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09/06/2026, 13:25Visual NeurosciencePoster
Background: Young people with vision impairment (VI) report lower well-being than their peers, but the mechanisms underlying this disparity are not well understood. Evidence for the effectiveness of existing emotional support is limited, and provision is often inconsistent. This study used qualitative interviews to explore factors that hinder or support well-being in adolescents with acquired...
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09/06/2026, 13:25Ocular Development and AgeingPoster
Purpose: Celastrol, a quinone methide triterpenoid isolated from Tripterygium wilfordii, possesses antioxidant, anti inflammatory and anti apoptotic properties, making it a promising neuroprotective candidate for retinal neurodegenerative diseases such as glaucoma. However, effective therapeutic rescue and preservation of retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) remain an unmet clinical need. The partial...
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09/06/2026, 13:25Disease MechanismsPoster
Leber congenital amaurosis type 4 (LCA4) is an early-onset inherited retinal disorder caused by pathogenic variants in AIPL1. Dysfunction of AIPL1 compromises the stability of phosphodiesterase 6 (PDE6), leading to non-homeostatic accumulation of cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP), which is strongly implicated in photoreceptor degeneration. Despite this, the initial cellular and molecular...
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09/06/2026, 13:25Disease MechanismsPoster
Retinitis Pigmentosa (adRP) is the most common Inherited Retinal Dystrophy (IRD). The autosomal-dominant form (adRP) accounts for 25-30% of the cases. adRP primarily affects rod photoreceptors and can progress into the central retina, affecting cone photoreceptor function and survival. We recently identified multiple genomic structural variants (SVs) at the previously unsolved RP17 locus on...
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09/06/2026, 13:25Genomic and Translational MedicinePoster
Background: Patients with biallelic mutations in RLBP1 gene develop a spectrum of autosomal recessive rod-cone dystrophies, for which there are currently no approved treatments. RLBP1 encodes cellular retinaldehyde binding protein 1 (CRALBP), a 36-kD protein that regenerates the visual chromophore 11-cis retinal. In this study, we aimed to assess the efficacy of RLBP1-mRNA therapy introduced...
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09/06/2026, 13:25Disease MechanismsPoster
Myopia is a leading global ophthalmologic disorder, with 50% of the population projected to be affected by 2050. Current management focuses on optical correction, neglecting the underlying pathological remodeling of posterior ocular tissues. Furthermore, animal models are limited in translational validity to human outcomes due to interspecies differences.
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To overcome these challenges, we... -
09/06/2026, 13:25Disease MechanismsPoster
Microglia are the resident immune cells of the central nervous system and are thought to play key roles in retinal disease. However, distinguishing microglia from infiltrating macrophages remains a challenge, as both cell types share overlapping transcriptional and functional profiles. This complicates interpretation of immune activation in retinal disorders such as age‑related macular...
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09/06/2026, 13:25Ocular Development and AgeingPoster
The vertebrate eye originates from a single forebrain-derived eye field, which splits into two optic vesicles during evagination. While this process is generally assumed to generate bilaterally symmetric structures, it remains unclear whether symmetry is established during this initial evagination or is subsequently rectified.
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To address this, we used zebrafish as a vertebrate model because... -
09/06/2026, 13:25Visual NeurosciencePoster
Vision plays a crucial role in navigation, particularly when tasks require spatial awareness and quick decision-making. Following loss of vision, compensatory approaches are needed to navigate, including use of other senses, memory of a journey (path retracing) and calculation of a homing path (path integration). Although it is commonly assumed that memory is too imprecise to serve as a...
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09/06/2026, 13:25Genomic and Translational MedicinePoster
Title: Extracellular matrix gene dysregulation and alternative splicing in Fuchs endothelial corneal dystrophy stratified by TCF4 repeat expansion status.
Purpose: Fuchs Endothelial Corneal Dystrophy (FECD) is characterised by abnormal extracellular matrix (ECM) protein accumulation and corneal endothelial cell (CEC) loss. Most European cases (~80%) are associated with a...
