The 109th Howard Taylor Ricketts Lecture
- When:
- Tuesday, May 21, 2024 4:00 pm - 6:00 pm
- Where:
-
Biological Sciences Learning Center, Room 109
Virtual
- Speaker:
-
Professor of Biochemistry and Molecular Biophysics and of Neuroscience
Columbia University’s Vagelos College of Physicians and SurgeonsPrincipal Investigator
Columbia University Zuckerman InstituteInvestigator
Howard Hughes Medical Institute - Description:
-
Charles Zuker, PhD will receives the 2024 Howard Taylor Ricketts Prize from the Biological Sciences Division and will give his lecture “The Body-Brain Axis.”
A reception will immediately follow the lecture in the BSLC lobby.
Dr. Zuker is known for his studies on how the brain represents our sensory experiences and how it transforms reception into perception. Over the past several years, his laboratory has identified the cells and receptors mediating all five basic taste qualities, and helped uncover the logic of taste coding, both at the periphery and in the brain. More recently, his lab has focused on the gut-brain axis, researching the neural basis for our craving and appetite for sugar and fat. His latest studies on the brain control of immune responses have uncovered new circuits in body-brain signaling, and how the brain monitors and modulates body inflammatory responses.
- Contact:
-
Megan Parker
(773) 702-5079
maparker@bsd.uchicago.edu - Notes:
-
The Howard Taylor Ricketts Prize is given annually in recognition of extraordinary achievement in any area of biomedical and biological sciences. The lecture series is named after Dr. Howard Taylor Ricketts, who was a pathologist at UChicago from 1902 to 1910. He was the first person to describe the tick-borne pathogen that causes Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever, as well as the related organism that causes typhus fever. While researching typhus in Mexico City, he contracted the disease and died at the age of 38. As a memorial to her husband, Myra Tubbs Ricketts established an endowed fund at the University in 1912 to support the Prize.