in Susumu Tonegawa's
lab at MIT. Professor Chattarji was awarded an International Senior
Research Fellowship by The Wellcome Trust in 2003. He is a member of the
Council of the Molecular and Cellular Cognition Society (MCCS) and
serves as the Secretary of MCCS-Asia.
For more biographical information, see
http://www.frontiersin.org/neuroscience/profiles/sumantrachatterji/detai
l/
For more information about his research, see
http://www.ncbs.res.in/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=135&Ite
mid=145
Elizabeth Kofron, PhD
Associate Director
Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital
Suite 636
3801 University Street
Montreal, Quebec, Canada H3A 2B4
Tel: 514-398-2316
Fax: 514-398-8248
elizabeth.kofron at mcgill.ca
Assistant: 514-398-1903
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