INSTITUT DE BIOLOGIE DU DEVELOPPEMENT DE MARSEILLE

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Congratulation to our young and talented doctors!

3 motivated and talented students successfully defended their thesis between February and July 2023.
Date de publication

IBDM welcomes motivated and talented students every year and offers them the opportunity to do thesis work in a dynamic and interdisciplinary environment. We support students to conduct independent research and to contribute to the advancement of knowledge in biology.

A look back at the latest students who have been promoted to doctor:

Olena VARUK

Title of the thesis: Highlighting phenotypic diversity within a Drosophila mitofusin allelic series mimicking mutations associated with Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease type 2A
Thesis supervisor: Thomas Rival

Team Kerkerian-LeGoff: Cellular Interactions, Neurodegeneration and Neuroplasticity

Thesis defended on March 30, 2023, ED: Life and Health Sciences, Health Biology – Neuroscience Specialty

Fanny CHAZAL

Title of the thesis: Deciphering the nature and mode of action of the mechanisms involved in temporal patterning in Drosophila wing disc epithelial progenitors.
Thesis supervisor: Cédric Maurange

Team Maurange: Neural stem cell plasticity

Thesis defended May on 12, 2023, ED: Life and Health Sciences, Health Biology – Developmental Biology Specialty

Marie FALQUE

Title of the thesis: Contribution of subventricular zone derived neuroblasts to myelin regeneration in the adult mouse brain: impact of tissue mechanical properties.
Thesis supervisor: Pascale Durbec

Team Durbec: Stem cells and brain repair

Thesis defended on June 23, 2023, ED: Life and Health Sciences, Health Biology – Neuroscience Specialty

Categories

Lastest publications

And yet it diffuses!

Free diffusion of Wnt ligands can polarize target cells at distance in C. elegans embryos.

SEMINARS

Juna Como

Actin is a cytoskeletal protein that is conserved in all

JOB OPPORTUNITIES

TWITTER

24/04/2024

And yet it diffuses!

Free diffusion of Wnt ligands can polarize target cells at distance in C. elegans embryos.