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Parthiv Haldipur

Norcliffe Foundation

ORCID: 0000-0003-2865-8683

Publishes on Fetal and Pediatric Neurological Disorders, Cancer-related molecular mechanisms research, Neurogenesis and neuroplasticity mechanisms. 60 papers and 2.5k citations.

60Publications
2.5kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Consensus Paper: Cerebellar Development
Ketty Leto, Marife Arancillo, Esther B. E. Becker et al.|The Cerebellum|2015
Cited by 497Open Access

The development of the mammalian cerebellum is orchestrated by both cell-autonomous programs and inductive environmental influences. Here, we describe the main processes of cerebellar ontogenesis, highlighting the neurogenic strategies used by developing progenitors, the genetic programs involved in cell fate specification, the progressive changes of structural organization, and some of the better-known abnormalities associated with developmental disorders of the cerebellum.

Spatiotemporal expansion of primary progenitor zones in the developing human cerebellum
Cited by 195Open Access

We present histological and molecular analyses of the developing human cerebellum from 30 days after conception to 9 months after birth. Differences in developmental patterns between humans and mice include spatiotemporal expansion of both ventricular and rhombic lip primary progenitor zones to include subventricular zones containing basal progenitors. The human rhombic lip persists longer through cerebellar development than in the mouse and undergoes morphological changes to form a progenitor pool in the posterior lobule, which is not seen in other organisms, not even in the nonhuman primate the macaque. Disruptions in human rhombic lip development are associated with posterior cerebellar vermis hypoplasia and Dandy-Walker malformation. The presence of these species-specific neural progenitor populations refines our insight into human cerebellar developmental disorders.