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09/06/2026, 13:25Disease MechanismsPoster
Introduction
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Pathological leakage and angiogenesis are hallmark features of diabetic retinopathy (DR), with vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) prominently driving disease. However, therapeutic targeting of VEGF is only fully effective for around half of patients, pointing to important yet unknown VEGF-independent mechanisms. Galectin-1, a β-galactoside-binding protein encoded by... -
09/06/2026, 13:25Genomic and Translational MedicinePoster
INTRODUCTION
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Keratoconus (KC) is a complex, progressive corneal ectasia and one of the most common causes of visual deterioration in young adults. Genetic risk contributes to the development of KC, but we lack understanding of the aetiology of this condition. Here we aim to complement our GWAS approaches with experimental investigation of familial KC, with the potential to identify rare... -
09/06/2026, 13:25Disease MechanismsPoster
Microphthalmia is a rare congenital eye defect characterised by a small, underdeveloped eye. Notably, microphthalmia exhibits genetic heterogeneity, in which mutations in different genes can result in a similar clinical phenotype. Although gene panel testing covering 147 genes is currently used by clinicians in the United Kingdom for the genetic diagnosis of microphthalmia, approximately 70%...
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09/06/2026, 13:25Disease MechanismsPoster
Glaucoma is the leading cause of irreversible blindness. The pathophysiology is characterised by damage to retinal ganglion cells (RGCs), typically associated with raised intra-ocular pressure. An arising theory is that retinal macroglia can contribute to the progression of glaucoma when they become dysregulated. The project aims to better understand the glia and RGC interactions using RNA...
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09/06/2026, 13:25Ocular Development and AgeingPoster
Purpose: Adult retinal pigment epithelial-19 (ARPE-19) cell line is widely used to study RPE physiology. Despite its common use, these cells show poor RPE-like characteristics including limited pigmentation and epithelial morphology. In the present study, we aimed to investigate the impact of the culture media on the morphology, pigmentation, and functional properties of the ARPE-19 cells,...
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09/06/2026, 13:25Disease MechanismsPoster
Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) and Alzheimer’s disease (AD) are both severe age-related disorders that are the leading causes of vision loss and dementia in older adults, respectively. The diseases share similar risk profiles; ageing, smoking, and cardiovascular dysfunction, as well as similar pathologic processes; chronic inflammation, lysosome dysfunction and amyloid accumulation....
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09/06/2026, 13:25Disease MechanismsPoster
Niemann-Pick disease type C (NPC) is a rare lysosomal storage disorder, most often caused by loss-of-function mutations in NPC1, resulting in pathological cholesterol and sphingolipid accumulation within late endosomes/lysosomes (LE/Lys). A recently-approved therapeutic, N-acetyl-L-leucine (NALL), was found to clear lysosomal lipids in NPC patient cells. NALL’s mechanism of action is not fully...
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09/06/2026, 13:25Visual NeurosciencePoster
During development, cells self-organise into functional tissues through local interactions, yet the mechanisms coordinating form with function remain poorly understood. Müller glia (MG), the principal glia of the retina, establish non-overlapping territories that span all retinal layers, providing metabolic support and synaptic regulation. How MG coordinate territorial organisation during...
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09/06/2026, 13:25Visual NeurosciencePoster
Glaucoma is primarily an ocular disorder, yet damage to the optic nerve causes widespread structural and functional alterations in the visual brain. Prior fMRI work suggests that the visual cortex maintains its coarse-scale retinotopic organization in glaucoma, but shows a significant reduction in BOLD amplitude—an alteration that persists beyond predictions based on perimetry. However, BOLD...
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09/06/2026, 13:25Disease MechanismsPoster
Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is the primary cause of legal blindness in the developed world. However, AMD remains incompletely understood due to a complex interplay of genetic and environmental factors and currently lacks an effective cure. Central to disease progression is degeneration of the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE), which is essential for photoreceptor homeostasis....
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09/06/2026, 13:25Disease MechanismsPoster
Introduction
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Retinitis pigmentosa (RP) affects approximately 1:4000 people, and 40% of RP cases remain genetically unsolved. We recently discovered complex structural variants (SVs) as the cause of RP17, and our lead hypothesis for the mechanism of disease is the RP17 SVs alter topological associated domain structure and result in ectopic contact of a retinal enhancer with GDPD1. To test... -
09/06/2026, 13:25Disease MechanismsPoster
Purpose: Retinitis pigmentosa 54 (RP54) is a severe inherited retinal dystrophy caused by pathogenic variants in PCARE, which encodes the photoreceptor cilium actin regulator protein (PCARE), essential for the outer segment (OS) disc formation. To date, PCARE mutations have been reported in ~40 families, and no treatment exists. This study aims to define the pathogenic mechanisms...
