Category Archives: News

Medal winner interviews: in Development

The Waddington Medal is the only national award in Developmental Biology. It honours outstanding research performance as well as services to the subject community. The medal is awarded annually at the BSDB Spring Meeting, where the recipient presents the Waddington Medal Lecture. The 2019 winner is Kate Storey, please read Kate’s interview here.

In 2016, the BSDB introduced the Cheryll Tickle Medal, which is being awarded annually to a mid-career, female scientist for her outstanding achievements in the field of Developmental Biology. The 2019 awardee is Bénédicte Sanson, please have a read of Bénédicte’s  interview here.

Autumn communication 2019

Welcome from our new chair

Dear members of the BSDB – I have recently taken over as President/Chairman of our society from the wonderful Ottoline Leyser and will try my hardest to do as good a job as she in advocating and looking after the interests of developmental biologists in the UK.  Please let me know urgent things that you think I need to know about and that you’d like me to act upon.
I have heard that the EDBC meeting in Alicante was a really great meeting, and am happy that many BSDB members were able to attend. I would have loved to have been at this first European Developmental Biology meeting for several years but couldn’t attend because I had tonnes of teaching that week.  Please be sure to note what are the highlights of this meeting (as well as things that don’t work so well) because the BSDB is hosting the next one of these meetings in the UK in 2023 and we want to make it a big success. The meeting itself will be co-organised with other European developmental biology societies, and we look forward to working with them on this.
Hoping to meet with lots of you in Warwick next March at our annual Spring meeting.  In the meantime good luck with all your science and here’s hoping that all your 3rd referees are kind ones.
Paul Martin

 

Upcoming meetings in 2020!

Registration for the Spring 2020 BSDB/Genetics society meeting is now live!

All details about this fantastic meeting can be found here. Please bookmark this page to keep up to date with plans for our annual meeting

 

Our Autumn 2020 meeting will be held jointly with the International Society for Differentiation. It will take place on 13-16 Sept 2020 in the beautiful location of Valletta, Malta and will be organised by Liz Robertson, Josh Brickman & Sally Lowell. BSDB Conference grants will be available for our members. We have a great line up of speakers for this meeting-  details to be released soon.

 

Hello, Goodbye, Hello, Goodbye…

All members of the committee want to take this opportunity to thank Ottoline Leyser for her dedication and efforts during her time as the BSDB chair. Its been great having your help during our various transitions! We also welcome Paul into his new role!

In addition, we have had a change in the treasurer role this year, saying goodbye to Chris Thompson and hello to Cynthia Andoniadou. A huge thanks to Chris for keeping our finances in check over the last five years! We also have Andy Oates leaving the committee this autumn, so thanks &y for your input and enthusiasm over the last five years.

Please keep an eye out for future nominations to join the committee and contribute the running of our society and the organisation of our meetings. We always strive to obtain a broader representation of our membership as possible, both in terms of geographical and model organism representation. So… if you are a plant developmental biologist- please stand up!

 

Waddington medal lecture 2019:

For those who couldn’t make it to the Spring lecture this year, or for those wanting to watch Kate Storey’s inspiring lecture again by following this link to our YouTube channel. There you will also find previous talks that we have recorded from our meetings

 

PlanS delayed by a year

In our Spring newsletter, we featured and article looking into how PlanS might impact society journals as it becomes implemented. It is an initiative set up by a consortium of research funders called cOAlition S and aims to rapidly promote the transition of publishes to a fully open access model. While this is widely supported by the community, there are concerns about how this will effect journals operating on a non-for-profit model, who re-insert funds gained from their journals back into the community. A key example for us as developmental biologists, is the Company of Biologists who generously provide funds to the BSDB and other academic societies, as well as supporting the community through the provision of travel grants, conference organisation and the maintenance of the Node (as well as many other things!). The decision of cOAlition S to delay implementation by a year will provide a welcome breathing space to publishes who are supportive of the underlying principles of open access, but nevertheless require more time to make the necessary changes to their publishing models.

“With effect from 2021, all scholarly publications on the results from research funded by public or private grants provided by national, regional and international research councils and funding bodies, must be published in Open Access Journals, on Open Access Platforms, or made immediately available through Open Access Repositories without embargo.”

cOAlition S

In addition to delaying implementation until 2021, the consortium have said that they won’t immediately place a cap on open access charges that journals will be able to charge to their authors. In addition, they have changed the rules around hybrid journals, in the hope that this will allow partly paywalled journals to have an easier transition to becoming fully open access.

Cancer Research UK’s new investment in paediatric cancer research

At this year’s Spring meeting, we had Sheona Scales from Cancer Research UK come to discuss with meeting attendees about their funding schemes. They have recently got in touch with us to follow up on the feedback they received. 

