Shumin Duan

Shumin Duan reveived his Ph. D. degree from Kyushu University in Japan in 1991 and received a postdoctoral training at University of Hawaii and University of California at San Francisco during 1997-1999. His research interests covers several important topics in neuroscience, including 1) the function and the mechanisms of neuron-glia interactions in health and disease; 2) the development, function, and plasticity of synapses; and 3) neural circuits basis of innate behaviors (including sleep and waking, emotion, and aggressive behaviors) and their related disease.

Dr Duan is an academician of Chinese Academy of Sciences and a member of the Academy of Sciences for the Developing World (TWAS). He served as the president of Chinese Society for Neuroscience from 2011 to 2019. He is currently the Editor-in-Chief of Neuroscience Bulletin (an official journal of Chinese Society for Neuroscience), the Advisory Board member of Neuron, and an editorial board member in several international neuroscience journals.

Engaged in neuroscience research for many years, Shumin Duan has made systematic innovations in neuron-glial cell interaction, synaptic development and function, and neural circuit analysis for precise regulation of brain function.




Duan Shumin

    Research directions include:

    1. The regulation mechanism of ATP released by glial cells on synaptic plasticity;

    2. The transport and release mechanism of neuronal presynaptic vesicles;

    3. The transport and release mechanism of microglia vesicles;

    4. Early neuronal network formation;

    5. The neural circuit basis of mood and mood-related diseases.

    The research methods mainly include:

    1. Single and double patch clamp recordings in cultured neurons and isolated brain slices;

    2. Morphological studies of confocal and electron imaging;

    3. Live-cell time-lapse imaging, combined with protein transfection with GFP for the study of the dynamic distribution of some important protein molecules, organelle movement and vesicle secretion;

    4. Using transgenic animals and conditional gene knockout mice produced by the use of glial cell specific molecules as promoters and the Cre-LoxP system to interfere with the specific molecules in the glia for investigating the roles of glial cells in various neurological functions;

    5. Combined optogenetics, animal behavior with virus reverse tracking to study the roles of specific types of neurons in emotion or disease-related neural circuits.

     



    AddressRoom 201, Building B, Medical Research Building, 131 Dong'an Road, Xuhui District, Shanghai

    Postcode200032

    Telephone/Fax021-54237056

    Emailshumin@fudan.edu.cn