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April 30, 2015

  • Date:06MondayNovember 2017

    Magnetic Resonance Seminar

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    Time
    11:00 - 11:00
    Title
    Casting Light on Intrinsically Disordered Proteins through Paramagnetism
    Location
    Perlman Chemical Sciences Building
    LecturerDr Dennis Kurzbach
    ENS Paris
    Organizer
    Department of Chemical and Biological Physics
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    AbstractShow full text abstract about The intrinsically disordered protein osteopontin (OPN) is a ...»
    The intrinsically disordered protein osteopontin (OPN) is a metastasis-associated extracellular matrix IDP. We investigate its structural dynamics and ligand interactions by use of nitroxide spin probes and labels. This enables the application of several methods such as electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR), paramagnetic relaxation enhancement (PRE) nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and dissolution dynamic nuclear polarization (D-DNP). Through this we, e.g., monitor 1H-15N correlation spectra of hyperpolarized HN protons of OPN via either single-scan detection or SOFAST-HMQC in less than 30 s. A peculiar unfolding-upon-binding process is observed when OPN interacts with heparin, an analogue of the natural ligand hyaluronic acid, which is involved in CD44 receptor recognition and cell-signaling
    Lecture
  • Date:06MondayNovember 2017

    Memory of species’ coexistence in ecological communities

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    Time
    14:15 - 14:15
    Location
    Edna and K.B. Weissman Building of Physical Sciences
    LecturerGuy Bunin
    Technion
    Organizer
    Department of Physics of Complex Systems
    Contact
    AbstractShow full text abstract about Communities of coexisting species are shaped by the interact...»
    Communities of coexisting species are shaped by the interactions between them, and by the motion of organisms. How does the network of interactions organize in response to these processes? Using a systematic analytical framework we calculate properties of the matrix of pair-interactions, reduced to the subset of species that are able to coexist. This reduced matrix acquires new statistical structure such as correlations between its elements. Yet to fully explain species coexistence one must go beyond simple correlations, to find a structure that is closely related to memory patterns in models of neural networks.
    Lecture
  • Date:07TuesdayNovember 2017

    You say tomato, I say potato. Evolution of the genetic code in yeasts

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    Time
    10:00 - 11:00
    Title
    Frontiers in Systems Biology
    Location
    Arthur and Rochelle Belfer Building for Biomedical Research
    LecturerProf. Ken Wolfe
    Conway Institute, University College Dublin, Ireland
    Organizer
    Azrieli Institute for Systems Biology
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    Lecture
  • Date:07TuesdayNovember 2017

    Aggregation-induced emission - A versatile tool for applications in biochemistry and material sciences

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    Time
    11:00 - 12:30
    Location
    Helen and Milton A. Kimmelman Building
    LecturerJun.-Prof. Dr. Jens Voskuhl
    Organizer
    Department of Molecular Chemistry and Materials Science
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    Lecture
  • Date:07TuesdayNovember 2017

    Tracking ROS-mediated host-virus interactions during algae bloom in the ocean

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    Time
    11:30 - 11:30
    Location
    Nella and Leon Benoziyo Building for Biological Sciences
    LecturerDr. Uri Sheyn
    Lab. of Prof. Assaf Vardi Department of Plant and Environmental Sciences
    Organizer
    Department of Plant and Environmental Sciences
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    Lecture
  • Date:07TuesdayNovember 2017

    Challenging the sensory division of labor in the brain. Lessons from the deafs’ sense of rhythm and tactile braille reading in the sighted.

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    Time
    12:30 - 12:30
    Location
    Gerhard M.J. Schmidt Lecture Hall
    LecturerDr. Marcin Szwed
    Dept of Psychology, Jagiellonian University, Krakow, Poland
    Organizer
    Department of Brain Sciences
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    AbstractShow full text abstract about It is established that the brain is capable of large-scale r...»
    It is established that the brain is capable of large-scale reorganization following sensory deprivation or injury. What is less clear is what are the rules that guide it. In the blind, many visual regions preserve their task specificity despite being recruited for different sensory input; ventral visual areas, for example, become engaged in auditory and tactile object-recognition. However, we are interested in two questions. First, is sensory deprivation necessary for such task-specific reorganization, or can it happen in non-deprived individuals? In this series of experiments, during 9 months we taught Braille, a tactile alphabet, to sighted individuals and observed the resulting changes with structural and functional MRI. (Siuda, Krzywicka, Bola et al, eLife, 2016). Second, we wondered whether task-specific reorganization is unique to the visual cortex, or alternatively, is it a general principle applying to other cortical areas. Here, we enrolled deaf and hearing adults into an fMRI experiment, during which they discriminated between rhythms. In hearing individuals, rhythm processing is performed mostly in the auditory domain. Our prediction was that if task-specific reorganization applies to the human auditory cortex, performing this function visually should recruit the auditory cortex in the deaf (Bola, Zimmerman et al., PNAS, 2017).
    Lecture
  • Date:07TuesdayNovember 2017

    Molecular Neuroscience Forum Seminar

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    Time
    15:00 - 16:00
    Title
    Diverse Functions of Semaphorin-Neuropilin Signaling during Development and in the Adult Mammalian Nervous System
    Location
    Nella and Leon Benoziyo Building for Biological Sciences
    LecturerTracy Tran
    Rutgers University
    Organizer
    Department of Biomolecular Sciences
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    Lecture
  • Date:08WednesdayNovember 2017

    Developmental Club Series 2017-2018

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    Time
    10:00 - 10:00
    Title
    “Unlocking the Combinatorial Epigenetic Code at a Single-Molecule Level”
    Location
    Arthur and Rochelle Belfer Building for Biomedical Research
    LecturerProf. Efrat Shema
    Department of Biological Regulations
    Organizer
    Department of Molecular Genetics
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    Lecture
  • Date:08WednesdayNovember 2017

