Our speaker will be Dr.
Alex Pinto, Research Scientist from Jackson Laboratory (USA).
He will be presenting "High-dimensional
profiling of cardiac cellular heterogeneity: Identifying novel cellular
protagonists of cardiac ageing and disease"
Abstract
Characterisation
of the cardiac cellulome—the network of cells that form the heart—is essential
for understanding cardiac development and normal organ function, and for
formulating precise therapeutic strategies to combat heart disease. Recent
studies have challenged assumptions about both the cellular composition and
functional significance of the cardiac non-myocyte cell pool, with unexpected
roles identified for resident fibroblasts and immune cell populations. However,
fundamental questions remain regarding the cellular composition of the heart.
We are yet to achieve fine-grained analysis of the full range of cells that
form the heart, and of the interactions between these cells; we have only
limited understanding of the role of cardiac cells and cell networks in tissue homeostasis,
development and disease. To address these gaps in our knowledge, we have
characterised the murine non-myocyte cardiac cellular landscape using
high-dimensional cytometry and single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-Seq). These
studies have revealed the diversity of cell types within the cardiac cellulome
and facilitated the development of novel techniques to isolate understudied
cardiac cell populations such as mural cells and glia. Our analyses have
revealed networks of intercellular communication as well as extensive sexual
dimorphisms in gene expression and cell abundances in the heart. These studies
offer new insights into the structure and function of the mammalian cardiac
cellulome and will inform new studies in cardiac cell biology.
Brief
Biography
Dr
Alexander Pinto is a Research Scientist at the Jackson Laboratory (USA). His
research group studies and seeks to therapeutically manipulate cardiac cells
and cell networks. Dr Pinto’s group completed the first systematic
characterisation of cardiac tissue macrophages in the heart and, building on
this, has profiled cardiac cellular heterogeneity, transforming our
understanding of the cell types that form the heart. Dr Pinto’s team recently
published the first transcriptomic analysis of the cardiac cellular ecosystem,
revealing the complexity and interconnectedness of cell populations in the
heart. Dr Pinto’s research employs data science approaches and novel genetic
tools to better understand cardiac cell networks in development and homeostasis
and how they may be manipulated to treat disease. Before joining the Jackson
Laboratory, Dr Pinto completed his postdoctoral training at the European
Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL, Rome, Italy) and the Australian
Regenerative Medicine Institute (ARMI, Melbourne, Australia).
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