It has been a couple of months since Cancer Research UK attended the BSDB spring meeting. I would like to say thank you to you for your input and suggestions at the meeting, it has been vital in shaping our work.
I’m delighted to let you know that we’re increasing our investment in paediatric cancer research to drive progress in this field, by launching two new significant funding calls. We would like to invite applications from researchers from all disciplines, including developmental biology, to apply their knowledge and expertise to paediatric cancers:
Children and Young People’s Innovation Cancer Awards
We’re looking for innovative approaches that will transform our understanding of paediatric tumour biology and develop new ways to treat, detect and prevent paediatric cancer.
Areas of focus may include the basis of tumour initiation and progression, discovery of novel biomarkers, and development of more effective and less toxic therapies to improve quality of life.  
Eligibility: Any discipline, from early career to established researcher.
Funding up to £1m for up to 3 years
Expression of interest deadline: 6 December 2019
 
Apply here
 
Stand Up To Cancer-Cancer Research UK Paediatric New Discoveries Challenge 
Together with Stand Up To Cancer, we’re welcoming applications from multi-disciplinary, multi-institutional, trans-Atlantic teams that want to pursue a step change in understanding the drivers of paediatric cancers and develop novel or repurposed medicines, treatment strategies or technologies. 
With a clear line of sight to the clinic, these projects will have the potential to significantly impact paediatric cancer patients, including teenagers and young adults. Further funding will be available to support translational or clinical studies for  the most promising research.
Eligibility: teams must be led by at least one researcher from a US institution and one from a UK institution. 
Funding up to £1m for 2 years
Expression of interest deadline: 6 December 2019
 
Apply here

Bénédicte Sanson – Winner of the 2019 Cheryll Tickle Medal.

In 2016, the BSDB introduced the Cheryll Tickle Medal, which is being awarded annually to a mid-career, female scientist for her outstanding achievements in the field of Developmental Biology.

The BSDB is proud to announce the 2019 awardee Bénédicte Sanson. Due to family commitments, Bénédicte was unable to be at the Spring meeting this year to receive the medal in person, but look out for her interview that will soon appear on the Node. 

After a PhD in Paris on the molecular mechanisms of mRNA processing in phage, Bénédicte Sanson switched to Drosophila developmental genetics for a postdoc in Cambridge at the MRC-LMB. During her four-year postdoc with Jean-Paul Vincent (1994-1998), she investigated key aspects of Wingless signalling (the homologue of vertebrate Wnt-1) in development.  Through this work, she became aware that the mechanisms underlying cell sorting at compartmental boundaries remained elusive.  This fostered a long-standing interest in morphogenesis, which became the focus of her independent research group when awarded a Wellcome Trust Career Development Award in 1998, hosted in the Department of Genetics, Cambridge. Since then, Bénédicte has built up an internationally recognized research group, obtaining a Lectureship in 2009, then a Readership in 2018, in the Department of Physiology, Development and Neuroscience. In 2011 and then in 2017, she was awarded a Wellcome Trust Investigator Award to work on the mechanisms of cell sorting and collective cell movement in vivo.

Bénédicte has made key contributions to the field of developmental signaling, including demonstrating that the adhesion and signaling activities of Armadillo (the homologue of vertebrate Beta-catenin) are separable (Sanson et al., 1996) and elucidating novel signaling regulations at the parasegmental organizer in Drosophila embryos (Desbordes and Sanson, 2003; Sanson, 2001; Sanson et al., 1999). More recently, the work of her group has focused on understanding the fundamental processes driving tissue morphogenesis during development. Their work on tissue-scale forces showed that an extrinsic axial force extends the main body axis in Drosophila embryos, acting in parallel to actomyosin-dependent polarized cell intercalations (Butler et al., 2009). Next, they identified the source of this extrinsic force as caused by the invagination of the endoderm at the posterior of the embryo (Lye et al., 2015). Their work on cell sorting demonstrated that actomyosin-based mechanical “barriers” stop cells from invading adjacent compartments, pioneering CALI on GFP in Drosophila embryos to inactivate Myosin II subcellularly (Monier et al., 2010). They further showed that actomyosin-based barriers also order cells during axis extension (Tetley et al., 2016). Recently, the work of her group has shed light onto how actomyosin-driven tension can orientate cell divisions at compartmental boundaries (Scarpa et al., 2018). They also investigated how epithelial folding and actomyosin-enrichment are coupled downstream of Wingless signaling at boundaries (Urbano et al., 2018).

