Samsung Science & Technology Foundation will fund K-lab for the next five years for investigating the neural mechanism underlying mechanosensory feedback control of ingestion. We are very excited about the new discoveries that we will make based on this support!
How do we stop eating when we feel full? We found a mechanism by which the distension of the digestive tract prevents harmful overconsumption.
In addition to the chemosensation of taste, osmolality, and nutrient, mechanosensation in the digestive tract plays an important role. It provides the information on the intake rate and amount, for one thing. How this information is relayed to the brain and regulate appetite remains unclear.
We found that Pdyn-expressing neurons in the parabrachial neurons monitor both eating and drinking using mechanosensory signals arising from the upper digestive tract. These neurons then produce aversive and sustained appetite-suppressing signals to discourage the initiation of eating and drinking (rather than terminating already ongoing bouts) in part via signaling to the paraventricular hypothalamus.
Huge congrats to Dong-Yoon, Gyuryang, and Minyoo and all team members!
This paper was highlighted as the lead highlight in the June issue of Nat Rev Gastroenterol Hepatol.
A pop art impression of the gut-brain neural circuits underlying satiety, inspired by Kim et al., Nature 2020.
25-min talk about Kim et al. Nature (2020) paper, presented at the SSIB 2021 meeting, the Annual Meeting of the Society for the Study of Ingestive Behavior. Check out the SSIB 2021 website for more information (https://www.ssib.org/virtual/index.php).
The first and corresponding authors. (Photo credit: Shin-Young Yoon, Dong-A Ilbo)
The first students of K-Lab, Dong-Yoon and Han-Eol, won several awards in the international conferences and workshops held near the end of 2019.
Dong-Yoon won the best poster awards from (1) the 26th East Asia Joint Symposium on Biomedical Research (Oct 25, 2019) and (2) SNU Joint Workshop for Neuroscience (Dec 13, 2019).
Han-Eol won the outstanding paper award from the 6th end-of-year symposium of the Institute of Molecular Biology and Genetics (Dec 30, 2019).
Huge congratulations everyone, and we anticipate more coming in 2020!
Dr. Ivan de Araujo (Mt.Sinai School of Medicine), a leading researcher in the fields including gut-brain communications, visited K-Lab on Nov 14, 2019. We had much fun activities and discussions until the next day morning!
Our first research paper is now published in Advanced Science, featured as the front cover!
We present the “ZOOM” technique that enables scalable and isotropic expansion of biological samples with easily tunable ZOOM factors (up to 8x). Check out the magnified bacteria, cultured cells, C. elegans, mouse and human brain tissues, and more in the paper. ZOOM enables super-resolution imaging of samples with ordinary microscopes.
Huge congratulations to Han-Eol and Dongkil, who are the co-first authors of the paper, and Prof. Yan Lee, the co-corresponding author of the paper.
Ben received an award from the SNU Institute of Environmental Protection & Safety, for his excellence in safety education examination. Talent shows itself anywhere, indeed!
Minyoo, a PhD student in K-Lab and an alum of Korea University (Life Sciences and Brain/Cognitive Sciences) was selected as a recepient of Global PhD Fellowship Program, which will financially support him for the next 2-5 years! Huge congratulatulations to Minyoo!!
In the middle of hot and humid Korean summer, we held “Summer Workshop on Neural Circuitry” with the labs of Greg Suh (KAIST) and Jeongjin Kim (KIST). Fun and exciting rafting was followed by delicious BBQ, Korean pension-style poster presentations at night and talks in the next day.
Ben, an outstanding alum of Yonsei University, and the invincible goalie of its soccer team, joined K-Lab–now to conquer neuroscience! He has already been loved by the lab members for bringing the solutions. We are very excited to see his progresses as a scientist!!
We held “Winter Workshop on Neural Circuitry” with five other labs on Feb 19-20, 2019 in Riverheim, Gapyeong. Participated labs are the labs of Chihye Chung (Konkuk U), Daesoo Kim (KAIST), Greg Suh (KAIST), Hyosang Lee (DGIST) and Han Kyung Choe (DGIST), who are actively engaged with research in the neural circuit field. We had exciting presentation, discussion and networking times.