    Emerging Electrochemical Membrane Technologies for Energy Storage and Conversion

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    Time
    11:00 - 12:00
    Location
    Perlman Chemical Sciences Building
    LecturerDr. Aniruddha Kulkarni
    CSIRO Energy Business Unit, Australia
    Organizer
    Department of Molecular Chemistry and Materials Science
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    Lecture
  • Date:08WednesdayNovember 2017

    Chemical and Biological Physics Lunch Club Seminar

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    Time
    12:30 - 12:30
    Title
    TBA
    Location
    Perlman Chemical Sciences Building
    LecturerProf. Michael Elbaum
    Chemical and Biological Physics, WIS
    Organizer
    Department of Chemical and Biological Physics
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    Lecture
  • Date:08WednesdayNovember 2017

    Astrobiological Horticulture and the search for pre-terrestrial life

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    Time
    14:00 - 15:00
    Location
    Arthur and Rochelle Belfer Building for Biomedical Research
    LecturerJoe Davis
    Lab of Prof. George Church, department of genetics, Harvard Medical School, Boston, USA
    Organizer
    Department of Molecular Cell Biology
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    Lecture
  • Date:09ThursdayNovember 2017

    “Targeted metabolic analysis: present and perspectives”

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    Time
    09:00 - 10:00
    Location
    Max and Lillian Candiotty Building
    LecturerDr. Alexander Brandis
    Department of Life Sciences Core Facilities
    Organizer
    Department of Life Sciences Core Facilities
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    Lecture
  • Date:09ThursdayNovember 2017

    Search for new physics at the intensity frontier

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    Time
    11:15 - 12:15
    Location
    Edna and K.B. Weissman Building of Physical Sciences
    LecturerTBA
    Organizer
    Faculty of Physics
    Contact
    AbstractShow full text abstract about With the discovery at the LHC of the Higgs boson, the main m...»
    With the discovery at the LHC of the Higgs boson, the main missing block of the Standard Model is now in place. An additional LHC result of great importance is that a large new territory has been explored and no unambiguous signal of New Physics has been found.
    However some new particles or interactions are required to explain a number of observed phenomena in particle physics, astrophysics, and cosmology as the neutrino masses, the baryon asymmetry of the universe, the Dark Matter and the cosmological inflation.
    So far the experimental efforts have been concentrated on the discovery of new particles with masses at or above the EW scale with sizable couplings with SM particles. Another viable possibility, largely unexplored, is that these new particles are below the EW scale and have not been detected because they interact very feebly with the SM particles.
    I will review the current status of the search for these new particles with masses in the MeV-GeV region at beam dump experiments currently running or proposed at CERN.
    Colloquia
  • Date:12SundayNovember 2017

    CARMENES: Searching for habitable planets around red stars

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    Time
    11:00 - 11:00
    Location
    Sussman Family Building for Environmental Sciences
    LecturerStefan Dreizler
    University of Göttingen Institute of Astrophysics
    Organizer
    Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences
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    Lecture
  • Date:13MondayNovember 2017

    Life Science Colloquium

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    Time
    11:00 - 12:00
    Title
    The Secret Life of FGF21
    Location
    Dolfi and Lola Ebner Auditorium
    LecturerProf. David Mangelsdorf
    The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center
    Contact
    Colloquia
  • Date:13MondayNovember 2017

    Shorter pulses and lower average laser power reduce photodamage during two-photon imaging of microdomain Ca2+ transients in fine astrocyte processes.

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    Time
    11:00 - 12:00
    Location
    Nella and Leon Benoziyo Building for Biological Sciences
    LecturerDr. Martin Oheim
    CNRS Saint-Pères Paris Institute for Neurosciences (SPPIN), University Paris Descartes
    Organizer
    Department of Biomolecular Sciences
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    Lecture
  • Date:13MondayNovember 2017

    Shorter pulses and lower average laser power reduce photodamage during two-photon imaging of microdomain Ca2+ transients in fine astrocyte processes.

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    Time
    11:00 - 12:00
    Location
    Nella and Leon Benoziyo Building for Biological Sciences
    LecturerDr. Martin Oheim
    CNRS Saint-Pères Paris Institute for Neurosciences (SPPIN), University Paris Descartes
    Organizer
    Department of Biomolecular Sciences
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    Lecture
  • Date:13MondayNovember 2017

    Epigenetic strategies to overcome chemoresistance and to radiosensitize cancers

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    Time
    14:00 - 15:00
    Title
    Special Guest Seminar
    Location
    Max and Lillian Candiotty Building
    LecturerProf. Elizabeth Martinez
    Department of Pharmacology, Hamon Center for Therapeutic Oncology, Research, UT Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, USA
    Organizer
    Department of Immunology and Regenerative Biology
    Contact
    Lecture
  • Date:13MondayNovember 2017

    Wicked problem at Kruger National Park - Elephant conservation, loss of tall trees and bush encroachment

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    Time
    14:00 - 14:00
    Location
    Nella and Leon Benoziyo Building for Biological Sciences
    LecturerDr. Izak Smit
    South African National Parks & University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa
    Organizer
    Department of Plant and Environmental Sciences
    Contact
    Lecture
  • Date:14TuesdayNovember 2017

    Epistasis, pleiotropy, the ruggedness of fitness landscape, and the Predictability of RNA virus evolution

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    Time
    10:00 - 11:00
    Location
    Arthur and Rochelle Belfer Building for Biomedical Research
    LecturerProf. Santiago Elena
    Institute for Molecular and Cellular Plant Biology (CSIC), Valencia, Spain
    Organizer
    Azrieli Institute for Systems Biology
    Contact
    Lecture

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