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October 01, 2009
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Date:21MondayDecember 2009Lecture
Advanced Quantitative Proteomics in Complex Samples using nanoLC-MS/MS
More information Time 10:00 - 10:00Title Special Guest Seminar Host: Michal SharonLocation Ullmann Building of Life SciencesLecturer Dr. Ishai Levin
Chemical Engineering & Biotechnology University of Cambridge, UKOrganizer Department of Biomolecular SciencesContact -
Date:21MondayDecember 2009Lecture
Comparative & Functional Genomics of the evolution of human-specific traits
More information Time 10:00 - 10:00Location Arthur and Rochelle Belfer Building for Biomedical ResearchLecturer Gill Bejerano Organizer The Kahn Family Research Center for Systems Biology of the Human CellContact Abstract Show full text abstract about The availability of several primate whole genome sequences h...» The availability of several primate whole genome sequences has spurred great excitement for the prospect of understanding the molecular basis of what makes us human. Recent investigations have discovered conserved non protein coding genomic loci that have experienced accelerated basepair changes in the human lineage, as well as protein coding genes that show similar evidence of positive selection. We expand these studies in search of human-specific events particularly likely to produce functional effects. I will share a computational
screen resulting in nearly 600 such regions lying in proximity to genes involved in development, morphogenesis, neural function, and steroid hormone signaling. We have functionally tested a subset of these regions in mice, and have found intriguing examples of regulatory alterations in humans that appear to be associated with evolution of specific anatomical differences between humans and other animals.
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Date:21MondayDecember 2009Lecture
Intercellular transfer of Ras and small RNAs: New mechanisms of non-autonomous post trsanscriptional control.
More information Time 14:00 - 15:30Location Max and Lillian Candiotty BuildingLecturer Prof. Yoel Kloog
Dean, George S. Wise Faculty of Life Sciences Tel Aviv UniversityOrganizer Department of Immunology and Regenerative BiologyContact -
Date:22TuesdayDecember 2009Lecture
Membrane embedded transporters: Regulators of homeostasis, importers of essential nutrients, and key determinants of bacterial pathogenesis
More information Time 10:00 - 10:00Location Wolfson Building for Biological ResearchLecturer Dr. Oded Lewinson
Howard Hughes Medical Institute CaltechOrganizer Department of Biomolecular SciencesContact -
Date:22TuesdayDecember 2009Lecture
Inferring complexities of signal transduction from multidimensional single-cell microscopy
More information Time 10:00 - 11:00Location Arthur and Rochelle Belfer Building for Biomedical ResearchLecturer Dr. Ran Kafri
Dept. of Systems Biology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, USAHomepage Contact Abstract Show full text abstract about A central premise of systems biology rests upon the idea tha...» A central premise of systems biology rests upon the idea that intracellular molecular dynamics are, to some extent, subject to formal mathematical description. Our work exemplifies this through the measurement of rates of endogenous protein dynamics in single cells. We have derived a method whereby rates and rate dependencies are extracted from single cell fluorescence microscopy measurements from populations that are at steady state (unsynchronized proliferating cells). We use several differentially labeled antibodies and record microscopic images from 10,000 cells within up to 3 cellular compartments. Our formalism allows to couple measured probability densities with rates, using Gauss flux theorem. This provides a route to infer signal transduction dynamics, e.g. in cell cycle or in pathways of DNA damage, based on parallelized static measurements.
