Pages
November 02, 2015
-
Date:18TuesdayMarch 2025Lecture
Vascular Aging:
More information Time 11:00 - 12:00Title The Hidden Driver of Age-Related Organ DysfunctionLocation Arthur and Rochelle Belfer Building for Biomedical ResearchLecturer Dr. Myriam Grunewald Organizer Sagol Institute for Longevity ResearchContact Abstract Show full text abstract about As life expectancy increases, age-related diseases are becom...» As life expectancy increases, age-related diseases are becoming more prevalent. While these conditions are traditionally studied in isolation, mounting evidence points to shared, systemic mechanisms underlying these conditions. Our research highlights the vasculature as a key player in organ homeostasis and repair, and a system shared across all organs—making its dysfunction potential driver of age-related pathologies.We demonstrate that manipulating VEGF signaling to counteract age-related microvascular rarefaction promotes comprehensive geroprotection, preserving organ function and delaying disease onset. Our findings also reveal a link between vascular rarefaction and altered RNA splicing. While hypoxia-driven and age-related changes in alternative RNA splicing have been studied independently, we propose a unifying mechanism that links the two. To explore this further, we also employ patient-derived organoids, which retain their biological age in culture, providing a robust in vitro platform to test anti-aging interventions.Our findings support a vascular theory of aging, identifying vascular health as a promising target to mitigate age-related diseases and promote healthier aging. -
Date:18TuesdayMarch 2025Lecture
Proteome-wide prediction of protein-protein interaction networks and protein compound interactions and their integration for biological discovery
More information Time 14:00 - 15:00Location Gerhard M.J. Schmidt Lecture HallLecturer Prof. Barry Honig Organizer Department of Chemical and Structural Biology -
Date:20ThursdayMarch 2025Lecture
Student Seminar-PhD Thesis Defense by Hagar Setty, Oren Lab, March 20
More information Time 10:00 - 11:30Location Arthur and Rochelle Belfer Building for Biomedical Research
BotnarAbstract Show full text abstract about While sexual dimorphisms in brain structure and function are...» While sexual dimorphisms in brain structure and function are well-documented across species, the specific features and mechanisms underlying sex differences in individual neurons and how these differences drive behavior remain largely unknown. Most research has focused on sex-specific neurons, limiting insight into how shared neural circuits diverge between sexes. Using C. elegans, we investigated sex differences in shared neuronal modules through two approaches: 1. To explore circuit-level sex differences we dissected the neuronal properties of a sexually dimorphic circuit shared by both sexes, focusing on the circuit responsible for mechanosensation (the detection of mechanical stimulation), specifically touch sensation, in both sexes of C. elegans. We discovered that touch is detected through a distinctly different set of neurons in each sex, and this process involves unique molecules and receptors that operate in a sex-specific manner. One of these key molecules is the ion channel TMC-1, critical for hearing in humans. This study identified for the first time that touch can be sensed differently by the two sexes of an organism. 2. To investigate genetic sex differences at the level of individual sex-shared neurons, we mapped the nervous system of C. elegans in both sexes using single-cell RNA sequencing. By analyzing gene expression patterns in the nervous system of both sexes derived from the transcriptomic profiles, we discovered novel sexually dimorphic neurons and their relevance to behavior and neuronal function. We further conducted computational analysis on our single-cell data set to predict synaptic connectivity regulators based on gene expression, leading to the identification of several candidate genes now under investigation. Taken together, our work revealed multiple cellular and molecular pathways that operate differently between the sexes, shedding light on how an organism's sexual identity shapes the organization of its nervous system. -
Date:20ThursdayMarch 2025Lecture
Harnessing Mistakes to Expose Cancer’s Vulnerability
More information Time 12:30 - 14:00Title Spotlight on Science lecture sponsored by the Staff Scientists CouncilLocation Gerhard M.J. Schmidt Lecture HallLecturer Ilana Eyal
