Rethinking Cell Differentiation and Development: A Unicellular Perspective
Organisers: Elena Casacuberta and James Gahan
Date: 6-9 December 2026
Location: Buxted Park, East Sussex, UK
One of the central questions in developmental biology is how different cell fates are generated from a single founding cell. Although great strides have been made in our understanding of this problem in animals, the evolutionary origins of this process are not understood. It is known that many unicellular organisms progress through different cell stages during their life cycle, known as temporal cell differentiation, and it has been hypothesized that spatial cell differentiation (as seen in animals) evolved from this more ancient differentiation-mode. A full understanding of how this occurred has been hampered by a lack of information on the basic principles underlying temporal cell differentiation in the closest relatives of animals, the unicellular holozoans.
In recent years, several studies have revealed that many of the genes and pathways directly related to development and cell fate in animals were already present in their unicellular ancestors. Moreover, many examples have shown the formation of specialized cell types in response to specific environmental ques and transient multicellular structures have been reported in many unicellular holozoan lineages. Therefore, recent discoveries strongly point towards an earlier origin of several developmental processes, including cell differentiation, than was previously thought and make a strong case that understanding the mechanisms underpinning “development” in these unicellular lineages will be key to understand the emergence of definitive animal cell differentiation and development.
The workshop will consist of sessions of talks and discussions centred around various aspects of development to unicellular holozoans. Each session will contain a mixture of researchers working on unicellular holozoans and those working on other eukaryotic systems who will provide alternative insights. Through these sessions the workshop will build knowledge aiming to produce a white-paper document outlining the emerging conceptual framework in the field, the major outstanding questions as well as seeding collaborative efforts to address these questions.
Organisers & speakers
Elena Casacuberta Institute for Evolutionary Biology, Spain
James Gahan University of Galway, Ireland
Detlev Arendt EMBL, Germany
David Booth University of California, San Francisco, USA
Thibaut Brunet Institut Pasteur, France
Pawel Burkhardt University of Bergen, Norway
Susana Coelho Max Planck Institute for Biology Tübingen, Germany
Alba Diz Muñoz EMBL, Germany
Omaya Dudin University of Geneva, Switzerland
Manuel Irimia UPF-CRG, Spain
Nicole King University of California, Berkeley, USA
Àlex de Mendoza Queen Mary University of London, United Kingdom
Florentine Rutaganira Stanford University, USA
Arnau Sebé-Padrós Centre for Genomic Regulation, Spain
Pauline Schaap University of Dundee, United Kingdom
Hiroshi Suga Prefectural University of Hiroshima, Japan
Katrina Velle UMass Dartford, USA
Renske Vroomans University of Cambridge, United Kingdom
Early-career researchers
We offer 10 funded places for early-career researchers (PhD, postdocs and PIs in the first three years of their first appointment) to attend our Workshops along with the 20 invited speakers. We just ask that you pay for your own travel costs. If you would like to attend please complete the online application form and include a one page CV and a letter of support from your supervisor. If your supervisor would prefer to send the letter directly to us please ask them to email it to workshops@biologists.com
All attendees are expected to actively contribute to the Workshops by asking questions at presentation sessions and taking part in discussions, as well as giving a short talk on their research.
Some travel grants are available for researchers that are based in Global South countries (list of qualifying GS countries ), on an application basis. Please contact us for more details.
About Buxted Park

The Workshop will be held at the beautiful Buxted Park in East Sussex which dates back to the 12th century. The current house was built in 1722 by Sir Thomas Medley and is an elegant Grade II Palladian mansion set in 312 acres of parkland. Over the years it has played host to a number of high profile visitors including William Wordsworth, Winston Churchill, and George V and Queen Mary. Whilst it was a health hydro in the 1960s Gregory Peck, Dudley Moore and Marlon Brando were regular visitors.
Buxted Park is less than 25 miles from Gatwick Airport and 60 miles from Heathrow Airport. There are direct trains taking 1 hour 10 minutes from London Bridge to the village of Buxted which is only a mile away from the hotel.
Buxted Park Hotel
Station Road
Buxted
East Sussex
TN22 4AY
Tel: +44 (0) 1825 733333





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