ISSCR 2026

Date & Time

8-11 July, 2026

Location

Montréal, Canada

Tags

Neuronal Cell Cultures
Organoids
Functional Phenotyping
Disease Modeling
Pharmacology & Toxicology

ISSCR 2026 is one of the landmark annual meetings in stem cell research, bringing together the global community to share breakthroughs, exchange ideas, and explore the latest advances across the field. Covering topics from basic stem cell biology to disease modeling, drug discovery, engineering, and clinical translation, it is a key meeting for staying close to where stem cell research is heading.

As every year, we are excited to be there, connecting with the community, discussing new ideas, and support your research and next discovery. Join us at our booth, innovation showcase, and posters to discover how next-generation HD-MEA technology brings functional insights to stem cell research, and learn what's new in the field.

Meet the MxW Team

Dr. Francesca Puppo

Field Application Scientist | MaxWell Biosystems (Switzerland)

Dr. Laura D'Ignazio

Head of Commercial Excellence and Engagement | MaxWell Biosystems (Switzerland)

Dr. Marian Hruska-Plochan

Scientific Business Developer | MaxWell Biosystems (Switzerland)

Dr. Silvia Oldani

Head of NAM | MaxWell Biosystems (Switzerland)

Dr. Fraser McCready

Field Application Scientist | MaxWell Biosystems (Switzerland)

Dr. Marie Obien

CCO | MaxWell Biosystems (Switzerland)

MxW Booth

Come visit us at booth 101 to find out how MaxWell Biosystems supports stem cell research with scalable high-content functional electrophysiology, delivering high-resolution insights and quality data you can trust. Stop by to connect with the team, explore what is new, and get a glimpse of what is coming next.

Innovation Showcase

Join us for this Innovation Showcase to explore scalable functional assays for disease modeling and drug discovery with iPSC-derived neural cultures and brain organoids, powered by next-generation HD-MEA technology. From recent platform advances to translational organoid research in space, the session will highlight new ways to capture functional insights from network to subcellular scale.

Register using the form below!

Agenda

Welcome & Introduction – Dr. Laura D’Ignazio

Recent Developments at MaxWell Biosystems – Dr. Marie Obien

Invited Talk – Dr. Aline Martins

Q&A Session – All speakers

Closing Remarks – Dr. Laura D’Ignazio

July 9th, 2026 | 12:30 PM - 1:30 PM

Next-generation Disease Modeling and Drug Discovery with Brain Organoids: Scalable Functional Assays From Lab To Space

Neurological disorders such as Alzheimer’s disease remain a major global health challenge, highlighting the urgent need for more predictive, human-relevant models. Induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC) neural systems, including 2D neuronal cultures and 3D brain organoids/assembloids, are transforming our ability to study brain development, aging, and disease mechanisms. However, unlocking their full potential requires technologies capable of capturing neuronal function across multiple scales.

MaxWell Biosystems’ High-Density Microelectrode Array (HD-MEA) technology enables label-free, high-resolution recordings of neuronal activity from networks down to single cells and subcellular signals. With the MaxOne and MaxTwo platforms, researchers can generate robust, reproducible datasets for in-depth functional characterization, phenotyping, and compound screening. Here, we will highlight recent developments that scale cell-culture experiments, enable automation-ready workflows, and expand support for organoids and New Approach Methodologies (NAMs).

In this Innovation Showcase, Dr. Aline Martins will also present pioneering insights from the International Space Station Cortical Organoid Research (ISSCOR) mission. Cortical organoids derived from Alzheimer’s disease patients were exposed to long-term spaceflight to accelerate aging. Molecular analysis and HD-MEA electrophysiology reveal how space-induced stress alters neuronal activity and pathways linked to neurodegeneration, opening new avenues for modeling age-related processes and accelerating more predictive, translational therapeutic strategies.

