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April 27, 2017
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Date:15SundayOctober 2017Lecture
Aerial Platforms to Study Small-Scale, Surface-Ocean Mixing in an Offshore Environment: From the Gulf of Mexico to Greenland
More information Time 11:00 - 11:00Location Sussman Family Building for Environmental SciencesLecturer Dan Carlson
Lamont Doherty Earth Observatory Columbia UniversityOrganizer Department of Earth and Planetary SciencesContact -
Date:15SundayOctober 2017Lecture
Identification of Potent Fli-1 Inhibitors from Chinese Medicinal Plants for treatment of Leukemia
More information Time 14:00 - 15:00Title Special Guest SeminarLocation Max and Lillian Candiotty BuildingLecturer Dr. Yaacov Ben-David
Key laboratory of Chemistry for Natural Products of Guizhou Province and Chinese Academy of Sciences Affiliated with Guizhou Medical UniversityOrganizer Department of Immunology and Regenerative BiologyContact -
Date:16MondayOctober 2017Lecture
Protein evolution - from so simple a beginning
More information Time 10:30 - 17:00Location Michael Sela AuditoriumLecturer Dan Tawfik Organizer Department of Biomolecular SciencesContact Abstract Show full text abstract about This joint MPI (Max Plank Institutes)-Weizmann one-day sympo...» This joint MPI (Max Plank Institutes)-Weizmann one-day symposium will focus on fundamental, unanswered questions; foremost: How did the first proteins evolve, and whether and how do functional proteins arise de novo? -
Date:16MondayOctober 2017Lecture
Using whiskers to gain insights into animal behaviour and motor control
More information Time 14:30 - 14:30Location Nella and Leon Benoziyo Building for Brain ResearchLecturer Dr. Robyn A. Grant
Conservation, Evolution and Behaviour Research Group Division of Biology and Conservation Ecology Manchester Metropolitan University, UKOrganizer Department of Brain SciencesContact Abstract Show full text abstract about Mammalian whiskers and avian rictal bristles come in a varie...» Mammalian whiskers and avian rictal bristles come in a variety of shapes and sizes. Indeed, one of the most striking facial features in all mammals (excluding higher primates and humans) is the presence of whiskers. They are deployed in a wide range of tasks and environments. For example, rodents may use their whiskers to guide arboreal locomotion, whilst seals use theirs to track hydrodynamic trails of vortices shed by the fish upon which they prey (Gläser et al, 2010). Certainly, the evolution of the sense of touch is a recognised cornerstone in mammalian evolution, driving brain complexity and behavioural flexibility. While the whisker system is an established model for sensory information processing, advances in measuring whisker behaviours suggests that whisker movements are also useful for measuring aspects of motor control. Many "whisker specialists" including rodents and pinnipeds employ their whiskers by moving them actively, and all mammals (and even some birds) share a similar muscle architecture that drives the movement of the whiskers. Certainly, changes in whisker movements can indicate a loss of motor control and coordination. In this talk I will consider the anatomy and morphology of whiskers, and consider their function in a range of different species. I will suggest how whisker movements may have evolved, and how they are very important for whisker specialists.
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Date:17TuesdayOctober 2017Lecture
Dissecting a Three-Protein Brain: The Chemosensory Array of E. coli
More information Time 10:00 - 11:00Location Nella and Leon Benoziyo Building for Biological SciencesLecturer Prof. John S. Parkinson
Dept. of Biology - University of UtahOrganizer Department of Biomolecular SciencesContact -
Date:17TuesdayOctober 2017Lecture
Future climate change will reduce herbicide efficiency
More information Time 11:30 - 11:30Location Nella and Leon Benoziyo Building for Biological SciencesLecturer Dr. Maor Matzrafi
Department of Plant Sciences, University of California-Davis, USAOrganizer Department of Plant and Environmental SciencesContact -
Date:18WednesdayOctober 2017Lecture
Monitoring treatment response by imaging oncogenic rewiring and immune microenvironment changes, through combining whole body imaging with tissue / exosome-based approaches
More information Time 14:00 - 15:00Title Special Guest SeminarLocation Max and Lillian Candiotty BuildingLecturer Prof. Tony Ng
School of Cancer and Pharmaceutical Sciences, King’s College London Department of Oncology at UCL-Cancer Institute, LondonOrganizer Department of Immunology and Regenerative BiologyContact -
Date:18WednesdayOctober 2017Lecture
A tutorial on the MPI Toolkit for protein bioinformatics analysis
More information Time 15:00 - 17:00Location Raoul and Graziella de Picciotto Building for Scientific and Technical SupportLecturer Vikram Alva Organizer Department of Biomolecular SciencesContact Abstract Show full text abstract about The MPI Bioinformatics Toolkit (https://toolkit.tuebingen.mp...» The MPI Bioinformatics Toolkit (https://toolkit.tuebingen.mpg.de) is an open and integrative Web service for advanced protein bioinformatic analysis. It includes a wide array of interconnected, state-of-the-art public and in-house tools, whose functionality ranges from the identification of features such as coiled-coil segments (PCOILS, MARCOIL), internal sequence repeats (HHrepID, REPPER) and secondary structure (Quick2D) to the detection of remote homologs (HHpred) and generation of structural models (MODELLER). In fact, due to this breadth of its tools, our Toolkit has established itself as an important resource for experimental scientists and as a useful platform for teaching bioinformatic inquiry. Recently, we replaced the first version of the Toolkit, which was released in 2005 and had serviced over 2.5 million external queries, with an entirely new version built using modern Web technologies and with improved features for teaching and collaborative research. In this presentation, I will focus on the usefulness of the Toolkit for the systematic analysis of proteins using some examples. -