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09/06/2026, 13:25Ocular Development and AgeingPoster
The contact of glial cells with neurons is necessary for the development of the central nervous system. This process is facilitated by the distinctive morphologies of glial cells that allow precise spatial contact with neurons. Specifically, glial cells and neurons form functional compartments at the synapse where the glial projection ensheathes the pre- and post-synaptic terminals. Among...
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09/06/2026, 13:25Disease MechanismsPoster
Background:
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Variants in the CRB1 gene cause severe inherited retinal dystrophies, including Leber congenital amaurosis, retinitis pigmentosa, cone-rod dystrophy and macular dystrophy. CRB1-retinopathies represent the 10th most common cause of early-onset vision loss in the UK, yet no clinically approved treatments currently exist. While AAV-mediated gene therapy has shown promise,... -
09/06/2026, 13:25Disease MechanismsPoster
Excessive vascular permeability causes damaging tissue oedema in neovascular and inflammatory diseases and is, in part, driven by the vascular endothelial growth factor VEGF. Several molecular pathways have been implicated in VEGF-induced permeability signal transduction, including recruitment of a SRC family kinase by the VEGF-activated tyrosine kinase receptor VEGFR2 via the T-cell specific...
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09/06/2026, 13:25Disease MechanismsPoster
Experimental Autoimmune Uveitis (EAU) is a murine model of non-infectious posterior uveitis characterised by inflammation of the posterior segment, including the retina and ON. In this study, we characterised microglial cells within the optic nerve (ON) at early (e; 2–3 weeks post-immunisation, wPI) and late (l; 4–6 wPI) EAU phases using IBA1 as a marker of microglia and P2RY12 as a marker of...
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09/06/2026, 13:25Visual NeurosciencePoster
Scientific Abstract
Background – Glaucoma affects more than 60 million people worldwide and is a leading cause of irreversible blindness. While elevated intraocular pressure (IOP) is the primary modifiable risk factor for glaucoma, degeneration of retinal ganglion cell (RGC) continues even after IOP is reduced.This continued apoptosis of RGC is a shared pathway in glaucoma, retinal...
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09/06/2026, 13:25Genomic and Translational MedicinePoster
Disruption of genes essential to early eye development may lead to anophthalmia or microphthalmia (A/M) which are characterised by absent or underdeveloped eyes, respectively. A/M are clinically and genetically heterogeneous, with their aetiology still not fully understood. This results in a low molecular diagnostic rate (~20–30%), limiting clinical management and genetic counselling....
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09/06/2026, 13:25Disease MechanismsPoster
The retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) is essential to photoreceptor homeostasis and visual function. Daily RPE phagocytosis of photoreceptor outer segment tips (OS) is essential for photoreceptor renewal following photooxidative damage. Impaired degradation of phagocytosed OS in the RPE leads to accumulation of lipid-rich lipofuscin and RPE degeneration in the common vision-loss disease...
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32. Spatial proteomic profiling of immune cells in archived FFPE human eyes with ocular inflammationJakub Kubiak (Institute of Ophthalmology)09/06/2026, 13:25Disease MechanismsPoster
Inflammation of eye known as Uveitis is responsible for 15% of blindness in the western world, particularly affecting the working age population. Uveitis can be induced by infection but often is associated with autoimmunity that is not well understood. Inflammation occurring in the posterior region of the eye may cause blindness as it disrupts the delicate structure of the retina and damages...
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09/06/2026, 13:25Genomic and Translational MedicinePoster
Background
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Expansion of an intronic CTG repeat within the TCF4 gene (termed CTG18.1) is the most common genetic risk factor for Fuchs endothelial corneal dystrophy (FECD), an age-related corneal-specific eye disease. PureTarget is an amplification-free targeted long-read sequencing approach that enables simultaneous assessment of TCF4 repeat size, sequence composition and 5mC... -
09/06/2026, 13:25Visual NeurosciencePoster
Glaucoma is a progressive neuropathy causing retinal ganglion cell loss and visual field defects, with elevated intraocular pressure (IOP) as a major risk factor. Lowering IOP can slow glaucoma progression, but vision loss still occurs in some patients which led to the idea of neuroprotection in glaucoma , to preserve retinal ganglion cells and prevent apoptosis. This project investigates...