Dr. Laura D'Ignazio
Head of Commercial Excellence and Engagement | MaxWell Biosystems (Switzerland)

Bio

Dr. Laura D’Ignazio is Head of Commercial Excellence & Engagement at MaxWell Biosystems AG. She earned her PhD at the University of Dundee and completed her postdoctoral training at the Lieber Institute for Brain Development, where she worked on X-linked Dystonia-Parkinsonism (XDP) and developed the first ventral-forebrain organoid model of the disease. Trained as molecular biologist, she brings hands-on experience in stem cells, neural organoid models, and neuroscience. In her current role, Laura drives user success through commercial excellence, engagement, and community building, helping researchers translate high-density microelectrode array (HD-MEA) data into scientific impact. Her interests include human iPSC-derived neural models, and phenotyping and screening workflows.

Dr. Marie Obien
CCO | MaxWell Biosystems (Switzerland)

Bio

Marie Obien is the Chief Commercial Officer (CCO) and a founding member of MaxWell Biosystems. Marie leads the company’s global commercial strategy, sales, business development, marketing, product management, channel partnerships, and customer success. A specialist in electrophysiology, Marie brings strong expertise in microelectrode arrays and complementary techniques, including the gold-standard patch-clamp method. She is the lead author of the most frequently cited review on MEA technology and has played a key role in shaping its adoption in neuroscience and drug discovery. Marie earned her PhD in Electrical Engineering from the Nara Institute of Science and Technology, Japan, and received neuroscience training as a postdoctoral researcher at RIKEN. She also completed the Global Innovation Program in Silicon Valley, focusing on business development and entrepreneurial leadership.

Dr. Aline Martins
Space Technologies Director - ISSCOR - Integrated Space Stem Cell Orbital Research Center - Sanford Consortium for Regenerative Medicine/UCSD

Bio

Dr. Aline Martins is a biologist specializing in translational medicine, with expertise in translating experimental challenges from the clinic to the bench side, spanning downstream services to upstream technologies. She earned a degree in Biological Sciences followed by a PhD in Biotechnology, with a focus on Functional Cancer Proteomics. She conducted her doctoral research within the Department of Surgery (Liver Transplantation) at the University Hospital HUWC/UFC, with experimental work carried out at the University of Siena (UNISI), Italy. From 2022 to 2024, Dr. Martins served as a Staff Scientist at The Scripps Research Institute in the laboratory of Dr. John Yates, where she developed methods in Single Cell Proteomics (SCP) with translational applications for clinical research and biological discovery. Currently, she is faculty within the Department of Regenerative Medicine at UC San Diego and serves as Director of the Integrated Space Stem Cell Orbital Research (ISSCOR) Center at UCSD. In addition, she is Chief Scientific Officer (CSO) of Doxa Space LLC. Dr. Martins’ work integrates proteomics and regenerative medicine to advance scientific innovation in space medicine and space biology.

Poster
Presentations

Dr. Francesca Puppo

Field Application Scientist | MaxWell Biosystems (Switzerland)

TBD

A multiscale HD-MEA workflow to quantify network, excitability, and propagation phenotypes in midbrain organoids

Abstract

Human iPSC-derived midbrain organoids are emerging as 3D models to study dopaminergic neuron development and dysfunction in midbrain-associated disorders, including Parkinson’s disease (PD) and related synucleinopathies. In these conditions, phenotypes can manifest as progressive shifts in excitability, network dynamics, and signal propagation, potentially preceding overt neurodegeneration. However, electrophysiological assays for organoids must combine throughput, longitudinal stability, and high spatial resolution to detect subtle functional changes during maturation and in response to compounds with therapeutic potential. Here, we present a reproducible, high-throughput multiscale functional profiling workflow for human iPSC-derived midbrain organoids using High-Density Microelectrode Arrays (HD-MEAs).

