Jon Clarke

Jon Clarke

Emeritus Professor, Group Leader



Biography:

Jon Clarke received his PhD at Bristol University after studying the Xenopus embryo spinal cord with Alan Roberts. He then moved to King?s College London to work with Nigel Holder on development and regeneration of the amphibian spinal cord before moving to work with Andrew Lumsden on the rhombomeric organisation of the chick embryo brainstem. In 1994 he took a lectureship in the Anatomy and Developmental Biology department at UCL. In 2000 he changed model system from the chick to the zebrafish embryo in order to take advantage of the superior transparency of the fish embryo to pursue live imaging studies of morphogenesis and neurogenesis in the early vertebrate CNS. His current interests are focussed on the regulation of neuroepithelial cell polarity and remodelling cell shape during neurogenesis. He was Head of Anatomy at King?s College London between 2008 and 2014.

Links:

Thompson Reuters Researcher ID: C-5347-2009
KCL PURE: https://kclpure.kcl.ac.uk/portal/jon.clarke.html

Related News:

There’s a time and a place for differentiation

11/07/19
Protrusive activity of newborn neurons organises long-distance pattern of differentiation

Selected Publications:

Hadjivasiliou Z, Moore RE, McIntosh R, Galea GL, Clarke JDW, Alexandre P (2019) Basal Protrusions Mediate Spatiotemporal Patterns of Spinal Neuron Differentiation. Dev Cell 49: 907-919.e10
Araya C, Häkkinen HM, Carcamo L, Cerda M, Savy T, Rookyard C, Peyriéras N, Clarke JDW (2019) Cdh2 coordinates Myosin-II dependent internalisation of the zebrafish neural plate. Sci Rep 9: 1835

Campo-Paysaa F, Clarke JD, Wingate RJ (2019) Generation of the squamous epithelial roof of the 4th ventricle. eLife 8

McIntosh R, Norris J, Clarke JD, Alexandre P (2017) Spatial distribution and characterization of non-apical progenitors in the zebrafish embryo central nervous system. Open Biol 7(2): 160312