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adameykolab.bsky.social
Neural crest biologist interested in broad and deep questions about clockworks of nature.
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This is a really nice position with a great mentor. Highly recommended. Rush.

Here is our new review article: "The role of microheterogeneity in cell fate decisions in neural progenitors and neural crest" Check it out if you are curious about how cell cycle or transcriptional noise affect fate selection in cell lineages. www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...

If you want to run MERFISH spatial transcriptomics and you search for the optimized probe codebooks, here they are: www.science.org/doi/10.1126/...

A pyrosome

Parley.tv made a story about my work on plankton biodiversity: parley.tv/journal/igor...

One of the best parts of Gordon Conferences in Italy.

Another video of our feeding experiment using fluorescent beads and bryozoan colonies (Membraniopora sp.). 💫

Mediterranean zooplankton from Pula.

Tanya's @tclebedeva.bsky.social paper on endomesoderm specification in the beta-catenin-negative area of the Nematostella embryo is out! www.nature.com/articles/s41...

Flowering season in Vienna

Feeding bryozoans. The experiment with fluorescent beads. Helgoland, North Sea 🌊

Diversity of zooplankton.

Another try to post a video: starfish larva, 1 mm long. This is a brachiolaria stage.

This is true, but also - science or any other human activity doesn't need to be USEFUL. It's immensely valuable to understand the world around us for it's own sake. Same goes for humanities, arts, pure mathematics. Without this the world is just an empty vessel for maximizing shareholder value.

With a part of the Adameyko lab

Swedish west coast

A beautiful planet

Nice memories from Patagonian w-track

Super happy my PhD work is finally published! We describe SOX2+ adrenomedullary stem cells for the first time. Huge thanks to my first co-author for taking it to the finish line and to all the wonderful collaborators at @pituitarylab.bsky.social @adameykolab.bsky.social and beyond. See below 👇

Pretty amazing seed pods of Drooping star of Bethlehem (Ornithogallum nutans L.)

What is new in the neural crest domain? Which neural crest-related studies do you find fun and exciting? Let’s have an interesting discussion. I feel like I want to go back to look into the pigmentation patterns and evolution of multipotency.

When I have a writer’s block, this guy comes and helps.

Here is our Focus Issue at #NatureNeuroscience! I loved working on it! One of the many highlights was the highly collaborative spirit among the authors. A win for #openscience www.nature.com/neuro/volume...

Yep, this is about cell fate transitions in the nervous system.

These are really great reviews for those who plan single cell experiments in neuroscience.

(1) Hi, Bluesky! Don't miss Igor's thread about our recent preprint, it’s a very cool reading! Here I will try to go a bit deeper into the computational part of the study — our new method clone2vec, how we developed it, what it does, and what it doesn't do. Grab a drink, and let's go!

Beautiful study from the Kicheva lab BMP signalling self-organises neural crest induction & dorsal neural patterning via a temporal relay mechanism involving Lmx1a Also, useful stencil-based micropatterning technique for studying growing/migrating tissue formation www.cell.com/developmenta...

Our sweet cubozoan Tripedalia. Their rhopalia contain image-forming eyes and are bilaterally-symmetrical.

Let’s go!

We are interested in all aspects globally connecting the neural crest to evolution, biomedicine and specific sub-field of developmental biology. In this study we show the role of motor circuits in shaping neural crest-derived sympathetic nervous system: www.nature.com/articles/s41...

We have different hobby projects in the lab, and some of them focus on cnidarians. Here i filmed Cotylorhiza tuberculata jellyfish 🤩

A convenient outline of our story on clonal reconstruction of development:

Amazing