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09/06/2026, 13:25Disease MechanismsPoster
Neovascular age-related macular degeneration (nvAMD) is a leading cause of irreversible vision loss, with subretinal fibrosis representing a late and vision-threatening stage of disease progression. Although anti-VEGF therapies effectively suppress pathological neovascularisation and vascular leakage, they do not reliably prevent fibrotic scarring, and fibrosis can still develop despite...
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09/06/2026, 15:35Disease MechanismsPoster
Aim: To benchmark three deep learning-based retinal image registration methods RetinaRegNet, EyeLiner, and GeoFormer on the Fundus Image Registration (FIRE) dataset, comparing accuracy and computational efficiency using Mean Landmark Error (MLE) as the primary metric.
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Methods: The methods were evaluated under consistent conditions across three overlap-based categories: Class S (71... -
09/06/2026, 15:35Disease MechanismsPoster
Spatial transcriptomics has become an essential tool in retinal research, yet preservation of both tissue architecture and RNA integrity remains technically challenging for post-mortem human samples. Difficulties in working with enucleated globes include retinal detachment from retinal pigment epithelium layer and retinal folding, which commonly occur during dissection due to the retina’s thin...
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09/06/2026, 15:35Disease MechanismsPoster
The retina relies on a dense vascular network to meet its high metabolic demand. Impaired vascular function and insufficient vessel growth are key features of several sight-threatening retinal diseases. Although anti-VEGF therapies are the current gold-standard treatment, a substantial proportion of patients respond poorly, and retinal ischemia remains unresolved due to vessel loss and...
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09/06/2026, 15:35Disease MechanismsPoster
Luxturna was the first approved adeno-associated virus (AAV)-based gene therapy, however, patients exhibit progressive retinal atrophy following treatment. One proposed cause is a transgene-specific cytotoxic CD8+ T cell response. Notably, this is not observed in mice suggesting they lack comparable CD8+ responses, limiting their ability to recapitulate clinical observations. This project...
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09/06/2026, 15:35Disease MechanismsPoster
Purpose
Biallelic mutations in ARHGEF18 cause adult-onset retinal degeneration, but its retinal function is unknown. Arhgef18/p114RhoGEF is a RhoA exchange factor that regulates the mechanical stability of epithelial cell–cell adhesions. We therefore hypothesized that it supports retinal integrity by stabilizing cell–cell adhesion in specific retinal cell types. We investigated the...
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09/06/2026, 15:35Visual NeurosciencePoster
Individual neurons in the primary visual cortex (V1) respond strongly to visual stimuli. The evoked responses of these neurons can be modulated by the behavioural state of the animal, such as increases in arousal and locomotion. This behavioural state-dependent cortical activity is regulated by neuromodulators, including the well-studied cholinergic and noradrenergic systems. Recent work...
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09/06/2026, 15:35Disease MechanismsPoster
Cerebral blood vessels play a central role in supplying and regulating the disproportionately large amount of energy the brain requires for neurological function. They also protect the central nervous system by forming the blood-brain barrier (BBB), which shields neurons from pathogens and immune attack. This intimate functional interdependency between neurons and their associated blood...
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09/06/2026, 15:35Disease MechanismsPoster
Introduction
The commonest cause of failure in retinal reattachment surgery is the anomalous wound healing process called proliferative vitreoretinopathy (PVR). The development of measures to improve outcomes depends on an understanding of the cellular mechanisms involved.Methods
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We imaged retinectomy tissue from eyes of three patients with recurrent retinal detachment... -
09/06/2026, 15:35Disease MechanismsPoster
Dbl3 is an apical guanine nucleotide exchange factor that promotes polarised Cdc42 activation to stimulate the apical effectors MRCKβ and the Par3/6/aPKC polarity complex, and, thereby, organisation of the apical actomyosin cytoskeleton. Its overexpression also rescues apical phagocytosis in diseased retinal pigment epithelial (RPE) cells. Polarisation of epithelia is accompanied by...
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09/06/2026, 15:35Disease MechanismsPoster
Background RPE65-biallelic mutation-associated inherited retinal disease (RPE65‑IRD) presents with distinct retinal imaging features that evolve with disease progression, including whitish dots (WD), marble‑like pathology (ML), hypopigmented areas (HA), patchy chorioretinal atrophy (PCA), pigmented spicules (PS), and spotty irregular hyperpigmentation (SIHP). Quantification of these...