Spotlight on Science lecture sponsored by the Staff Scientists CouncilContact Abstract Show full text abstract about Over the past few decades, immunotherapy has revolutionized ...» Over the past few decades, immunotherapy has revolutionized cancer treatment with great success in treating cancer patients and preventing tumor recurrence after surgery. Harnessing the immune system to fight cancer largely relies on the ability of T lymphocytes to distinguish between “self” and “non-self” to specifically identify and eliminate malignant cells. This is achieved through the recognition of neoantigens, tumor-specific proteins resulting from genetic mutations.The Samuels’ lab is exploring the immune-tumor interactions, with specific focus on the mechanisms underlying cancer-cell recognition, and developing novel strategies to increase antitumor immune responses.In this talk, I will present results from our recent studies investigating the link between mRNA mistranslation in cancer cells and immunological tumor control. -
Date:20ThursdayMarch 2025Lecture
Spatial transcriptomics of pancreatic cancer development and immune cells targeting to restrict tumor growth
More information Time 14:00 - 15:00Location Max and Lillian Candiotty Building
AuditoriumLecturer Dr. Oren Parnas Organizer Dwek Institute for Cancer Therapy Research -
Date:21FridayMarch 2025Cultural Events
Walking on Water | Andrey Paounov
More information Time 11:00 - 12:30Location Michael Sela AuditoriumHomepage Contact -
Date:23SundayMarch 2025Lecture
Reduced N-fixation in the Low Latitude Atlantic during the Warmer Pliocene
More information Time 11:00 - 12:00Location Sussman Family Building for Environmental Sciences
M. Magaritz seminar roomLecturer Maayan Yehudai Organizer Department of Earth and Planetary SciencesAbstract Show full text abstract about N2 fixation is the primary pathway by which bioavailable nit...» N2 fixation is the primary pathway by which bioavailable nitrogen is added to theoceans. However, the drivers of N2 fixation on orbital timescales are uncertain. Wepresent high-resolution foraminifera-bound (FB) δ15N records from the Westernand Eastern tropical Atlantic Ocean (WTA and ETA respectively) throughout thelate Pliocene (~3.60 to ~1.97 Ma), where WTA ODP Site 999 represents N2fixation changes and EEA ODP Site 662 represents changes in pycnocline δ15N.Our results show that, compared to the past 160 ka, N2 fixation in the WTA wassignificantly lower throughout the late Pliocene as reflected by an average of ~2 ‰higher FB-δ15N values. A possible explanation to the higher Pliocene FB-δ15N inthe WTA could be lower rates of global denitrification that were balanced by lowerglobal N2 fixation levels. We suggest that this reduced N2 fixation was due todecreased excess P in the pycnocline/subsurface ocean, driven by lower globalwater column denitrification. This finding implies a coupling between decreasedwater column denitrification and reduced level N2 fixation rates under warmerclimates.On orbital timescales, our N2 fixation record display obliquity-paced cycles thatprogressively intensified after the Northern Hemisphere glaciation intensification ~2.8 Ma, and the onset of equatorial upwelling pulses documented during glacialperiods in the EEA (ODP Site 662; [1]). The observed changes in N2 fixation of thelast 160 ka were previously explained by precession-paced upwelling in the EEAthat imported excess P into the oligotrophic WTA [2]. However, precessionalcyclicity is not dominant in the Pliocene FB- δ15N, which calls for other candidatesto explain the variations after 2.8 Ma. The best explanation is a response to sealevelpaced sedimentary denitrification. Glacial lower sea levels exposedcontinental shelves, reducing regional benthic denitrification and inhibiting thesupply of excess P, thereby limiting N2 fixation in the WTA, whereas interglacialsubmerged shelves increased excess P availability. -
Date:23SundayMarch 2025Lecture
CANCELED - The Clore Center for Biological Physics
More information Time 12:45 - 14:30Title Self-assembled active elastic gels spontaneously curve and wrinkle similar to biological cells and tissuesLocation Nella and Leon Benoziyo Physics LibraryLecturer Prof. Anne Bernheim
