Schering Stiftung

Project 

Cordelia Imig

Dissecting the Molecular and Morphological Requirements for Gut Hormone Secretion

Cordelia Imig

Dissecting the Molecular and Morphological Requirements for Gut Hormone Secretion


Why do we have butterflies in our stomach or feel nauseous before an important exam? Our digestive system plays an important role in influencing our behaviour via constant communication with the brain. A major form of information exchange is mediated by signalling molecules (hormones) that are secreted from ‘sensory’ enteroendocrine cells in the gut.

Despite a growing understanding of the signals that stimulate enteroendocrine cells, the process by which they secrete hormones is essentially unknown. The research project by the young scientist Dr. Cordelia Imig from the Max Planck Institute of Experimental Medicine in Göttingen therefore tries to identify key molecular players of the hormone release machinery in enteroendocrine cells. These findings will set the basis for a detailed understanding of the hormone signalling mechanisms that regulate pivotal body functions and have been implicated in the pathogenesis of multiple disorders including diabetes mellitus. Dr. Imig’s project is funded from 2017 to 2018 by a start-up grant of the Schering Stiftung as part of its program „BOOST – Young Investigator Fund for Innovative Research Ideas“.

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About C. Imig 

Dr. Imig möchte in einem Forschungsprojekt Eiweißbausteine identifizieren, die als Teil der sogenannten „Freisetzungsmachinerie“ die Hormonsekretion vermitteln.

17.04.2018, Christiane Böhm, Göttinger Tageblatt

Cordelia Imig works a neuroscientist at the Max Planck Institute for Experimental Medicine in Göttingen. She studied Biology and completed the international Neuroscience Program in Göttingen. She joined the department of Nils Brose at the Max Planck Institute of Experimental Medicine and received her doctorate degree in 2013.

Cordelia Imig at Max Planck Institute for Experimental Medicine in Göttingen.

Young Investigator Fund 

Promotion of young researchers — Series

Start-up grants to fund promising research ideas by young scientists in the fields of biochemical, neuroscience or immunology basic research.

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