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UID:3791-1771500600-1771506000@srp.med.stanford.edu
SUMMARY:Cytiva Office Hours
DESCRIPTION:You’re invited to Cytiva Office Hours \nWhen: Feb 19\, 2026 11:30AM – 1PM\nWhere: 1701 Page Mill Road\, Palo Alto\, CA (Lobby) \nBring your questions on: chromatography\, Western blotting\, protein interactions/kinetics\, cell culture\, molecular diagnostics or anything life science\, we’ll try to help! We’ll bring snacks and swags! \nCytiva Contact:\nNitish Agrawal\nnitish.agrawal@cytiva.com
URL:https://srp.med.stanford.edu/event/cytiva-office-hours-10/
LOCATION:1701 Page Mill Road\, 1701 Page Mill Road\, Palo Alto\, CA\, 94304\, United States
CATEGORIES:In Person
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://srp.med.stanford.edu/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/cytiva-feb-19.png
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UID:3817-1771502400-1771506000@srp.med.stanford.edu
SUMMARY:Wu Tsai Neuro Seminar w/ Staci Bilbo - SRP Livestream Locations
DESCRIPTION:Good morning SOM Stanford Research Park Community\, \nWe invite you to join us for today’s Neurosciences Seminar. The seminar will be held in-person on the main Stanford campus with 3 satellite viewing locations in Stanford Research Park. \n🗓️ Feb 19\, 2026\nLung-brain signaling in mental health outcomes\nStaci Bilbo\, PhD\nDuke University | Host: Karen Malacon (Monje Lab) \nThis seminar is co-presented by Psychiatry Grand Rounds | Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences \nKnowledge linking connections between the lung and the brain has been with us for millennia\, spanning ancient (ayurvedic) breathing practices aimed at breath awareness/control\, to the prevailing recognition in recent years that respiratory insults (e.g.\, infection\, allergens) can have lasting impacts on mood\, cognition\, pain\, and other aspects of brain function. Despite these links\, we know little about the mechanisms by which these two critical organs communicate. The lung has a small population of specialized sensory epithelial cells called pulmonary neuroendocrine cells (PNECs) that sit in clusters at the branch points of the major airways. PNECs are the first lung epithelial cell to differentiate during early development and have key morphogenic roles during the transition to an air environment after birth. Whereas PNECs share redundant immune secretary functions with several other lung cells\, they are the only innervated cells of the lung epithelium and were initially discovered based on hallmark secretary vesicles\, pointing to their neural signaling function. I hypothesize a primary function of PNECs is to communicate with the brain and are critical for the behavioral consequences of lung (dys)function broadly. To begin to investigate these questions\, we developed a model to efficiently ablate PNECs in mice and determined the brain and lung response to a common respiratory insult\, influenza infection. Our preliminary data suggests that lung activity detected via the PNECs is rapidly transduced to the CNS via vagal afferents\, which impacts brain function via the encoding of immune “engrams” (memories) within select brain regions\, which if reactivated\, can persistently impact behavior (e.g. anxiety). A primary goal of this research going forward is to comprehensively phenotype behavior (mood\, cognition\, pain) in the days and weeks after infection recovery and subsequent neural reactivation to determine the persistence of immune engrams within the brain. Then\, we will determine if we can modulate PNECs to impact immune engram formation/maintenance and alleviate behavioral consequences such as anxiety. A parallel goal is to examine these questions using a developmental lens. \n⏰ Time: 12:00-1:00 PM (PT)\nCome 15 minutes early (11:45 AM) to enjoy coffee\, cookies\, and conversation with the speaker and your colleagues (main campus location only) \n📍 Locations: \n\nMain Campus (in person): Gunn Rotunda (E241)\, Stanford Neurosciences Building\nStanford Research Park satellite locations:\n\n3172 Porter Drive\, Room 253\n3174 Porter Drive\, Room 140\n1070 Arastradero Road\, Room 211\n\n\n\nLearn about the SRP satellites » \nLearn more and get involved:\n\nNominate speakers for the 2026-2027 seminar series\nAbout the Wu Tsai Neurosciences Seminar Series »\nSign up to dine or meet with the seminar speakers »\nSee all upcoming and past seminars »\nSign up for Wu Tsai Neuro’s mailing list »\nJoin the #neuroscience slack channel »\n\n📅 Want to add all of the seminars to your calendar?\nDownload the calendar here or\, for live updates\, copy this link and use these instructions for subscribing to a public calendar: Outlook\, Mac\, Google Calendar. \nBest regards\, \nEmily Elrod (she/they)\nPrograms Associate | Wu Tsai Neurosciences Institute\, Stanford University
URL:https://srp.med.stanford.edu/event/wu-tsai-neuro-seminar-w-staci-bilbo-srp-livestream-locations/
LOCATION:Stanford Neurosciences Building\, 290 Jane Stanford Way\, Stanford\, CA\, 94305\, United States
CATEGORIES:In Person
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