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Date:22TuesdayDecember 2009Lecture
On the thermal history of gauge mediation
More information Time 10:30 - 11:30Location Neve ShalomLecturer Andrey Katz
Maryland UniversityOrganizer Department of Particle Physics and AstrophysicsContact Abstract Show full text abstract about Many messenger models of gauge mediation are based on meta-s...» Many messenger models of gauge mediation are based on meta-stable vacua. In this talk I will discuss the thermal history of generic messenger models, also known as ''Extra-Ordinary gauge mediation``. I will show that while some of the models clearly prefer a supersymmetric vacuum, there is a vast class of models where the answer strongly depends on the initial conditions. Along with the vacuum at the origin, the high temperature thermal potential also possesses a local minimum far away from the origin. This vacuum has no analog at zero temperature. The first order phase transition from this vacuum into the supersymmetric vacuum is parametrically suppressed, and the theory, starting from that vacuum, is likely to evolve to the desired gauge-mediation vacuum." -
Date:22TuesdayDecember 2009Colloquia
Harnessing actin dynamics for endocytic trafficking events
More information Time 11:00 - 11:00Location Dolfi and Lola Ebner AuditoriumLecturer Prof. David G. Drubin
Dept. of Molecular & Cell Biology, University of California, Berkeley, CAContact -
Date:22TuesdayDecember 2009Lecture
New singular solutions of the biharmonic NLS equation
More information Time 11:00 - 11:00Location Jacob Ziskind BuildingLecturer Guy Baruch
Tel Aviv UniversityOrganizer Faculty of Mathematics and Computer Science -
Date:22TuesdayDecember 2009Lecture
Joint Seminar:Organic Chemistry & Materials and Interfaces
More information Time 11:00 - 11:00Title "Self-assembly of nanostructured materials"Location Gerhard M.J. Schmidt Lecture HallLecturer Dr. Rafal Klajn
Department of Organic Chemistry Weizmann Institute of ScienceOrganizer Department of Molecular Chemistry and Materials ScienceContact -
Date:22TuesdayDecember 2009Lecture
"Water saving economic plants, is this a real possibility?"
More information Time 11:00 - 12:00Location Ullmann Building of Life SciencesLecturer Prof. Emeritus Yosef Mizrahi
Dept. of Life Sciences Ben Gurion University of the Negev Beer Sheva, IsraelOrganizer Department of Plant and Environmental SciencesContact -
Date:22TuesdayDecember 2009Lecture
Lux et Lex: Optical Traps for b decay studies
More information Time 11:15 - 12:30Location Edna and K.B. Weissman Building of Physical SciencesLecturer Dr. Guy Ron
LBLOrganizer Nella and Leon Benoziyo Center for AstrophysicsContact Abstract Show full text abstract about Neutral radioactive atoms trapped with laser light have beco...» Neutral radioactive atoms trapped with laser light have become a standard tool of the trade for precision studies of beyond SM physics. b decay studies, in particular, offer the possibility of detecting deviations from standard model predictions of the weak interaction. The development of the Soreq Applied Research Accelerator Facility (SARAF) as well as the promised availability of a neutron generator at the Weizmann Institute promises the possibility of developing such an active research effort in Israel. I will present a general overview of optical traps and their use for weak interaction studies. I will further present the Berkeley 21Na trapping experiment, recent experimental results, and future plans. -
Date:22TuesdayDecember 2009Lecture
"N=2 generalized quiver theories, Liouville theory and loop operators"
More information Time 11:45 - 13:00Title Joint High Energy Physics SeminarLocation Neve ShalomLecturer Nadav Drukker
Humboldt universityOrganizer Department of Particle Physics and AstrophysicsContact Abstract Show full text abstract about A large family of interacting conformal field theories in fo...» A large family of interacting conformal field theories in four dimensions with N=2 supersymmetry was recently constructed by Gaiotto. Each gauge theory is associated to a Riemann surface with certain allowed singularities. In fact, it was proposed by Alday, Gaiotto and Tachikawa that the partition function of these theories (based on SU(2) gauge groups) is equal to correlation function in Liouville theory with central charge c=25.
After reviewing these constructions I will turn to a detailed exploration of S-duality using loop operators: Wilson, 't Hooft and dyonic. I will explain the classification and evaluation of arbitrary loops in arbitrary theories and show how they transform into each-other under S-duality.
