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BMS Seminar: Geometry-driven organisation in living matter, Dr Anna Erzberger, Department of Physics and Astronomy, Heidelberg University

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Location: A151, Medical School Building

Abstract: The spontaneous generation of patterns and structures occurs in many living systems and is linked to biological form and function. Such processes often take place on domains which themselves evolve in time, and they can be guided by or coupled to geometrical features. Using two different biophysical examples, I will discuss how geometry directs spatial organization in cellular and multicellular systems. I will discuss how boundary geometry controls bulk organisation in the developing mouse epiblast, and how contact area-dependent signaling interplays with cell shape dynamics.

Anna ErzbergerShort biography: Anna Erzberger obtained a PhD in theoretical physics working on the active hydrodynamics of the cytoskeleton during cell migration and cytokinesis at the Max Planck Institute for the Physics of Complex Systems, Dresden. In 2016, she moved to the Rockefeller University, New York, where she worked on the theoretical principles of self-organization during the development and regeneration of mechanosensory organs in the zebrafish lateral line as a Feodor-Lynen postdoctoral fellow in the group of A.J. Hudspeth. Since December 2020, Anna leads a theoretical physics group in the Cell Biology and Biophysics unit at the EMBL Heidelberg and is an affiliated junior group leader in the Department of Physics and Astronomy of the Heidelberg University since 2021. Her group uses different approaches from theoretical physics to identify general principles of biological organization and function across scales.

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