Research Seminars @ Illinois

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Tailored for undergraduate researchers, this calendar is a curated list of research seminars at the University of Illinois. Explore the diverse world of research and expand your knowledge through engaging sessions designed to inspire and enlighten.

To have your events added or removed from this calendar, please contact OUR at ugresearch@illinois.edu

Special Biological Physics Seminar-Hyun Youk "Slowed or Suspended Lives of Cells"

Event Type
Seminar/Symposium
Sponsor
The Physics Department
Location
The Rhondale Tso Seminar Room Loomis 236
Date
Apr 15, 2025   10:00 am  
Speaker
Hyun Youk, University of Massachusetts
Contact
Janice Benner
E-Mail
jbenner@illinois.edu
Originating Calendar
Physics - Biological Physics / iPoLS / STC-QCB Seminar

Why do all living systems eventually lose their ability to stay alive? And what defines the edge of viability — the point at which a living cell or organism can no longer restart life's essential dynamics?

In this talk, I will describe how my lab studies these questions by slowing down or suspending the lives of cells and organisms — through environmental perturbations like extreme cooling or starvation, or through developmental changes such as cellular differentiation. Using yeast and mouse embryonic stem cells, we probe how biological time — defined by the pace, directionality, and duration of life's non-equilibrium dynamics — breaks down.

 I will summarize three studies from our lab that uncover fundamental constraints on gene expression, self-replication, and viability. For example, in our ongoing work, we demonstrate — for the first time to our knowledge — that cells that have lost viability can regain it. This surprising result challenges the long-held assumption that losing viability is synonymous with death. Instead, we show that a reversible non-viable state exists — a state from which life's dynamics can spontaneously restart.

 These studies highlight conceptual links between physics, biology, and medicine. I will conclude by discussing future directions, including our current efforts to understand slowed life in multicellular systems like C. elegans, and longer-term plans to investigate dormant cancer cells — with the goal of uncovering quantitative principles that govern life's limits.

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