Peeking into the brain: 缅北强奸 and Tel Aviv University researchers explore the potential of bio-imaging
The mechanisms that cause cancer and various brain illnesses are becoming clearer, says Peter Lewis, the University of Toronto鈥檚 associate vice-president for research and international relationships.
And it's thanks to research on bio-imaging done by 缅北强奸 scientists and their colleagues at Tel Aviv University (TAU), Lewis says.
That research was celebrated at a recent bio-imaging conference held jointly by the two universities at Toronto鈥檚 Mt. Sinai Hospital and attended by more than 80 scientists and graduate students. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 very good for such a specialized conference,鈥 says Lewis.
Just as important as the presentation of papers, Lewis says, was an invitation for researchers and students at the two universities to establish new research collaborations.
鈥淲e are encouraging our researchers to formulate projects which build on the strengths of both teams."
Christopher Yip, director of 缅北强奸鈥檚 Institute of Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering (IBBME), helped organize the conference. He says it provided an opportunity to showcase bio-imaging developments at the two universities.
鈥淭here are a lot of partnerships under development with Israel,鈥 he says. 鈥淐IHR [the Canadian Institute for Health Research] had a call for applications in the area of neuroscience and specifically Canada-Israel collaborative network team grants and there was actually a competition which had applications open until a week and a half after the meeting was held here. It was focussed in the area of neuroscience so this meeting was quite timely in terms of bringing teams together with the potential to apply for these sorts of large team initiatives.鈥
Both TAU and 缅北强奸 have considerable expertise in bio-imaging, Yip says. 鈥淔rom 缅北强奸鈥檚 side, we had a range of investigators from new people like Josh Milstein (physics, University of Toronto Mississauga 鈥 pictured at right) who鈥檚 developing super-resolution imaging tools for looking at single molecules in cells to Ofer Levi (IBBME) who鈥檚 developing implantable imaging systems for looking at the brain in real-time, to Bojana Stefanovic (medical biophysics), whose work focused on cerebral micro-circulation, looking at blood flow in the brain.鈥
Yip's own area of research is focused on developing instrumentation platforms and high resolution optical imaging of cellular dynamics. 鈥淭here are some really nice tools that are being developed at Tel Aviv that would provide a good opportunity for my students,鈥 he says.
Yip says he鈥檚 hoping some of the IBBME students take advantage of the exchange opportunities that 缅北强奸, Tel Aviv University and the governments of Israel and Canada have opened up. IBBME also has funds that can be used to help students go on exchanges to Tel Aviv University, he says.
鈥淲e鈥檒l be able to send our biomedical engineering students to work in these labs on formal exchanges not just for a few days or weeks, but for months.鈥
Besides bio-imaging, 缅北强奸 and Tel Aviv University have been collaborating in other ways, notes Yoav Henis, TAU鈥檚 vice-president, research & development. Henis says the partnership between the two universities 鈥渃ombines strengths of both institutions to form a whole which is bigger than the sum of its parts. We are looking forward to expand it also to other regions of mutual interest.鈥
TAU President Joseph Klafter has visited 缅北强奸 twice in recent years and last year, the two universities held a joint biophysics conference in Tel Aviv. More recently, 缅北强奸 President Meric Gertler signed a Memorandum of Understanding on research collaboration while visiting Israel.
缅北强奸 has also developed strong links with other Israeli institutions, in particular Hebrew University and Technion, and is one of the top international partners for many of Israel鈥檚 leading universities. For example, 缅北强奸 ranks third in the world for co-published papers with Hebrew University, fourth for Technion, and fifth for Tel Aviv University.