BioSysBio:Conference Programme With Videos

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Revision as of 13:15, 11 January 2007 by Mackenzie L. Cowell (talk | contribs) (→‎Opening plenary speakers:: added gv link to alfonso's talk)
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BioSysBio, 11th-13th January 2007, Manchester, UK.

Programme: Thursday 11th Jan

Kick-off

Opening plenary speakers:

  • 13.15 – 14.00 Hans Westerhoff - University of Manchester -
    • "Systems Biology, hierarchies and robustness: bringing information to Life".
  • 14.00– 14.45 Alfonso Valencia - Universidad Autonoma Madrid -
  • 14.45 – 15.15 Refreshments

Session 1: Gene regulation and profiling

  • 15.15 - 15.55 Roland Eils - DKFZ (German Cancer Research Centre) -
    • "Network based microarray data analysis".
  • 15.55 - 16.20 Martino Barenco - Institute of Child Health UCL (University College London) -
    • "rHVDM – A fast and user-friendly R package to predict transcription factor targets from microarray time series data."
  • 16.20 - 16.45 Alok Mishra - Imperial College London -
    • "Effect of microarray data heterogeneity on gene regulatory module discovery"
  • 18.00 – 21.00 Industry Partnership Fair and Welcome party sponsored by the Doctoral Training Centre

Programme: Friday 12th Jan

Session 2: Metabolomics and machine learning: quantitative bioanalysis for systems biology

  • 08.00 - 8.45: Breakfast
  • 08.45– 09.25 Douglas Kell - University of Manchester, UK
  • 09.25 - 09.50 Raul Munoz Hernandez - University of Manchester, UK
    • "Metabolic flux analysis to study the production of a non-ribosomal lipopeptide, cda, by streptomyces coelicolor"
  • 09.50 - 10.15 Daniel Mateus - CEA/List Saclay, France
    • "Modeling Genetic Regulatory Networks from specified behaviors."

10.15– 11.45 Break & poster session 1

Session 3: Synthetic Biology and iGEM.

  • 11.45– 12.15 Randy Rettberg - MIT (Massachusetts Institute of Technology), USA
  • 12.15– 12.35 University of Edinburgh iGEM , UK
    • "Modeling Arsenic Biosensor System"
  • 12.35– 12.55 iGEM Imperial College London
    • "Engineering a synthetic molecular oscillator based on the Lotka-Volterra dynamic."
  • 12.55– 13.15 University of Cambridge iGEM team, UK
    • Autonomous pattern formation between bacterial populations

13.15– 14.15 Lunch + iGEM workshop - What do I need to do to take part in iGEM 2007?

Session 4: Modeling and databases in systems Biology.

  • 14.15– 14.55 Nicolas Le Novere - European Bioinformatics Institute, UK
  • 14.55– 15.20 Michael Lees - University of Nottingham
    • "BacGrid: Simulations of Bacteria using the GRID"
  • 15.20– 15.45 Isabel Rojas - EML Research gGmbH, Heidelberg, Germany

"SABIO-RK: a database of biochemical reactions and their kinetics."

15.45– 17.15 Break & poster session 2

Session 5: Modeling and modularity, tools for systems biology.

  • 17.15– 17.55 Herbert Sauro - University of Washington, USA
  • 17.55– 18.20 Martin Hemberg - Imperial College London
    • "A study of the properties of stochastic genetic oscillators"
  • 18.20– 18.45 Nuno Lages - Faculty of Sciences of the University of Lisbon
    • "Potential role of the glyoxalase pathway as a drug target in L infantum."

20.00– onwards, Conference meal at Tai Wu, Manchester- sponsored by Chemical Computing Group.

Programme: Saturday 13th Jan

  • 08.00 - 8.45: Breakfast

Session 6: Gene regulatory networks, Structural and Computational Genomics.

  • 08.45– 09.25 Sarah Teichmann - Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Cambridge, UK
  • 09.25– 09.50 Sanne Abeln - University of Oxford
    • "Linking evolution of protein structures through fragments."
  • 09.50– 10.15 Emily Jefferson - University of Dundee
    • "The relationship between domain-domain interaction orientation and sequence similarity"
  • 10.15– 10.45 Refreshments break

Session 7: Synthetic Biology

  • 10.45– 11.25 Chris Voigt - UCSD (University of California, San Diego) USA
  • 11.25– 11.50 James Brown - Univeristy of Cambridge
    • "Navigational Control of Bacteria"
  • 11.50– 12.15 Alfonso Jaramillo - Ecole Polytechnique, France
    • "Computational Design of Proteins With New Functions"
  • 12.15– 13.00 Closing Plenary: Ron Weiss - Princeton University
    • "Developments in Synthetic Biology"
  • 13.00– 13.15 Prize giving and conference close