In collaboration with STEMCELL Technologies, we plated midbrain organoids at an early functional stage (organoid age ~77 days) onto MaxWell MaxTwo 24-well HD-MEA plates (26,400electrodes/well) and tracked electrophysiological development longitudinally for~1 month. Using the ActivityScan assay, we quantified progressive strengthening of spontaneous activity, including increased firing rate and spike amplitude, consistent with functional maturation. Using the Network assay, organoids showed increasingly organized dynamics, with synchronized bursting emerging and becoming more robust over time, accompanied by increased burst cadence. To establish responsiveness for compound workflows, we applied 4-aminopyridine (4-AP) and tetrodotoxin (TTX), which induced rapid and reproducible bidirectional modulation of firing activity, supporting suitability for pharmacological testing and screening. Furthermore, using our unique AxonTracking assay, we extracted label-free soma-to-axon propagation patterns at the organoid–electrode interface, enabling subcellular-resolution phenotyping complementary to network metrics.

Together, these results demonstrate a scalable HD-MEA workflow for longitudinal, multiscale functional phenotyping of midbrain organoids, supporting assay development and pharmacological perturbation studies in 3D human iPSC-derived models for neurodegenerative disease–relevant phenotyping and screening.

Biography

Dr. Marian Hruska-Plochan

Scientific Business Developer | MaxWell Biosystems (Switzerland)

TBD

High-Density Microelectrode Arrays (HD-MEAs) for modeling, phenotyping, and screening in a human model of frontotemporal dementia

Abstract

Frontotemporal dementia (FTD) due to progranulin (GRN) haploinsufficiency shows evidence of early alterations in functional connectivity, but translating human iPSC-derived models into quantitative, mechanistically anchored functional endpoints for therapeutic development remains a critical challenge. Detecting subtle and progressive functional disease phenotypes requires sensitive, scalable, and longitudinal electrophysiological readouts. The MaxTwo Multiwell High-Density Microelectrode Array (HD-MEA) System (MaxWell Biosystems, 26,400 electrodes per well; 17.5 µm pitch) was used to record real-time, label-free functional activity from FUJIFILM Cellular Dynamics iPSC-derived iCell Induced Excitatory Neurons co-cultured with apparently healthy normal  iCell Astrocytes 2.0, comparing apparently healthy normal control neurons to a GRN R493X heterozygous knockout neuronal FTD model over 6 weeks in vitro. In the progranulin haploinsufficiency neuronal FTD model, increased excitability was evident at early developmental stages with significantly elevated mean firing rates and reduced inter-spike intervals by DIV 15 (p < 0.01) and persistent hyperactivity throughout maturation. Sustained network dysfunction and irregular oscillation patterns were observed, including increased burst frequency from DIV 25 and >2-fold prolonged burst durations by DIV 50 (p < 0.001), consistent with impaired network consolidation.  The AxonTracking Assay revealed a distinct subcellular phenotype: despite hyperexcitability, the FTD model exhibited reduced axonal branching and shorter neurites, reflecting impaired connectivity.  High-density electrode coverage and superior signal-to-noise enabled reconstruction of action potential propagation along individual axonal arbors, revealing structure-function deficits not detectable with conventional MEAs.

Overall, longitudinal profiling on the MaxTwo HD-MEA platform provides a sensitive, reproducible, and scalable approach for multi-parametric electrophysiological phenotyping in human iPSC-derived FTD models. By resolving network-, cellular-, and subcellular-level dysfunction within a unified assay framework, this platform delivers robust, mechanistically informed functional endpoints suitable for pharmacological perturbation and phenotypic drug discovery in FTD and other neurodegenerative diseases.

Biography

Workshops

Join us for this Innovation Showcase to explore scalable functional assays for disease modeling and drug discovery with iPSC-derived neural cultures and brain organoids, powered by next-generation HD-MEA technology. From recent platform advances to translational organoid research in space, the session will highlight new ways to capture functional insights from network to subcellular scale.

Register using the form below!

Agenda

Welcome & Introduction – Dr. Laura D’Ignazio

Recent Developments at MaxWell Biosystems – Dr. Marie Obien

Invited Talk – Dr. Aline Martins

Q&A Session – All speakers

Closing Remarks – Dr. Laura D’Ignazio

No items found.

Register

Which activities are you attending?

You can unsubscribe from marketing emails at any time. For details, see our Privacy Policy.

Submit
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.
MaxWell