Date:19ThursdayOctober 2017Lecture
Photoelectrochemical sensors, neuromimetic devices and reservoir computers
More information Time 11:00 - 12:30Location Helen and Milton A. Kimmelman BuildingOrganizer Department of Molecular Chemistry and Materials ScienceContact -
Date:19ThursdayOctober 2017Colloquia
Physics Colloquium
More information Time 11:15 - 12:15Location Edna and K.B. Weissman Building of Physical SciencesLecturer Prof. Ofer Feinerman
WISOrganizer Faculty of PhysicsContact Abstract Show full text abstract about TBA ...» TBA -
Date:19ThursdayOctober 2017Lecture
"Image Scanning Microscopy and Metal Induced Energy Transfer: Enhancing Microscopy Resolution in All Directions"
More information Time 14:00 - 14:00Title Special SeminarLocation Helen and Milton A. Kimmelman BuildingOrganizer Department of Chemical and Structural BiologyContact Abstract Show full text abstract about Classical fluorescence microscopy is limited in resolution b...» Classical fluorescence microscopy is limited in resolution by the wavelength of light (diffraction limit) restricting lateral resolution to ca. 200 nm, and axial resolution to ca. 500 nm (at typical excitation and emission wavelengths around 500 nm). However, recent years have seen a tremendous development in high- and super-resolution techniques of fluorescence microscopy, pushing spatial resolution to its diffraction-dictated limits and much beyond. One of these techniques is Image Scanning Microscopy (ISM). In ISM, the focus of a conventional laser-scanning confocal microscope (LCSM) is scanned over the sample, but instead of recording only the total fluorescence intensity for each scan position, as done in conventional operation of an LCSM, one records a small image of the illuminated region. The result is a four-dimensional stack of data: two dimensions refer to the lateral scan position, and two dimensions to the pixel position on the chip of the image-recording camera. This set of data can then be used to obtain a super-resolved image with doubled resolution, completely analogously to what is achieved with Structured Illumination Microscopy. However, ISM is conceptually and technically much simpler, suffers less from sample imperfections like refractive index variations, and can easily be implemented into any existing LSCM. I will also present recent results of combining ISM with two-photon excitation, which is important for deep-tissue imaging of e.g. neuronal tissue, and for performing non-linear coherent microscopy such as second-harmonic generation.
A second method which I will present is concerned with achieving nanometer resolution along the optical axis. It is called Metal Induced Energy Transfer or MIET and is based on the fact that, when placing a fluorescent molecule close to a metal, its fluorescence properties change dramatically. In particular, one observes a strongly modified lifetime of its excited state (Purcell effect). This coupling between an excited emitter and a metal film is strongly dependent on the emitter’s distance from the metal. We have used this effect for mapping the basal membrane of live cells with an axial accuracy of ~3 nm. The method is easy to implement and does not require any change to a conventional fluorescence lifetime microscope; it can be applied to any biological system of interest, and is compatible with most other super-resolution microscopy techniques which enhance the lateral resolution of imaging. Moreover, it is even applicable to localizing individual molecules, thus offering the prospect of three-dimensional single-molecule localization microscopy with nanometer isotropic resolution for structural biology.
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Date:22SundayOctober 2017Lecture
"A stress-Induced Hidden Secret of the Genetic Code"
More information Time 10:00 - 10:00Location Arthur and Rochelle Belfer Building for Biomedical ResearchLecturer Prof. Hanna Engelberg-Kulka
Hadassah Medical School, The Hebrew UniversityOrganizer Department of Molecular GeneticsContact -
Date:22SundayOctober 2017Lecture
Evolution and Engineering of Allosteric Regulation in Protein Kinases
More information Time 10:00 - 11:00Location Nella and Leon Benoziyo Building for Biological SciencesLecturer Dr. Orna Resnekov Organizer Department of Biomolecular SciencesContact Abstract Show full text abstract about Allosteric regulation - the control of protein function by s...» Allosteric regulation - the control of protein function by sites far from the active
site, is a common feature that enables dynamic cellular responses. Reversible post-translational
modifications (such as phosphorylation) appear to be well suited to mediate dynamic cellular responses - yet
how new allosteric regulation evolves is not understood.
We mutationally scanned the surface of a prototypical kinase to identify readily evolvable phosphorylation
sites. Our data reveal spatially distributed "hotspots" on the surface of the protein that coevolve with the
active site and preferentially modulate kinase activity. By engineering simple consensus phosphorylation
sites at these hotspots, we successfully re-wired in vivo cell signaling.
