08:30

Canada/Eastern

08:30 - 08:40 EST
CRCHUM Amphitheatre

Welcome : Vincent Poitout, PhD, DVM,

Director of research and innovation, CHUM and Scientific director, CRCHUM

08:40

Canada/Eastern

08:40 - 09:40 EST
CRCHUM Amphitheatre

KEYNOTE SPEAKER: Giles Yeo, PhD

Professor of molecular Neuroendocrinology and program leader at the MRC Metabolic Diseases Unit, University of Cambridge, UK Genetics of obesity: Can an old dog teach us new tricks? It is clear that the cause of obesity is a result of eating more than you burn. It is physics. What is more complex to answer is why some people eat more than others? Differences in our genetic make-up mean some of us are slightly more hungry all the time and so eat more than others. In contrast to the prevailing view, obesity is not a choice. People who are obese are not bad or lazy; rather, they are fighting their biology. Research Area His focus is on the study of obesity, brain control of body weight and genetic influences on appetitive behaviour

09:40

Canada/Eastern

09:40 - 10:10 EST
CRCHUM Amphitheatre

Alain Dagher, MD

Neurologist, Montreal Neurological InstituteProfessor, Department of Neurology and Neurosurgery Mc Gill University, Canada. Obesity as a cause of neurodegenerative disease Midlife obesity is the most common modifiable risk factor for Alzheimer’s Disease (AD) and vascular dementia, and it consistently relates to poorer cognition and brain atrophy. Obesity causes a decline in brain health through hyperlipidemia, hypertension, inflammation, and insulin resistance. Brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) reveals that individuals with higher body mass index (BMI), even in early adulthood, exhibit a loss of grey and white matter. These midlife obesity-associated brain changes are thought to represent an early lesion that predisposes to progressive neurodegeneration and dementia. We will present evidence from large datasets such as UK Biobank and Human Connectome Project that (1) visceral adiposity leads to cortical thinning and cognitive impairment via inflammation and cerebrovascular disease (2) the pattern of cortical tissue loss resembles that seen in AD and (3) weight loss from bariatric surgery may reverse these changes. I ntroduced by: Thierry Alquier

10:10

Canada/Eastern

10:10 - 10:45 EST

PAUSE

10:45

Canada/Eastern

10:45 - 11:05 EST
CRCHUM Amphitheatre

Marc Bilodeau, MD,  Principal Scientist, Immunopathology theme

Physician, Department of hepatology, CHUM, Principal scientist, Immunopathology theme, CRCHUM Research Area Introduced by: Sabri Ahmed Rial Rewiring a busy metabolic network: the case of hepatocellular carcinoma Research on the cellular physiology of the liver: role of glucose metabolism in the development of hepatocellular carcinoma and in hepatic homeostasis, effect of hepatic fibrosis on hepatocellular carcinoma. He uses cell culture models of mouse and human hepatocytes, liver cancer cell lines and animal models. Tissue and cell bank on autoimmune diseases of the liver: characterization of cytokines and cytoimmunological phenotype.

11:05

Canada/Eastern

11:05 - 11:15 EST
CRCHUM Amphitheatre

Yousef, Maali, PhD.

Postdoctoral fellow, CRCHUM, Laboratory of Naglaa Shoukri, Immunopathology theme Two transcriptionally and functionally distinct waves of neutrophils during mouse acute liver injury.

11:15

Canada/Eastern

11:15 - 11:45 EST
CRCHUM Amphitheatre

Julie St-Pierre, PhD

Interim Vice-President, Research and Innovation, Professor at the Faculty of Medicine. Ottawa University Metabolic vulnerabilities in advanced breast cancer Research area Her central research focus is the understanding of metabolic adaptation to physiological and pathological conditions, notably, the role of the master regulators PGC-1s in cancer, with a particular focus on poor outcome breast cancers. Introduced by: Réjean Lapointe

11:45

Canada/Eastern

11:45 - 12:05 EST
CRCHUM Amphitheatre

Thierry Alquier, PhD

Principal scientific and Theme leader, Cardiometabolic research theme, CRCHUM and professor at the Department of medicine, Université de Montréal Neuronal lipid droplets in the central control of energy homeostasis This presentation will highlight the previously unrecognized role of neuronal triglyceride metabolism and lipid droplets in the regulation of whole-body energy homeostasis by hunger-activated AgRP neurons. Field of research Thierry Alquier's research investigates metabolic signaling in hypothalamic regions that regulate energy homeostasis and their contribution to obesity with a particular focus on lipid sensing and astrocyte-neuron communication.

