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Marjorie Lee Browne Colloquium

January 15, 2024 | 4:00 pm - 5:00 pm | East Hall

Department of Mathematics

Title:

Decoding Vision: Unraveling Photoreceptor Vitality & Degeneration through Mathematics

Abstract:

This talk will provide a brief overview of my mathematical research in photoreceptor degeneration and vitality at both the cellular and molecular level as well as the interactions and feedback mechanisms within and between these levels. Mathematical modeling has been used to study diverse biological topics ranging from protein folding to cell interactions to interacting populations of humans but has only recently been used to study photoreceptor degeneration, which occurs in age-related maculardegeneration (AMD) and retinitis pigmentosa (RP). There are many different maladies that can result in blindness but the ones that result from photoreceptor degeneration pose the biggest threat as there is no cure. Computer (in silico) experiments in this area have given researchers invaluable insights to mitigate blindness and, in some cases, re-directed experimental research. My mathematical models, often developed in collaboration with experimental researchers and/or their data, investigate experimentally observed photoreceptor death and rescue in retinal degeneration, the complex interrelated metabolic pathways in cones, and the impact of administered neurotrophic factors. Dynamical systems, optimal control, uncertainty and sensitivity analysis together with in silico experiments are used to analyze these systems of nonlinear differential equations. This work highlights the delicate balance of many aspects of the photoreceptor system including the inter-dependent and inter-connected feedback processes modulated by and affecting cone’s metabolism. My work provides a framework for future physiological investigations potentially leading to long-term targeted multi-faceted interventions and therapies.

Speakers

  • Professor Erika Tatiana Camacho
  • Manuel P. Berriozábal, Ph.D. 
  • María Antonietta Berriozábal, Endowed Chair, University of Texas at San Antonio

The Marjorie Lee Browne Colloquium was established in 1999 in the Department of Mathematics, in observance of Martin Luther King day. Every year this colloquium brings a distinguished speaker to campus to present a talk that highlights their research while also addressing the issue of diversity in the sciences. The speakers have included leaders in the DEI initiative within Mathematics, including several alumni of UM. The colloquium honors Marjorie Lee Browne, who received her Ph.D. in 1950. She was the third black woman to receive a Ph.D. in Mathematics, and the very first to receive a Ph.D. in this field from the University of Michigan.

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