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09/06/2026, 15:35Disease MechanismsPoster
Genome editing encompasses the targeted modification of DNA, enabling insertions, deletions, or substitutions at defined genomic loci. Conventional approaches, however, rely on the generation of a double-stranded break (DSB), which limits both their precision and efficiency.
Prime editing, characterised as a "search-and-replace" genome editing technology, builds upon earlier CRISPR-based...
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09/06/2026, 15:35Disease MechanismsPoster
Introduction: Retinitis Pigmentosa (RP) is one of the most common forms of inherited retinal dystrophy (IRD) and a leading cause of blindness in the working-age population. Disease progression can be exacerbated by environmental light exposure. Variants in the RHO gene encoding rhodopsin, the light-sensitive G protein-coupled receptor that initiates phototransduction, are a major cause of...
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09/06/2026, 15:35Disease MechanismsPoster
Heterozygous changes within a mutation hotspot in RP1 are associated with autosomal dominant retinitis pigmentosa (adRP). Homozygous or compound heterozygous variations outside of this region are associated with autosomal-recessive retinitis pigmentosa (arRP). We have developed hiPSC-derived retinal organoid (RO) models of adRP-RP1 harbouring a common variant (p.Gln686*, KI) and an RP1 knock...
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09/06/2026, 15:35Genomic and Translational MedicinePoster
Anophthalmia and microphthalmia (A/M) are rare developmental eye disorders characterised by the absence or reduced size of the eye, respectively. These conditions are genetically heterogeneous, with over 150 causative genes identified, yet much of their genetic basis remains unresolved, resulting in only 20-30% of affected individuals receiving a genetic diagnosis. This highlights a critical...
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09/06/2026, 15:35Genomic and Translational MedicinePoster
Developmental glaucoma is a potentially blinding condition caused by raised intraocular pressure in babies and young children. It may be isolated or syndromic and is known to have a genetic basis, but in the UK the molecular diagnostic rate is less than 25%. Established causes of developmental glaucoma include pathogenic variants in CYP1B1, FOXC1, PAX6 and SLC4A11.
The 100,000 Genomes...
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09/06/2026, 15:35Disease MechanismsPoster
Microphthalmia, anophthalmia, and coloboma (MAC) are developmental eye disorders that remain one of the major causes of childhood blindness, affecting 1 to 4 in every 10,000 live births. While genetic heterogeneity of the MAC clinical spectrum is well recognised, many cases still lack an identifiable genetic diagnosis. Vitamin A deficiency has been highlighted as an environmental cause for MAC...
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09/06/2026, 15:35Disease MechanismsPoster
Inflammation is a major driver of fibrosis. In the eye, Mitomycin-C (MMC) is used in the clinic to prevent scarring following surgery to manage glaucoma. High inflammation levels before surgery is a significant risk factor for the development of fibrosis and subsequent treatment failure. Furthermore, in the presence of local inflammation, MMC is less efficient in modulating scarring, despite...
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09/06/2026, 15:35Disease MechanismsPoster
Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is a leading cause of irreversible vision loss in adults over 60 years. It can be classified into two main forms: neovascular and dry AMD. The hallmarks of dry AMD are the accumulation of drusen (yellow deposits composed of lipids and protein) and the disruption of the retinal pigmented epithelium (RPE) cells and photoreceptors, leading to cell death. The...
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09/06/2026, 15:35Ocular Development and AgeingPoster
Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is the leading cause of irreversible blindness in high-income countries. Although aging is the strongest known risk factor for AMD, the molecular mechanisms linking aging to disease pathogenesis remain poorly understood.
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The Information Theory of Aging proposes that aging is driven, in part, by a progressive loss of epigenetic information, in which DNA... -
09/06/2026, 15:35Ocular Development and AgeingPoster
Synaptic pruning is a neurodevelopmental checkpoint that occurs to eliminate excess neurons and refine circuits in the nervous system. The retina consists of highly organised networks of neuronal and glial cells that connect to pass visual information. However, the cellular and molecular processes behind synaptic pruning in the retina remain unclear. Glial cells, like astrocytes, microglia...