Underlying all of this work is a clear understanding that morphogenesis is dependent on both genetic and physical inputs. As a consequence, Bénédicte’s group often pioneers new methodologies to follow developmental processes quantitatively, and at multiple scales. Their approaches include computational methods to automatically track cell behaviours in real time, for thousands of cells; light sheet imaging (SPIM) to analyse morphogenetic events at the scale of the whole embryo; and laser cuts to probe and manipulate tissue tension. By combining such imaging and computational techniques, the lab continues to investigate how cell intrinsic and extrinsic forces integrate to shape developing tissues. Recently, Bénédicte’s group started developing computational models in collaboration with physicists and mathematicians, to explore the more mechanical aspects of morphogenesis.

In addition to her research contributions, Bénédicte has taught in a range of molecular and developmental genetics courses. Since her appointment in 2009, a significant fraction of her teaching for the University of Cambridge has been for the first year course in Veterinary Anatomy, contributing to the practical element of the course, where the students dissect the different organs and tissues. Other contributions include the active support of postdoctoral careers, both through a previous appointment at the Wellcome Trust to evaluate candidates for early career fellowships, and as Postdoc Committee Chair for her Department.

Selected papers:

Butler, L. C., Blanchard, G. B., Kabla, A. J., Lawrence, N. J., Welchman, D. P., Mahadevan, L., Adams, R. J. and Sanson, B. (2009). Cell shape changes indicate a role for extrinsic tensile forces in Drosophila germ-band extension. Nat Cell Biol 11, 859-864.

Desbordes, S. and Sanson, B. (2003). The glypican Dally-like is required for Hedgehog signalling in the embryonic epidermis of Drosophila. Development 130, 6245-6255.

Lye, C. M., Blanchard, G. B., Naylor, H. W., Muresan, L., Huisken, J., Adams, R. J. and Sanson, B. (2015). Mechanical Coupling between Endoderm Invagination and Axis Extension in Drosophila. PLoS Biol 13, e1002292.

Monier, B., Pelissier-Monier, A., Brand, A. H. and Sanson, B. (2010). An actomyosin-based barrier inhibits cell mixing at compartmental boundaries in Drosophila embryos. Nat Cell Biol 12, 60-65.

Sanson, B. (2001). Generating patterns from fields of cells. Examples from Drosophila segmentation. EMBO Rep 2, 1083-1088.

Sanson, B., Alexandre, C., Fascetti, N. and Vincent, J. P. (1999). Engrailed and hedgehog make the range of Wingless asymmetric in Drosophila embryos. Cell 98, 207-216.

Sanson, B., White, P. and Vincent, J. P. (1996). Uncoupling cadherin-based adhesion from wingless signalling in Drosophila. Nature 383, 627-630.

Scarpa, E., Finet, C., Blanchard, G. B. and Sanson, B. (2018). Actomyosin-Driven Tension at Compartmental Boundaries Orients Cell Division Independently of Cell Geometry In Vivo. Dev Cell 47, 727-740 e726.

Tetley, R. J., Blanchard, G. B., Fletcher, A. G., Adams, R. J. and Sanson, B. (2016). Unipolar distributions of junctional Myosin II identify cell stripe boundaries that drive cell intercalation throughout Drosophila axis extension. Elife 5, e12094.

Urbano, J. M., Naylor, H. W., Scarpa, E., Muresan, L. and Sanson, B. (2018). Suppression of epithelial folding at actomyosin-enriched compartment boundaries downstream of Wingless signalling in Drosophila. Development 145.

BSDB Newsletter – Spring 2019

Please find the 2019 BSDB newsletter here!

The annual newsletter of the BSDB forms an essential summary of all that has happened over the previous year, including past and upcoming society meetings (articles 5 and 6), secretary and treasurer’s reports (articles 3 and 7), incoming committee members (article 4) and 2018 award winners (articles 11-14). At last year’s Spring meeting, a few members came to me to say how much they felt developmental biology was of great importance for the teaching of biological sciences. As an initial exploration into this issue, Bethan Clark has nicely summarized the opinions of previous Gurdon summer student awardees (article 15). Our Gurdon summer student program continues to go very well, with another set of exciting research projects that were undertaken last summer. Please take the time to have a look through their reports and see what they got up to this time around (article 16).

In this year’s AGM at the Spring meeting, we on opened a discussion around the subject of Open Access publishing. This is a highly pressing issue, as the cOAlitition S group are moving forward with PlanS to be implemented by 2020. Essentially, this will mean that researchers supported by specific funders (including the ERC, major research councils and the Wellcome Trust) will be required to publish only in entirely open access journals. For more on what this will mean for non-for-profit community journals such as those of the Company of Biologists, please see articles 8 and 9. One initiative that the Company of Biologists have launched to support the wider commenting of pre-prints is the PreLights platform, read more about this in article 10.

Remember, Ito explore the BSDB newletters of the last 10 years, they are archived on our website.