Lunch at 12:45Contact Abstract Show full text abstract about Living systems from individual cells to entire tissues adopt...» Living systems from individual cells to entire tissues adopt diverse curved shapes, appearing on many length scales and commonly driven by active contractile stresses generated in the cell cytoskeleton. Yet, how these forces generate specific 3D forms remains unclear. By recreating the cell cytoskeleton from basic components, with precisely controlled composition and initial geometry, we demonstrate that the spontaneous buildup of stress gradients generated by these molecular motors drive shape deformation. We identify the shape selection rules that determine the final adopted configurations. These are encoded in the initial radius to thickness aspect ratio, likely indicating shaping scalability. These results provide insights on the mechanically induced spontaneous shape transitions in contractile active matter, revealing potential shared mechanisms with living systems across scales. FOR THE LATEST UPDATES AND CONTENT ON SOFT MATTER AND BIOLOGICAL PHYSICS AT THE WEIZMANN, VISIT OUR WEBSITE: https://www.biosoftweizmann.com/ -
Date:23SundayMarch 2025Lecture
Department of Molecular Genetics Student Seminars 2024-25
More information Time 13:00 - 14:00Location BotnarLecturer Alexander Maman -
Date:23SundayMarch 2025Cultural Events
Molière's Glory | The Israel Camerata Jerusalem
More information Time 20:00 - 22:00Location Michael Sela AuditoriumHomepage Contact -
Date:24MondayMarch 2025Lecture
Foundations of Computer Science Seminar
More information Time 11:15 - 12:15Title Privacy amplification by random allocation (is approximately Poisson subsampling)Location Jacob Ziskind Building
Room 1 - 1 חדרLecturer Moshe Shenfeld
Hebrew University of JerusalemOrganizer Department of Computer Science and Applied MathematicsContact Abstract Show full text abstract about Given two distributions P, Q and an integer t, we analyze tw...» Given two distributions P, Q and an integer t, we analyze two sampling processes. In "random allocation," we first sample an index i uniformly from [t], then draw r_{i} ~ P and r_{j} ~ Q for all other j in [t]. In "Poisson sampling," we independently draw r_{i} ~ 1/t*P + (1-1/t)*Q for each i in [t]. We bound the difference between these processes' output distributions and the baseline of sampling r_{i} ~ Q for all i.
This theoretical result provides key insights for analyzing DP-SGD, a privacy-preserving variant of stochastic gradient descent. While Poisson subsampling has well-understood privacy guarantees, common implementations use element shuffling, which was recently shown to have larger privacy losses in certain regimes. Random allocation offers a middle ground, and we prove its privacy analysis reduces to comparing the distributions described above.
We show that these variants' privacy guarantees are within a constant factor of each other across all parameter regimes and converge asymptotically in t. Our proof has two key components: decomposing Poisson sampling into a mixture of random allocation processes, and showing that random allocation can be viewed as a modified Poisson process where sampling probabilities depend on previous outputs.
Joint work with Vitaly Feldman -
Date:24MondayMarch 2025Academic Events
PhD Defense- Melina Shamshoon ZOOM ONLY
More information Time 17:00 - 18:00Title Assessment of Enzymes Involved in Cotton (Gossypium Hirsutum ) Cellulose Biosynthesis Using Glucose DerivativesLocation Nella and Leon Benoziyo Building for Plant and Environmental SciencesLecturer Melina Shamshoon
Zoom meeting:https://us06web.zoom.us/j/82678863618?pwd=lQMH2BaIYVjqaT7aSrMkvDL0tzy0Eb.1Meeting ID: 826 7886 3618 Passcode: 603380Contact -
Date:25TuesdayMarch 2025Lecture
Molecular Origami and the Hidden Rules of Protein Complex Evolution
More information Time 14:00 - 15:00Location Gerhard M.J. Schmidt Lecture HallLecturer Dr. Saurav Malik Organizer Department of Chemical and Structural Biology -
Date:27ThursdayMarch 2025Lecture
Geometric Functional Analysis and Probability Seminar
More information Time 11:00 - 12:00Title Boundaries of attractors of diffeomorphisms subject to a bounded diffusive noiseLocation Jacob Ziskind Building
Room 1 - 1 חדרLecturer Dmitry Turaev
Imperial CollegeOrganizer Department of MathematicsContact Abstract Show full text abstract about We show that the unit normal bundle of a smooth boundary of ...» We show that the unit normal bundle of a smooth boundary of an attractor for random dynamical systems of a certain natural class is a Legendrian invariant manifold of a deterministic map which preserves a contact structure. In this framework, random dynamics can be described and analyzed by purely deterministic means. -
