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The HUN-REN KOKI and the Weizmann Institute in Israel co-organised a two-day symposium at the KOKI, 28-29 October 2024, which contributed to the promotion of long-term joint neuroscience research between Hungary and Israel.
Copenhagen not only provided an excellent venue, but also a wonderful summer weather during the last week of August for the 2500 participants of EMC204, the largest meeting of microscopists in Europe. The Hungarian Microscopy Society was represented by Techoorg Linda and eight microscopists, including four colleagues from KOKI.
Our institute is known as a brain research institute, one of the excellence in basic neuroscience research at home and abroad, so it is legitimate to ask where this special title comes from. Hair grows outside the skull, our brains nest inside the skull. Or can the cat in János Arany's ballad catch mice inside and out?
KOKI is special in many ways, and another fact confirms this. Our Institute now has HUN-REN ARP Ambassadors.
The Molecular Cell Metabolism Research Group led by Dr. Balázs Gereben and the Integrative Neuroendocrinology Research Group led by Dr. Csaba Fekete developed a new approach that may contribute to better healthcare for many patients with thyroid hormone (TH) related disorders. The preliminary results of the paper were presented by the first author, Richárd Sinkó, at the Annual Meeting of the European Thyroid Association (ETA) 2023, where the work was awarded the Society's Berlin-Chemie Menarini Young Investigators' Award.
The results, obtained in collaboration with the research group of Dr. Endre Nagy from the University of Debrecen and several Hungarian clinical endocrine centers have been published in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism.
Even a true understanding of nerve cells is impossible without exploring their connections. Besides each other, they connect with different cells that make up the nervous system. And we haven't even mentioned the effect of hormones in the blood serum! The latest work by Balázs Gereben's group, published in the Journal of Biological Chemistry, investigates the role of thyroid hormones in regulating brain function.
The latest work from Ádám Dénes' group was published in Nature Communications. The fact that microglia were the main subject of their niche study is fundamental. Still, the fact that we are not familiar with our often well-established experimental methods is not only worth noting for those who also use their acute brain slice model in their experiments.
There are not only many types of people, but also many types of awards, and the high science of statistics has proven that once you've won a great award, it's easier to win another. However, the award that Balázs Hangya received on 10 July at Semmelweis University is not one of the more commonly known types of award. So much so that Balázs did not even know it existed.