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Date:22TuesdayDecember 2009Lecture
Controlling the dissociation of a molecular ion beam with intense two-color laser fields
More information Time 12:00 - 12:00Location Edna and K.B. Weissman Building of Physical SciencesLecturer Itzik Ben-Itzhak
JR Macdonald Lab, Kansas State U.Organizer Department of Physics of Complex SystemsContact -
Date:22TuesdayDecember 2009Lecture
Tolerating DNA damage by error-prone DNA polymerases in mammalian cells: Mechanistic insight into optimization of an inherently mutagenic defense system
More information Time 12:15 - 12:15Location Wolfson Building for Biological ResearchLecturer Prof. Zvi Livneh
Dept. of Biological Chemistry The Weizmann Institute of ScienceOrganizer Department of Molecular Cell BiologyContact -
Date:22TuesdayDecember 2009Lecture
Plasticity in high level visual cortex: insights from development and fMRI-adaptation
More information Time 12:30 - 12:30Location Jacob Ziskind BuildingLecturer Dr. Kalanit Grill-Spector
Dept of Psychology and Neurosciences Institute Stanford University, CAOrganizer Department of Brain SciencesContact Abstract Show full text abstract about The human ventral stream consists of regions in the lateral ...» The human ventral stream consists of regions in the lateral and ventral aspects of the occipital and temporal lobes and is involved in visual recognition. One robust characteristic of selectivity in the adult human ventral stream is category selectivity. Category selectivity is manifested by both a regional preference to particular object categories, such as faces, places and bodyparts, as well as in specific (and reproducible) distributed response patterns across the ventral stream for different object categories. However, it is not well understood how these representations come about throughout development and how experience modifies these representations and how do. I will describe two sets of experiments in which we addressed these important questions. First, I will describe experiments in which we examined changes in category selectivity throughout development from middle childhood (7-11 years), through adolescence (12-16) into adulthood. Surprisingly, we find that it takes more than a decade for the development of adult-like face and place-selective regions. In contrast, the lateral occipital object-selective region showed an adult-like profile by age 7. Further, recent findings from our research indicate that face-selective regions have a particularly prolonged development as they continue develop through adolescence in correlation with improved face, but not object or scene recognition memory. Development manifests as increases in the size of face-selective regions, increases in face-selectivity as well as increases in the distinctiveness of distributed response patterns to faces compared to nonfaces. Second, I will describe experiments in adults in which we examined the effect of repetition on categorical responses in the ventral stream. Repeating objects decreases responses in the human ventral stream. Repetition in lateral ventral regions manifests as a proportional effects in which responses to repeated objects are a constant fraction of nonrepeating stimuli with no change in selectivity. In contrast in medial ventral temporal cortex, we find differential effects across time scales whereby immediate repetitions produce proportional effects, but long-lagged repetitions sharpen responses, increasing category selectivity. Finally, I will discuss the implications of these results on plasticity in the ventral stream and our theoretical models linking between fMRI measurements and the underlying neural mechanisms. -
Date:22TuesdayDecember 2009Lecture
Conexic: A Bayesian framework to detect drivers and their function uncovers an endosomal signature in Melanoma
More information Time 13:30 - 13:30Location Wolfson Building for Biological ResearchLecturer Dana Pe'er, Ph.D.
Department of Biological Sciences, Columbia UniversityOrganizer Department of Molecular Cell BiologyContact -
Date:22TuesdayDecember 2009Lecture
Chemical Nucleases as gene-modifying agents
More information Time 14:00 - 15:00Location Helen and Milton A. Kimmelman BuildingLecturer Dr. Eylon Yavin Organizer Department of Chemical and Structural BiologyContact -
Date:22TuesdayDecember 2009Lecture
From a new charecterization of Teichmuller spaces to positive representations
More information Time 16:00 - 16:00Location Jacob Ziskind BuildingLecturer Gabi Ben Simon
E.T.H.Organizer Faculty of Mathematics and Computer Science -
Date:22TuesdayDecember 2009Cultural Events
Windmills - The Shem Tov Levy ensemble
More information Time 20:30 - 20:30Title A Balkan-Mediterranean journeyContact -
Date:22TuesdayDecember 2009Lecture
קפה מדע
More information Time 20:30 - 20:30Location בקפיטריה של גן המדע (הכניסה דרך מרכז המדע לנוער)Organizer Science for All UnitHomepage Contact
