Gene regulation in the developing brainstem and its variation in behavioural disorders

Description of the granted funding

The brainstem is an evolutionarily old brain region that controls key aspects of our behaviour, including mood, motivation, attention, and motor activity. Work with model organisms has shown that defects in the brainstem results in marked behavioural alterations. The brainstem is a complex neuronal mosaic, the cell types and development of which remain incompletely understood. This knowledge is highly needed, as important behavioural traits and neuropsychiatric disorders, such as attention deficit, hyperactivity and mood disorders, have developmental origins but the mechanisms remain obscure. In this project, we elucidate how gene regulation controls neuronal differentiation in the developing brainstem. We test the hypothesis that genetic variation in the developmental regulatory mechanisms can lead to innate behavioural variation in mammals and predisposition to brain disease. Our work has the potential to reveal neuronal mechanisms of normal and disturbed behavioural states.
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Starting year

2024

End year

2028

Granted funding

Juha Partanen Orcid -palvelun logo
600 000 €

Funder

Research Council of Finland

Funding instrument

Academy projects

Decision maker

Scientific Council for Biosciences, Health and the Environment
12.06.2024

Other information

Funding decision number

362600

Fields of science

Neurosciences

Research fields

Neurotiede

Identified topics

brain, neuroscience