Juan Angueyra

Portrait of Juan Angueyra

Juan Angueyra

Biology Assistant Professor
angueyra@umd.edu 2213 Biology-Psychology Bldg.
301 405 1605

Graduate Program Affiliations


Research Interests

Because of its potential applications in regenerative medicine, one of the ultimate goals of neuroscience is to build a nervous system from scratch. Despite incredible advances over the last few decades in identifying the different cell types and subtypes in each brain region ("parts list") and, in mapping the connectivity of the brain ("wiring diagram"), our ability to make functional organoids that contain many cell types is still in its infancy. The overarching goal of our group's research is to tackle two of the main hurdles in this field — the correct generation of parts and their appropriate wiring — by determining, during development, (1) how progenitor cells make decisions to acquire specific neural fates, (2) how these developing neurons make connections with specific postsynaptic partners and (3) which mechanisms are required to coordinate fate and connectivity locally and globally across an entire organ (patterning).

Our research focuses on the retina because of its physical and experimental accessibility and the near-complete mapping of retinal cell subtypes and connectivity. It also exploits the technical advantages of zebrafish, enabling both fast prototyping and deep mechanistic insights. Our ultimate goal is to use this developmental knowledge to establish methods and manipulations capable of directing cellular fate and guiding rewiring in the context of regenerative or replacement therapies for neurodegeneration or other conditions characterized by neuronal loss.


All Publications

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Latest Papers

Predictably manipulating photoreceptor light responses to reveal their role in downstream visual responses

| eLife
Author(s): Qiang Chen, Norianne T Ingram, Jacob Baudin, et. al
UMD Author(s): Juan Angueyra


Neurexin 3 is Essential for the Specific Wiring of a Color Pathway in the Mammalian Retina


Author(s): Vincent P Kunze, Juan M Angueyra, John M Ball, et. al
UMD Author(s): Juan Angueyra


Transcription factors underlying photoreceptor diversity

| eLife
Author(s): Juan M Angueyra, Vincent P Kunze, Laura K Patak, et. al
UMD Author(s): Juan Angueyra


Predicting and Manipulating Cone Responses to Naturalistic Inputs

| The Journal of Neuroscience
Author(s): Juan M. Angueyra, Jacob Baudin, Gregory W. Schwartz, et. al
UMD Author(s): Juan Angueyra


Identification of transcription factors involved in the specification of photoreceptor subtypes


Author(s): Juan Angueyra, Vincent P. Kunze, Laura K. Patak, et. al
UMD Author(s): Juan Angueyra


The tarantula toxin GxTx detains K+ channel gating charges in their resting conformation

| The Journal of General Physiology
Author(s): Drew C. Tilley, Juan M. Angueyra, Kenneth S. Eum, et. al
UMD Author(s): Juan Angueyra


S-cone photoreceptors in the primate retina are functionally distinct from L and M cones

| eLife
Author(s): Jacob Baudin, Juan M Angueyra, Raunak Sinha, et. al
UMD Author(s): Juan Angueyra


Retinoid isomerase inhibitors impair but do not block mammalian cone photoreceptor function

| Journal of General Physiology
Author(s): Philip D. Kiser, Jianye Zhang, Aditya Sharma, et. al
UMD Author(s): Juan Angueyra


Leveraging Zebrafish to Study Retinal Degenerations

| Frontiers in Cell and Developmental Biology
UMD Author(s): Juan Angueyra


Photoreceptor Outer Segment-like Structures in Long-Term 3D Retinas from Human Pluripotent Stem Cells

| Scientific Reports
Author(s): Karl J. Wahlin, Julien A. Maruotti, Srinivasa R. Sripathi, et. al
UMD Author(s): Juan Angueyra