Our results demonstrate a general strategy for engineering new cell signaling pathways, suggest cryptic sites for developing
small molecule allosteric kinase inhibitors and also provide a context for interpreting kinase mutations involved in disease. -
Date:22SundayOctober 2017Academic Events
2017 Weizmann Memorial Lecture
More information Time 15:00 - 16:30Location The David Lopatie Conference CentreContact -
Date:23MondayOctober 2017Lecture
IMM Guest Seminar: Prof. Smita Krishnaswamy, from Yale school of Medicine, will lecture on "Manifold-Learning Frameworks for Extracting Structure from High-throughput Single-Cell Datasets", Monday Oct 23rd, 2017
More information Time 10:00 - 10:00Location Wolfson Building for Biological ResearchLecturer Prof. Smita Krishnaswamy
Assistant Professor of Genetics and of Computer Science, Yale school of MedicineOrganizer Department of Systems ImmunologyContact Abstract Show full text abstract about Recent advances in single-cell technologies enable deep insi...» Recent advances in single-cell technologies enable deep insights into cellular development, gene regulation, and phenotypic diversity by measuring gene expression and epigenetics for thousands of single cells in a single experiment. While these technologies hold great potential for improving our understanding of cellular states and progression, they also pose new challenges in terms of scale, complexity, noise and measurement artifact which require advanced mathematical and algorithmic tools to extract underlying biological signals. In this talk, I cover one of most promising techniques to tackle these problems: manifold learning, and the related manifold assumption in data analysis. Manifold learning provides a powerful structure for algorithmic approaches to naturally process and the data, visualize the data and understand progressions as well as to find phenotypic diversity as well and infer patterns in it. I will cover two alternative approaches to manifold learning, diffusion-based and deep learning-based and show results in several projects including:1) MAGIC (Markov Affinity-based Graph Imputation of Cells): an algorithm for denoising and transcript recover of single cells applied to single-cell RNA sequencing data from the epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition in breast cancer, 2) PHATE (Potential of Heat-diffusion Affinity-based Transition Embedding): a visualization technique that offers an alternative to tSNE in that it emphasizes progressions and branching structures rather than cluster separations shown on several datasets including a newly generated embryoid body differentiation dataset, and 3) SAUCIE (Sparse AutoEncoders for Clustering Imputation and Embedding): a novel auto encoder architecture that performs denoising, batch normalization, clustering and visualization simultaneously for massive single-cell data sets from multi-patient cohorts shown on mass cytometry data from Dengue patients. -
Date:23MondayOctober 2017Colloquia
Life Science Colloquium
More information Time 11:00 - 12:00Title Organizational principles of nervous system specificationLocation Dolfi and Lola Ebner AuditoriumLecturer Prof. Oliver Hobert
Professor, Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biophysics Investigator, Howard Hughes Medical InstituteContact -
Date:23MondayOctober 2017Academic Events
2017 Weizmann Memorial Lecture
More information Time 15:00 - 16:30Location The David Lopatie Conference CentreContact -
Date:24TuesdayOctober 2017Conference
HESTPV Solar ERAnet October 2017 meeting
More information Time 08:00 - 08:00Location Michael Sela AuditoriumChairperson David CahenHomepage -
Date:24TuesdayOctober 2017Lecture
Sewing the Original “Smart Fabrics”: Catalysts of Extracellular Matrix Assembly
More information Time 10:00 - 11:00Location Nella and Leon Benoziyo Building for Biological SciencesLecturer Prof. Deborah Fass
Dept. of Structural BiologyOrganizer Department of Biomolecular SciencesContact Abstract Show full text abstract about Abstract: Disulfide bonds are covalent cross-links that sta...» Abstract:
Disulfide bonds are covalent cross-links that stabilize and regulate proteins. Disulfides are typically introduced into proteins as they fold in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), and a great number of enzymes are present in the ER to help with this process. Despite the predominance of the ER as the site of disulfide cross-linking, an additional disulfide catalyst, called Quiescin Sulfhydryl Oxidase (QSOX), is found in the Golgi apparatus. We have investigated the function of QSOX in cultured cells and animals and have found that it participates in the formation of extracellular “smart fabrics” such as fibrous matrices and mucus. The structural and compositional complexity of these materials makes studying them on the biomolecular level a great challenge, but their enormous importance to cell and organismal biology inspire us to seek novel approaches.
Bio:
Deborah Fass received her scientific training at Harvard and MIT and came to Israel in 1998 to join the Department of Structural Biology. She has a background in molecular virology and protein folding. She became interested in disulfide bond formation by studying how virus envelope proteins manipulate endoplasmic reticulum chaperones to acquire “spring-loaded” conformations that prime them to penetrate new target cells. Over the past two decades, she has been continually surprised at how many interesting and unexpected biological processes are controlled by disulfide bond formation.
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Date:24TuesdayOctober 2017Lecture
On discovery in (photo-) catalysis
More information Time 11:00 - 12:30Location Helen and Milton A. Kimmelman BuildingLecturer Prof. Frank Glorius
Organisch-Chemisches Institut der Westfälischen Wilhelms-Universität Münster, GermanyOrganizer Department of Molecular Chemistry and Materials ScienceContact
