About the VHIR
Here at the Vall d'Hebron Research Institute (VHIR) we promote biomedical research, innovation and teaching. Over 1,800 people are seeking to understand diseases today so the treatment can be improved tomorrow.
Research
We are working to understand diseases, to find out how they operate and to create better treatments for patients. Get to know about our groups and their lines of research.
People
People are the centre of the Vall d'Hebron Research Institute (VHIR). This is why we are bound by the principles of freedom of research, gender equality and professional attitudes that HRS4R promotes.
Clinical trials
Our work is not just basic or translational; we are leaders in clinical research. Enter and find about the clinical trials we are conducting and why we are a world reference in this field.
Progress
Our aim is to make the research carried out at the Vall d’Hebron Research Institute (VHIR) a driving force for transformation. How? By identifying new channels and solutions for the promotion of people's health and well-being.
Core facilities
We offer specialist support for researchers, internal and external alike, ranging from specific services to preparing complete projects. All this, from a perspective of quality and speed of response.
News
We offer you a gateway for staying up to date on everything going on at the Vall d’Hebron Research Institute (VHIR), from the latest news to future solidarity activities and initiatives that we are organising.
Speaker: Thomas Mortimer. Postdoctoral Fellow Stem Cells and Cancer Laboratory. Institut de Recerca Biomèdica Barcelona (IRB).
Abstract: A breakdown of mechanisms maintaining cellular, tissue and systemic homeostasis is a conserved feature of ageing. This decay includes a marked degeneration of daily rhythms in biological processes that are required to anticipate diurnal changes in the internal and external environment. Under homeostatic conditions, the daily rhythms of a tissue relies upon the cooperation between a cell's circadian clock and a multitude of tissue-intrinsic and systemic inputs. Often, these inputs originate from the circadian clocks of other tissues or cell types, giving rise to a crosstalk known as clock communication, many pathways of which are themselves altered by ageing. To provide new insights into this critical inter-tissue communication, Dr. Mortimer and colleagues constructed a mouse model with isolated communication between two specific circadian clocks. In his talk, Dr. Mortimer will begin by describing how this tool was used to identify the interactions between a tissue's circadian clock and systemic inputs, cataloguing for the first time the systemic dependencies of a tissue's daily rhythms. Then, he will explain his ongoing work to globally characterise and correct the changes that ageing provokes to these communication pathways. Finally, he will outline his future research plans to determine if the ageing of the circadian system reshapes the circadian biology of cancer in a manner pertinent to its prevention and treatment.
Reunió de Microsoft Teams
Unirse: https://teams.microsoft.com/meet/38123501609779?p=0dm2obbKaRr5lO5i5G
Id. de reunió: 381 235 016 097 79
Código de acceso: zj6jk7d7