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09/06/2026, 15:35Disease MechanismsPoster
Hyalocytes are macrophage-lineage border immune cells located at the posterior hyaloid and vitreoretinal interface (VRI), a specialised compartment between the vitreous and neural retina. Clinical OCT frequently reveals punctate hyperreflective cell-like signals at this interface, but their cellular identity remains uncertain. These signals are often grouped under broad descriptive terms such...
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09/06/2026, 15:35Disease MechanismsPoster
Photoreceptors undergo continuous renewal to maintain visual function and retinal integrity. Each day, neighbouring retinal pigment epithelial (RPE) cells phagocytose the aged and damaged tips of photoreceptor outer segments (OS). Within the RPE, these components are degraded, while essential lipids and metabolites are recycled back to photoreceptors. This tightly regulated process supports...
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09/06/2026, 15:35Disease MechanismsPoster
Guided by multiple signalling pathways, vascular endothelial cells (ECs) closely align with alveolar epithelium to mediate gas exchange in the lung. By contrast, the molecular and cellular mechanisms that organise airway vasculature are poorly understood. Here, we have immunostained mouse lungs to reveal that the vascular, bronchiolar smooth muscle and epithelial compartments of the airways...
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09/06/2026, 15:35Visual NeurosciencePoster
Introduction
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A significant proportion of individuals with inherited retinal dystrophies (IRD) remain genetically unsolved. New technologies offer the opportunity to identify and characterise previously inaccessible areas of the genome that could harbour disease-causing variants. We investigated five families affected by autosomal dominant cone-rod dystrophy (adCRD); one family from the... -
09/06/2026, 15:35Disease MechanismsPoster
Retinopathy of prematurity (ROP) is a leading cause of neonatal blindness, characterized by hyperoxia-induced vascular regression followed by pathological neovascularisation. Restoring physiological revascularisation while preventing aberrant neovascular tuft formation remains a major therapeutic challenge. Although anti-VEGF-A therapy is the current standard of care, frequent treatment...
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09/06/2026, 15:35Ocular Development and AgeingPoster
In the field of ageing, protein aggregation and the downstream pathologies implicated in neurodegenerative diseases have been extensively studied in the brain. The retina, often termed the window to the brain, has been suggested to exhibit maladaptive processes similar to those seen in the brain, however, the extent to which aggregation-prone proteins accumulate in the healthy aged retina...
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09/06/2026, 15:35Disease MechanismsPoster
A specialised transcriptome is activated early during retinal development. Importantly, numerous splicing altering variants are associated with Inherited retinal diseases (IRD’s), like Leber Congenital Amaurosis (LCA), therefore, an improved understanding of retinal alternative splicing could help reveal underlying disease mechanisms. The inclusion of retina-specific exons is thought to be...
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09/06/2026, 15:35Visual NeurosciencePoster
This study investigates the role of vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) interneurons in adult ocular dominance plasticity, focusing on how different components of VIP signalling contribute to cortical network reorganisation following monocular deprivation (MD). While plasticity is most prominent during the critical period, the adult visual cortex retains a limited but functionally relevant...
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09/06/2026, 15:35Disease MechanismsPoster
Mitochondria play a vital role in the visual system, with functions that include ATP production, to meet the high energy demand of phototransduction in photoreceptors and support the retinal pigment epithelium role in the visual cycle. Other roles include maintenance of the redox balance and calcium/stress homeostasis as well as the organisation of these organelles being proposed to direct...
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09/06/2026, 15:35Disease MechanismsPoster
Birdshot chorioretinopathy (BCR) is a chronic, autoimmune form of posterior uveitis that targets the retina and can result in progressive visual deterioration or permanent blindness. It has a striking genetic association with the HLA A29 molecule, which plays a central role in disease susceptibility. As a result, BCR is widely regarded as a prototypical HLA linked autoimmune ocular...
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09/06/2026, 15:35Genomic and Translational MedicinePoster
Inflammation and fibrosis, which contribute to epithelial and endothelial dysfunction, are common pathological features of ocular diseases such as eye infections and age-related macular degeneration (AMD). Guanine nucleotide exchange factor H1 (GEF-H1) activates RhoA signalling to promote inflammatory and fibrotic responses (PMID: 35681428). Under physiological conditions, GEF-H1 expression is...
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Ah-Lai Law
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