12:05

Canada/Eastern

12:05 - 12:15 EST
CRCHUM Amphitheatre

Manon Duquenne, PhD.

Postdoctoral fellow, Thierry Alquier and Ciaran Murphy-Royal laboratories Glucocorticoid receptors in astrocytes : Star players in energy homeostasis

12:15

Canada/Eastern

12:15 - 13:45 EST

LUNCH

13:45

Canada/Eastern

13:45 - 14:15 EST
CRCHUM Amphitheatre

Gillian Booth, MD

Professor, Institute of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation, Toronto University and researcher at St. Michael’s Hospital in Toronto. The weight of place. Urban environments and cardiometabolic risk. Urban environments and cardiometabolic risk. Research area Dr. Booth’s research focuses on health outcomes related to diabetes; specifically how socioeconomic, environmental and health care factors influence the risk of diabetes and its complications. Presented by : Lise Gauvin

14:15

Canada/Eastern

14:15 - 14:45 EST
CRCHUM Amphitheatre

Matthew Hill, PhD

Professor, Cumming School of Medicine, Department of Cell Biology and AnatomyFull Member, Mathison Centre for Mental Health Research and Education, Calgary University Endocannabinoids, Cannabis and Feeding Behavior Cannabis is well known to promote food intake, a process widely known as "the Munchies". Cannabis exerts its effects on physiology and behavior through its interaction with the endocannabinoid system. The ability of endocannabinoids, and cannabis, to influence feeding behavior appears to be multifactorial and involve multiple neural processes. This talk will review the current state of knowledge regarding how endocannabinoids and cannabis interact with feeding hormones and the neural circuits and behavioral mechanisms by which they promote food intake. Introduced by: Ciaran Murphy-Royal

14:45

Canada/Eastern

14:45 - 15:05 EST
CRCHUM Amphitheatre

PAUSE

15:05

Canada/Eastern

15:05 - 15:25 EST
CRCHUM Amphitheatre

John Stagg, PhD

Principal scientist, Cancer theme, CRCHUMAssistant professor, Faculty of pharmacy, Université de Montréal Targeting the adenosine immune checkpoint in cancer: is our model correct? Senior scientist at CRCHUM and Full Professor at UdM, Dr Stagg made seminal discoveries in the field of immuno-oncology. His work notably sparked the development of therapeutics agents targeting the adenosine immune checkpoint that are now in late-stage clinical trials. In this presentation, Dr Stagg will present new data highlighting the complex mechanism of adenosine-mediated immunosuppression and discuss how adenosine transport and metabolism regulates T cell function Introduced by: Sabri Ahmed Rial

15:25

Canada/Eastern

15:25 - 15:35 EST
CRCHUM Amphitheatre

David Allard, Ph.D,

Postdoctoral fellow, John Stagg laboratory, Cancer theme The CD73 immune checkpoint promotes tumor cell metabolic fitness

15:35

Canada/Eastern

15:35 - 16:35 EST
CRCHUM Amphitheatre

Panel

Panel: 30 years since the discovery of Leptin Giles Yeo, Matthew Hill, Alain Dagher, Patrick Malenfant, Novo Nordisk Canada Moderator: Thierry Alquier

    Panel

16:35

Canada/Eastern

16:35 - 16:40 EST
CRCHUM Amphitheatre

Vincent Poitout, DVM, PhD

Closing remarks and invitation to the cocktail

16:40

Canada/Eastern

16:40 - 18:30 EST
CRCHUM agora

Networking cocktail

Words from Vincent Poitout et Marie-Ève Desrosiers

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