Our steering committee consists of our spokesperson, our vice-spokesperson, 2 PIs, our coordinator, a student´s ombudsperson (PI or postdoc, elected by our students) and 2 student representatives (1 PhD and 1 MD student). The members of the steering committee are committed to report to the DFG, mediate in case of conflicts, coordinate public outreach, manage all administrative hurdles and organize the educational program.
Members

Prof. Dr. Daniela Dieterich
Spokesperson RTG2413, Dean of the Medical Faculty, Director of the Institute for Pharmacology and Toxicology, & PI of Neural Plasticity and Communication
The work in my lab concentrates on the molecular and cellular underpinnings of protein homeostasis at the multipartite synapse and their consequences for brain function during aging. My major goals within the graduate program SynAGE is to guide young scientists along their ways to develop their very own line of research, to support the intersection of ideas across disciplines, and thereby to catalyze discovery.

Prof. Dr. Oliver Stork
Head of the Department of Genetics and Molecular Neurobiology, Institute of Biology, OVGU
My work is devoted to the understanding of molecular mechanisms that mediate information processing in the brain and the control of behavior. In my group we are particularly interested in long-term change in GABAergic interneurons that control local circuit activity as well as extended network activity patterns in the limbic brain system. Our focus lies on unraveling the intracellular pathways controlling homeostatic plasticity in both GABAergic and their excitatory target neurons. We address the role of these cells with molecular and physiological tools in cell culture, genetically manipulated mice and following acut viral interventions.

Prof. Dr. Constanze Seidenbecher
Committee member, LIN
I am a group leader at the Leibniz Institute for Neurobiology (LIN) Magdeburg. My scientific interests are devoted to synaptic molecules and the brain extracellular matrix and their role in neuroplasticity and cognitive functions.
I am member of the Board of directors of the Center for Behavioral Brain Sciences (CBBS) Magdeburg, steering committee member of the SFB „Neurobiology of motivated behavior“ and deputy speaker of the graduate school ABINEP. In 2019 I was elected as council member of the International Society for Neurochemistry (ISN).
My aim is to further support excellent young scientists – with a special focus on female researchers – by connecting, inspiring and promoting young careers in SynAGE and beyond.

Dr. Michael R. Kreutz
Committee member, LIN
My research in NPlast in Magdeburg and DOF in Hamburg is concerned with fundamental questions on how synapses communicate with the nucleus, how gene activity-dependent gene expression feeds back to synaptic function and how this is related to the formation of a cellular engram and last but not least how the nanoscale organization of the synapse determines functional properties in the context of learning and memory. We use a multi-disciplinary approach with studies ranging from single molecules to in vivo animal experimentation. We also address translational aspects where we try to understand whether the processes that we investigate might be relevant for disease. The Leibniz Group ‚Dendritic Organelles and Synaptic Function‘ at the ZMNH in Hamburg investigates how microsecretory systems and organelles in neurites are involved in synaptic function. We are interested in organelles like autophagosomes, lysosomes, and Golgi satellites and their local contribution to neurotransmission.

Prof. Dr. Dr. Anne Albrecht
PI at Neuroanatomy, Institute of Anatomy, OVGU & Ombudsperson SynAGE
My work aims for understanding neuronal mechanisms of stress resilience and vulnerability. Usually individuals cope well with aversive experiences, but if they become too intense or last too long, stress-induced neuropsychopathologies such as anxiety disorders or depression can occur. Using different models of stress in juvenile and adult rodents, we study how stress across the life span affects anxiety, learning and memory. Specifically we are interested on how such stress experiences shape local GABAergic interneuron circuits, signaling by modulatory neuropeptides as well as astrocyte-neuron-interactions in the dorsal and ventral hippocampus. To that end, we utilize biochemical and molecular tools such as high-resolution gene expression analysis with laser microdissection and quantitative PCR and combine it with testing emotional and cognitive functions in transgenic mice and after acute pharmacological and viral interventions.

Elisa Lancini
PhD Candidate Project 12, SynAGE PhD Representative
My work focuses on the role of the dopaminergic and noradrenergic systems in age-related episodic memory decline. Specifically, I investigate whether L-DOPA administration improves memory consolidation in healthy older adults. Furthermore, I will explore to what extent the variance of the MTL, the volume of medial temporal lobe memory structures and the volume/signal intensity of SN and LC mediate the memory outcomes.

Miguel del Angel
PhD Candidate Project 2, SynAGE PhD Representative
A good maintenance of autophagy has been linked to longer lifespan, and reduced age-related diseases in many model organisms, In my PhD project I am trying to find novel pathways that regulate this process, as well as potential interventions that could prevent cognitive impairment during ageing. For that, I use neuronal culture, as well as protein biochemistry and behavioural experiments.

Lena Haag
MD Candidate Project 12, SynAGE MD Representative
In my project I am focusing on the noradrenergic neuromodulatory system especially in preclinical Alzheimer’s disease. I use volume measures of specific brain regions reflecting a noradrenergic high or low content and analyze their associations to possible disease predicting factors CSF biomarkers, genetic and external risk factors in healthy and non-healthy elderly subjects within a structural equation model.

Dr. Anika Dirks
Scientific Coordination of RTG 2413 SynAGE
After studying Biochemistry at the Martin Luther University Halle, I did my PhD in Molecularbiology and Neurochemistry at the Leibniz Institute for Neurobiologie Magdeburg. During that time, my life focused on the presynapse-to-nucleus shuttling protein CtBP1.
Since 2017, I have worked as scientific coordinator at LIN and OVGU, especially at the center for behavioral brain sciences cbbs and the cbbs graduate program. I like to help young motivated students to complete their MD or PhD, which I am looking forward to continue and intensify at SynAGE.

Sandra Schinkel
Project assistant
Since June 2021 I am supporting Prof. Dr. Daniela Dieterich and SynAGE especially in financial concerns. I am looking forward to work with and assist young scientists on their way to become independent reseachers.