Friday 26 July
Keynote lectures
IUPS Keynote (Sponsored by SPS)
Respiratory and neural consequences for fish of a warmer and more carbonated future
GSK Prize Lecture (The Physiological Society)
Cortical HCN channels: function, trafficking and plasticity
Symposia
Paul Greenhaff (University of Nottingham, United Kingdom) and Bettina Mittendorfer (Washington University School of Medicine, United States)
Cardiac ß-adrenergic signalling in health and disease
Andrew Trafford (University of Manchester, United Kingdom) and Patrick Most (University of Heidelberg, Germany)
Current advances in structure and regulation of epithelial tight junctions
Radhakrishna Rao (University of Tennessee Health Science Center, United States) and Sachiko Tsukita (Osaka University, Japan)
Dendritic ion channel function and plasticity
Mala Shah (University College London, United Kingdom) and Michael Häusser (University College London, United Kingdom)
Developmental programming of cardiovascular and renal disease in adulthood
Jennifer Pollock (Georgia Regents University, United States) and Abigail Fowden (University of Cambridge, United Kingdom)
Hypometabolism, hypothermia and hibernation
Shi-Qiang Wang (Peking University College of Life Sciences, China) and Esa Hohtola (University of Oulu, Finland)
Intercellular communications in the vasculature: From physiology to pathophysiology
Christelle Guibert (Bordeaux Segalen University / INSERM, France) and Cor De Wit (University of Lübeck, Germany)
Neurotransmitter transporters: Impact on nerve cell excitability and function
Francisco Suárez (European University of Madrid, Spain) and Susan Amara (National Institutes of Health, United States)
Shedding light in the neurophysiological black box
Hiromu Yawo (Tohoku University, Japan) and Georg Nagel (University of Wuerzburg, Germany)
Understanding microcirculatory blood flow using quantitative approaches
Sylvie Lorthois (Institut de Mécanique des Fluides de Toulouse, France)
Plenary
IUPS Wallace Fenn Lecture
Optical deconstruction of fully-assembled biological systems