Description from Organizer: This year’s Symposium, entitled: Decoding the Regenerative Dialogue Between Inflammatory and Stem Cell Pathways, explores a fundamental question in regenerative biology: how inflammation and the immune system work together with tissue stem cells to drive repair and recovery after injury. While inflammation is often viewed as harmful, growing evidence shows that immune signals can also play an essential and instructive role in guiding tissue-resident stem cells to rebuild damaged tissues and restore function.
The program brings together researchers who study how stem cells and immune cells communicate during regeneration, using powerful experimental and translational models. Our speakers draw mainly on musculoskeletal tissues, including muscle, bone, and cartilage, where these interactions can be studied in exceptional detail. The symposium is designed to engage the wider stem cell, immunology, and regeneration communities, and to foster cross-disciplinary discussion around shared mechanisms and therapeutic opportunities.
Highlighted Topics
Inflammation as an instructional signal in tissue regeneration
Immune-stem cell communication during injury and repair
Stem cell activation, plasticity, and fate decisions in regenerative environments
Aging, chronic inflammation, and epigenetic remodeling of stem cells
Muscle, bone, and cartilage as model systems for regenerative inflammation
Osteoimmune and stromal-immune interactions in degeneration and repair
Injury-induced gene programs that coordinate inflammation and regeneration