缅北强奸

Maia Kokoeva

Maia Kokoeva

Maia Kokoeva, Ph.D.

Associate Professor, Department of Medicine
Research Institute of the 缅北强奸 Health Centre, E02.7218
1001 Decarie Blvd., Montreal, QC, 听H4A 3J1

Tel: 514-934-1934 ext. 35360

maia.kokoeva [at] mcgill.ca

Biographical Sketch

Dr. Maia Kokoeva completed her undergraduate studies at the Department of Biology, Lomonosov Moscow State University and obtained her Ph.D. degree from the Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow. During her first postdoctoral fellowship at the Max Planck Institute for Biochemistry in Martinsried/Munich, Germany, under the supervision of Dr. Dieter Oesterhelt, she investigated sensory signal transduction in the archaeon Halobacterium salinarum. By employing molecular genetic techniques in conjunction with behavioral analysis, she uncovered the signaling pathways that mediate the chemotactic responses to a variety of chemical attractants including several amino acids. She then joined the laboratory of Dr. Jeffrey Flier at Harvard Medical School to continue her postdoctoral training with a focus on central regulation of energy balance in the mammals. Dr. Kokoeva was intrigued by the observation that obese rodents and humans treated with the neuropeptide ciliary neurotrophic factor (CNTF) show a reduction in body weight that is sustained well beyond termination of treatment, a phenomenon not seen with any other weight lowering drug. In an attempt to elucidate the mechanistic basis for this effect, she discovered that CNTF potently stimulates neurogenesis in adult hypothalamic structures that are important for the regulation of energy balance. Dr. Kokoeva was appointed Assistant Professor at the Department of Medicine of 缅北强奸 in summer 2008.

Keywords

Obesity, diabetes, hypothalamus, adult neurogenesis, neural plasticity, NG2-glia, neuroendocrinology, genetic mouse models

Research or Clinical Activities

While much is known about the molecular basis of hypothalamic control in mammalian energy homeostasis, neural circuit plasticity including changes in neural cell numbers has only recently been implicated in body weight regulation. We want to decipher the mechanistic underpinnings of long-term changes in body weight set points by exploring plastic changes in the brain circuits that control feeding.

We have previously shown that exogenous induction of hypothalamic cell proliferation is associated with weight loss. We also have demonstrated that cells proliferate on an ongoing basis in the adult hypothalamus, even in the absence of external cues such as growth factor administration. We are currently investigating the role of these constitutively born cells in energy homeostasis by employing in vivo cell ablation approaches in conjunction with electrophysiological and ultrastructural studies.

The long-term goal of my lab is to mechanistically understand why some humans can maintain their body weights strikingly constant over most of their adult lives while others are confronted with gradual or abrupt increases in fat mass. Our studies may thus provide new insight in the etiology of obesity and ultimately help to develop new strategies for the prevention and treatment of obesity-related diseases.

Selected Recent Publications

Robins SC, Trudel E, Rotondia O, Liu X, Djogo T, Kryzskaya D, Bourque CW, & Kokoeva MV 鈥淓vidence for NG2-glia derived, adult-born functional neurons in the hypothalamus 鈥 PLoS ONE, 8:e78236. (2013)

Robins SC, Villemain A, Liu X, Djogo T, Kryzskaya D, Storch K-F, & Kokoeva MV 鈥淓xtensive regenerative plasticity among adult NG2-glia populations is exclusively based on self-renewal鈥 Glia, 10:1735-47. (2013)

Robins SC, Stewart I, McNay D, Taylor V,听 G枚tz M, Ninkovic J, Briancon N, Maratos-Flier E, Flier JS, Kokoeva MV, & Placzek M. 鈥淎lpha-tanycytes of the hypothalamic third ventricle include distinct populations of FGF-responsive neural progenitors鈥 Nat. Comm. 27;4:2049 (2013)

Kokoeva MV, Yin H, Flier JS. Evidence for constitutive neural cell proliferation in the adult murine hypothalamus. J. Comp. Neurol.听 505: 209-220 (2007)

Kokoeva MV, Yin H, Flier JS. Neurogenesis in the hypothalamus of adult mice: potential role in energy balance. Science, 310: 679-83 (2005).

PubMed Publications 鈥

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