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Presented By: Department of Human Genetics

Human Genetics Research Seminar Series

presenting Alex Pollen, PhD, Assistant Professor Neurobiology Developmental & Stem Cell Biology University of California, San Francisco

Monday, May 4, 2026
11:00am - 12:00pm
1020 Kahn Auditorium, BSRB

Alex Pollen, PhD
Assistant Professor
Neurobiology
Developmental & Stem Cell Biology
University of California, San Francisco
“Seminar Title TBD”

Hosted By: Xander Nuttle, PhD, Department of Human Genetics
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We study how genetic changes that accumulated over the last 6 million years of human evolution influence specialized features of brain development using single cell genomics, cerebral organoid models of ape brain development, and genome engineering.

Over the last six million years, human cognition has changed in remarkable ways to support symbolic language, long-term planning, cooperation on vast scales, and the rapid cultural accumulation of technology. During this time, patterns of brain development and life history changed to triple the number of neurons produced prenatally, extend synaptic plasticity through a prolonged phase of development, and restructure connectivity between brain regions. At the same time tens of millions of mutations accumulated as fixed changes in the human genome through the processes of selection and drift. A portion of this new genomic information guides the development of uniquely human traits and contributes to disease vulnerabilities shared by all humans. However, connecting human-specific mutations to recently evolved traits remains a major challenge because we lack experimental systems for comparative and functional studies of great ape cortical development. To identify genomic differences underlying unique features or vulnerabilities of the human brain, we are incorporating advances in single cell genomics and genome engineering with great ape cerebral organoid models of brain development. We are enthusiastic for new graduate students to join the team, and the lab is well suited for those with an interest in evolution, neuropsychiatric disorders, neuronal cell diversity, stem cell models, or bioinformatics.

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