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April 29, 2015

  • Date:25WednesdayNovember 2015

    Genomics of drug sensitivty in leukemia and lymphoma

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    Time
    11:30 - 11:30
    Title
    Special Guest Seminar
    Location
    Wolfson Building for Biological Research
    LecturerProf. Dr. med. Thorsten Zenz
    National Center for Tumor Disease (NCT), Heidelberg
    Organizer
    Department of Molecular Cell Biology
    Contact
    Lecture
  • Date:25WednesdayNovember 2015

    The Higgs Mass in the MSSM at two-loop order beyond MFV

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    Time
    13:00 - 13:00
    Location
    Edna and K.B. Weissman Building of Physical Sciences
    LecturerYael Shadmi
    Technion
    Organizer
    Department of Particle Physics and Astrophysics
    Contact
    AbstractShow full text abstract about Soft supersymmetry-breaking terms provide a wealth of new po...»
    Soft supersymmetry-breaking terms provide a wealth of new potential sources of flavour violation, which lead to very tight constraints from precision experiments. This has posed a challenge to construct flavour models to both explain the structure of the Standard Model Yukawa couplings and how their consequent predictions for patterns in the soft supersymmetry-breaking terms do not violate these constraints. While such models have been studied in great detail, the impact of flavour violating soft terms on the Higgs mass at the two-loop level has been assumed to be small or negligible. In this letter, we show that large flavour violation in the up-squark sector can give a positive or negative shift to the SM-like Higgs of several GeV, without being in conflict with any other observation. We investigate in which regions of the parameter space these effects can be expected.
    Lecture
  • Date:25WednesdayNovember 2015

    Shining light on the gut microbiota-host interactions

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    Time
    13:30 - 13:30
    Location
    Wolfson Building for Biological Research
    LecturerDr. Naama Geva-Zatorsky
    Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Harvard Medical School, USA
    Organizer
    Department of Molecular Cell Biology
    Contact
    Lecture
  • Date:25WednesdayNovember 2015

    Serum albumin based biomaterials: From free-standing cell scaffolds to charge conduction

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    Time
    14:00 - 14:00
    Location
    Perlman Chemical Sciences Building
    LecturerDr. Nadav Amdursky
    Imperial College, London
    Organizer
    Department of Molecular Chemistry and Materials Science
    Contact
    Lecture
  • Date:26ThursdayNovember 2015

    Was Einstein Right? A Centennial Assessment

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    Time
    11:15 - 12:30
    Location
    Edna and K.B. Weissman Building of Physical Sciences
    LecturerClifford Will
    Washington University
    Organizer
    Faculty of Physics
    Contact
    AbstractShow full text abstract about A century after Einstein’s formulation of general relativity...»
    A century after Einstein’s formulation of general relativity, a remarkably diverse set of preci-sion experiments has established it as the ``standard model’’ for gravitational physics. Yet it might not be the final word. We review the array of measurements that have verified general relativity in the laboratory, in the solar system and in binary pulsars. We then describe some of the opportunities and challenges involved in testing Einstein’s great theory in strong-field regimes, in gravitational waves, and in cosmology.

    Colloquia
  • Date:26ThursdayNovember 2015

    Pelletron lecture series - by invitation

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    Time
    16:00 - 17:45
    Location
    Pelletron
    Contact
    Lecture
  • Date:26ThursdayNovember 2015

    This City - Hip Hop Musical

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    Time
    21:00 - 22:30
    Location
    Michael Sela Auditorium
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    Cultural Events
  • Date:27FridayNovember 2015

    The doctor and the patient - Dr. Tzachi Ben Zion and Yair Nitzani

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    Time
    21:00 - 21:00
    Title
    Entertainment show
    Location
    Michael Sela Auditorium
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    Contact
    Cultural Events
  • Date:28SaturdayNovember 2015

    Ze Broadway, Buba

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    Time
    20:00 - 22:30
    Location
    Michael Sela Auditorium
    Contact
    Cultural Events
  • Date:29SundayNovember 2015

    RNA-mediated regulation of quorum sensing in bacteria

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    Time
    All day
    Location
    Arthur and Rochelle Belfer Building for Biomedical Research
    LecturerMaya Shamir
    Rotem Sorek's group, Dept. of Molecular Genetics
    Organizer
    Department of Molecular Genetics
    Contact
    Lecture
  • Date:29SundayNovember 2015

    Scaling carbon cycling from organisms to ecosystems: Insights from novel isotopic measurements in temperate forests and thawing permafrost wetlands

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    Time
    11:00 - 11:00
    Location
    Sussman Family Building for Environmental Sciences
    LecturerScott Saleska
    Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology University of Arizona
    Organizer
    Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences
    Contact
    Lecture
  • Date:29SundayNovember 2015

    Chemical Control of Biological Self-Assembly

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    Time
    11:00 - 12:00
    Location
    Helen and Milton A. Kimmelman Building
    LecturerProf. Akif Tezcan
    Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry University of California, San Diego
    Organizer
    Department of Molecular Chemistry and Materials Science
    Contact
    Lecture
  • Date:30MondayNovember 201502WednesdayDecember 2015

