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How DPAG is supporting our staff, students and community during the Coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak
General Teaching
24 March 2020
DPAG announces the closure of all buildings from Friday 27 March at noon and outlines how our department is operating during the pandemic.
DPAG Students win 2020 Goodger and Schorstein Awards
Awards and Honours EDI News Students
20 March 2020
Congratulations are in order to Britt Hanson and Dr Lukas Krone, who have won Goodger and Schorstein Awards from the Medical Sciences Internal Fund.
Support Oxford's Response to the COVID-19 Outbreak
General Research
19 March 2020
Funding for Oxford’s COVID-19 research requires unprecedented speed, scope and ambition. Please make a gift.
Prof. Dr. Nils Brose honours former teacher Marianne Fillenz in Memorial Lecture
EDI Events Head of Department's News
5 March 2020
The annual lecture is held in honour of one of the great physiologists of the last century, Marianne Fillenz. Fillenz was a devoted and much loved University Demonstrator in the Laboratory of Physiology and her lab was positioned at the forefront of the application of measuring chemicals that could be detected directly at the electrode.
Oxford Medical Students and DPAG tutors are setting the standard for neuroanatomy teaching
Awards and Honours EDI News Integrative Neuroscience Molnar Group News Students Teaching
5 March 2020
Pre-clinical Medicine Undergraduate students Kacper Kurzyp, Rafee Ahmed and Oliver Bredemeyer achieved Oxford University's best ever performance in The National Undergraduate Neuroanatomy Competition at the University of Southampton. Their participation was sponsored by DPAG with Professor Zoltán Molnár and Departmental Lecturer Dr Michael Gilder providing extra tuition to prepare them for their successful performances.
Communicating the messages of extracellular vesicles to the wider public
Outreach Research Students
2 March 2020
DPAG's Denis Noble has collaborated with Wood Group researchers in the Department of Paediatrics to produce innovative podcast talks on a prominent global platform, the Future Tech Podcast, following the successful DPAG hosted fourth annual Oxosome meeting. Following the release of the final podcast talk in February 2020, today we chart the story leading to these innovative pieces of public engagement.
OPDC visits local children's group to raise brain awareness
EDI News OPDC News Outreach Wade-Martins Group News
27 February 2020
Congratulations to DPAG's new Departmental Lecturers
Awards and Honours EDI News Head of Department's News Teaching
25 February 2020
Professor Eve Marder delivers the 2020 Mabel FitzGerald Prize Lecture
EDI Events Head of Department's News
24 February 2020
The annual lecture is held in honour of the pioneering physiologist and clinical pathologist, Mabel Purefoy FitzGerald.
New human heart model set to boost future cardiac research and therapies
Cardiac Theme Postdoctoral Publication Research
31 January 2020
DPAG's Dr Jakub Tomek and Professor Blanca Rodriguez's Computational Cardiovascular Science Team have developed a new computer model that recreates the electrical activity of the ventricles in a human heart. In doing so, they have uncovered and resolved theoretical inconsistencies that have been present in almost all models of the heart from the last 25 years and created a new human heart model that could enable more basic, translational and clinical research into a range of heart diseases and potentially accelerate the development of new therapies.
New target identified for repairing the heart after heart attack
Publication Research Riley Group News Simoes Group News
30 January 2020
An immune cell is shown for the first time to be involved in creating the scar that repairs the heart after damage. The Riley Group study was funded by the British Heart Foundation and led by BHF CRE Intermediate Transition Research Fellow Dr Filipa Simões.
New insights into how the brain makes sense of our constantly changing soundscape
Integrative Neuroscience Publication Research
16 January 2020
We experience a wide range of sounds at varying levels. The brain's auditory neurons constantly adapt their responses to changes in sound level to help us perceive and understand what we hear. King Group researchers have previously demonstrated how these neurons do this and have now produced new evidence for exactly where this happens in the brain and the perceptual consequences of these adaptations.
Malnutrition linked with increased risk of Zika birth defects
Integrative Neuroscience Molnar Group News Publication Research
15 January 2020
The severity of Zika virus-related deformations in babies has been shown to be affected by environmental factors such as maternal nutrition. The study was partially funded by a joint MRC Grant between DPAG's Professor Zoltán Molnár and Associate Professor Patricia Garcez of the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro.
Understanding the mechanisms driving a major type of immune cell to keep our gut healthy
Domingos Group News Postdoctoral Publication Research
10 January 2020
A news and views article published in Nature Immunology by Domingos Group researchers examines significant recent research revealing how group 3 innate lymphoid cells (ILC3s), the cells responsible for protecting the gut and maintaining intestinal homeostasis, are regulated. In doing so, they also reveal important new research avenues of ILCs activation in the body.
New target identified to help prevent dangerous heart rhythms after heart attack
Cardiac Theme Herring Group News Publication Research
8 January 2020
For many years, we have been using beta-blockers to neutralise a specific stress hormone and prevent dangerous heart rhythms following a heart attack. However, a new study led by Associate Professor Neil Herring and published in the European Heart Journal has uncovered evidence for an additional stress hormone acting as a key trigger for dangerous heart rhythms that is not currently targeted by these drugs.
Biomarker predicts which patients with heart failure have a higher risk of dying
Cardiac Theme Herring Group News Publication Research
7 January 2020
UCLA Researchers in collaboration with DPAG researchers from the Paterson and Herring Groups have identified a biomarker for increased risk of early mortality in patients with heart failure. Associate Professor Neil Herring is senior author.