Date:27ThursdayMarch 2025Colloquia
Simulating high-temperature superconductivity in a triangular moiré lattice
More information Time 11:15 - 12:15Location Physics Weissman AuditoriumLecturer Prof. Kin Fai Mak
Light refreshments at 11:00Organizer Department of Condensed Matter PhysicsAbstract Show full text abstract about Moiré materials built on transition metal dichalcogenide sem...» Moiré materials built on transition metal dichalcogenide semiconductors have emerged as a tunable platform for simulating the Hubbard model on a triangular lattice. A natural question arises: Can the platform be tuned to yield a phase diagram similar to that in high-temperature cuprate superconductors? In this talk, I will discuss the emergence of “high-temperature” superconductivity near the Mott transition in a triangular moiré lattice with intermediate coupling strength. The emergent doping-temperature phase diagram looks remarkably similar to that in cuprate superconductors. I will also discuss the evolution of the phase diagram by tuning the band structure of the material by gating. The results could provide a new angle for understanding the phenomenon of high-temperature superconductivity in strongly correlated materials. -
Date:27ThursdayMarch 2025Lecture
Regulation of immune cell function in tumor microenvironment of triple-negative breast cancer
More information Time 14:00 - 15:00Location Max and Lillian Candiotty Building
AuditoriumLecturer Prof. Idit Shachar Organizer Dwek Institute for Cancer Therapy Research -
Date:27ThursdayMarch 2025Lecture
Metabolism, Clonality and Immunotherapy: A Single-Cell PerspectiveTo be announced
More information Time 15:00 - 16:00Location Nella and Leon Benoziyo Building for Biological Sciences
Auditorium Rm. 191Lecturer Dr. Keren Yizhak
Faculty of Medicine, Technion - Israel Institute of Technology, HaifaAbstract Show full text abstract about Understanding why some patients respond to immune checkpoint...» Understanding why some patients respond to immune checkpoint therapy while others do not remains a critical challenge in cancer research. This talk will explore three key studies that shed light on this question. First, we uncover metabolic predictors of response to checkpoint blockade therapy, revealing how tumor and immune cell metabolism shape treatment outcomes. Next, we present a single-cell meta-analysis of T cell clonal dynamics, highlighting their role in immunotherapy success. Finally, we introduce scXpand, a machine-learning approach for predicting T cell clonality from scRNA-seq, offering a novel tool to enhance immunotherapy research and precision medicine. -
Date:27ThursdayMarch 2025Academic Events
PhD defense- Eliran offer
More information Time 15:00 - 17:00Title Viral and bacterial synergy in pathogenicity expedites algal bloom demiseLocation Nella and Leon Benoziyo Building for Plant and Environmental Sciences
690Lecturer Eliran Soffer Contact -
Date:27ThursdayMarch 2025Lecture
Vision and AI
More information Time 16:30 - 17:30Title Decomposing Images through Compositional Energy FunctionsLecturer Yilun Du
Google Deepmind, HarvardOrganizer Department of Computer Science and Applied MathematicsContact Abstract Show full text abstract about Given a distribution of images, how can we can decompose the...» Given a distribution of images, how can we can decompose the data into a set of underlying components? In this talk, I'll present an approach that decomposes images into a underlying composable energy functions. I'll illustrate how energy functions allow us to represent both global components of an image, such as lighting as well as local components such as objects. I'll further show how we leverage pretrained vision models to infer these components. Finally, I'll illustrate how discover components can be recombined to form a variety of images substantially different than those seen at training time.
Speaker's bio:
Yilun Du is an incoming assistant professor at Harvard and is currently a senior research scientist at Google Deepmind. He received has PhD and BS from MIT and was supported by a NSF graduate fellowship. -
Date:27ThursdayMarch 2025Cultural Events
Rona Kenan at Sela
More information Time 21:00 - 22:30Location Michael Sela AuditoriumContact