    Bat-Sheva de Rothschild Seminar on RNA regulatory circuits in infectious diseases and man

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    Time
    All day
    Location
    The David Lopatie Conference Centre
    Chairperson
    Eran Hornstein
    Homepage
    Contact
    Conference
  • Date:30MondayNovember 2015

    Flux controls flux – how microbes regulate their metabolism

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    Time
    09:15 - 11:00
    Location
    Arthur and Rochelle Belfer Building for Biomedical Research
    LecturerProf. Matthias Heinemann
    Molecular systems biology University of Groningen
    Organizer
    Department of Systems Immunology
    Contact
    Lecture
  • Date:30MondayNovember 2015

    "Comparative studies of intrinsically disordered proteins"

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    Time
    11:00 - 12:30
    Location
    Gerhard M.J. Schmidt Lecture Hall
    LecturerProf. Jane Clarke
    Department of Chemistry, University of Cambridge
    Organizer
    Faculty of Chemistry
    Contact
    AbstractShow full text abstract about In my laboratory we use a multidisciplinary approach to stud...»
    In my laboratory we use a multidisciplinary approach to study protein folding - how the linear sequence of amino acids in a polypeptide chain determines the structure to which it folds, the pathway by which it folds, and how it avoids misfolding. That is, how the primary sequence defines the entire energy landscape for folding.

    It has recently become apparent that many proteins are not, in fact folded, but they play important roles in the cell. These intrinsically disordered protein challenge the structure : function paradigm, and they have attracted significant interest from investigators in the fields of structural biology, bioinformatics and theory, but, relatively little work has been done using standard biophysical kinetics techniques pioneered in studies of protein folding

    Many key protein-protein interactions are driven by assembly of complexes where one or both partner proteins are intrinsically disordered before binding. In this case the free energy of binding has to compensate for the energetic cost of folding. We are comparing the folding of a number of different folding-upon binding systems to ask some fundamental questions about the mechanisms of folding upon binding: What is the importance of residual structure? What role does the ordered partner play? What is the mechanism of assembly? And, perhaps most fundamentally – what is the function of disorder? I will describe some of our recent findings.
    Colloquia
  • Date:30MondayNovember 2015

    Restoration of tumor suppression: challenges and therapeutic opportunities

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    Time
    11:00 - 11:00
    Location
    Wolfson Building for Biological Research
    LecturerProf. Ygal Haupt
    Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre, Melbourne, Australia
    Organizer
    Department of Molecular Cell Biology
    Contact
    Lecture
  • Date:30MondayNovember 2015

    "Skeletal Molding of Chiral Pool Compounds: C–C and C–H Bond Activation of Pinene"

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    Time
    14:00 - 14:00
    Location
    Helen and Milton A. Kimmelman Building
    LecturerDr. Ahmad Masarwa
    UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, BERKELEY
    Organizer
    Department of Molecular Chemistry and Materials Science
    Contact
    Lecture
  • Date:30MondayNovember 2015

    Real-space condensation in mass transport models: statics, dynamics, and large deviations

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    Time
    14:15 - 14:15
    Location
    Edna and K.B. Weissman Building of Physical Sciences
    LecturerOri Hirschberg, Technion
    Organizer
    Department of Physics of Complex Systems
    Contact
    AbstractShow full text abstract about The formation of traffic jams on highways, the clustering of...»
    The formation of traffic jams on highways, the clustering of particles in shaken granular gases, and the emergence of macroscopically-linked hubs in complex networks are all examples of real-space condensation. This phase transition, in which a finite fraction of the “mass” in a macroscopic system is concentrated in a microscopic fraction of its volume, is rather ubiquitous in nonequilibrium systems. In this talk, I shall present some of the insights into these phenomena garnered from the study of prototypical toy models. After reviewing static properties of the condensation transition, I shall focus on two unexpected features recently discovered: (1) Spatial correlations, which generically exist in driven systems, may give rise to a collective motion of the condensate through the system. The mechanism behind this motion is explained using simplified models, and shown to be rather generic. (2) When the current flowing through a system is conditioned to have highly atypical values, condensates may form in systems that otherwise do not condense. I will present microscopic and macroscopic approaches to analyze this novel scenario of condensation.

    Lecture
  • Date:30MondayNovember 2015

    Afternoon Music "Shlomo Ydov " - Free Entrance

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    Time
    16:30 - 17:30
    Location
    Michael Sela Auditorium
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    Contact
    Cultural Events
  • Date:01TuesdayDecember 2015

    From metabolism to persistence and back

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    Time
    10:00 - 11:00
    Location
    Arthur and Rochelle Belfer Building for Biomedical Research
    LecturerProf. Matthias Heinemann
    Molecular systems biology University of Groningen
    Organizer
    Department of Systems Immunology
    Contact
    Lecture

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