The Developmental Biology GRC is a premier, international scientific conference focused on advancing the frontiers of science through the presentation of cutting-edge and unpublished research, prioritizing time for discussion after each talk and fostering informal interactions among scientists of all career stages. The conference program includes a diverse range of speakers and discussion leaders from institutions and organizations worldwide, concentrating on the latest developments in the field. The conference is five days long and held in a remote location to increase the sense of camaraderie and create scientific communities, with lasting collaborations and friendships. In addition to premier talks, the conference has designated time for poster sessions from individuals of all career stages, and afternoon free time and communal meals allow for informal networking opportunities with leaders in the field.
The 2025 Gordon Research Conference and Gordon Research Seminar in Developmental Biology will bring together an international community focusing on mechanisms that govern development and disease across diverse cell and animal systems with a special focus on the latest concepts and paradigms on acquisition of shapes and patterns in developmental systems from in vitro to in vivo systems, integrating physics, mathematics, and biological fields. 2025 GRC and GRS has been designed with an emphasis on exploring cell identity and acquisition of tissue shape, and pattern to govern organ function and organization in a wide variety of organisms and systems. The opening session will start with special lectures on gene regulation and fate specification designed to highlight the established paradigms and discuss emerging models that counter some of the paradigms in the field. Other sessions are on stem cell models, cell fate determination, metabolism, mechanics morphogenesis, developmental timing, evolution and developmental disorders in organoids as well as in vivo systems, and feature various technical approaches and investigations in vertebrate, and invertebrate systems.