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ינואר 01, 2015
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Date:07רביעידצמבר 2022הרצאה
Lysosomal regulation of neuronal circuit remodeling
More information שעה 10:00 - 11:00מיקום בניין ארתור ורושל בלפר למחקר ביורפואימרצה Prof. Oren Schuldiner
Dept of Molecular Cell Biology WISצרו קשר -
Date:08חמישידצמבר 2022כנסים
The annual IsSDB symposium: Imaging development
More information שעה 08:00 - 08:00מיקום מרכז כנסים על-שם דויד לופאטייושב ראש Oren Schuldiner -
Date:08חמישידצמבר 2022הרצאה
Time Domain and High Frequency DNP Experiments
More information שעה 09:30 - 10:30מיקום אולם הרצאות ע"ש גרהרד שמידטמרצה Prof. Robert G. Griffin
Dept. Chemistry, MITמארגן מכון קלור לדימות וספקטרוסקופיה של תהודה מגנטית בעוצמות גבוהותצרו קשר תקציר Show full text abstract about Dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) has become an invaluable ...» Dynamic nuclear polarization (DNP) has become an invaluable tool to enhance sensitivity of
magic angle spinning (MAS) NMR, enabling the study of biomolecules and materials which are
otherwise intractable. In this presentation we explore some new aspects of time domain DNP
experiments and their applications.
One of the main thrusts of DNP was to provide increased sensitivity for MAS spectroscopy of
membrane and amyloid protein experiments. A problem frequently encountered in these
experiments is the broadened resonances that occur at low temperatures when motion is quenched.
In some cases it is clear that the proteins are homogeneously broadened, and therefore that higher
Zeeman fields and faster spinning is required to recall the resolution. We show this is the case for
MAS DNP spectra of Ab1-42 amyloid fibrils where the resolution at 100 K is identical to that at room
temperature. Furthermore, we compare the sensitivity of DNP and 1H detected experiments and find
that DNP, even with a modest ℇ=22, is ~x6.5 times more sensitive.
We have also investigated the frequency swept-integrated solid effect (FS-ISE) and two recently
discovered variants – the stretched solid effect (SSE) and the adiabatic solid effect (ASE). We find
that the latter two experiments can give up to a factor of ~2 larger enhancement than the FS-ISE.
The SSE and ASE experiments should function well at high fields.
Finally, we discuss two new instrumental advances. First, a frequency swept microwave source
that permits facile investigation of field profiles. It circumvents the need for a B0 sweep coil and the
compromise of field homogeneity and loss of helium associated with such studies. This
instrumentation has permitted us to elucidate the polarization transfer mechanism of the Overhauser
effect, and also revealed interesting additional couplings (ripples) in field profiles of cross effect
polarizing agents. Second, to improve the spinning frequency in DNP experiments, we have
developed MAS rotors laser machined from single crystal diamonds. Diamond rotors should permit
higher spinning frequencies, improved microwave penetration, and sample cooling. -
Date:08חמישידצמבר 2022הרצאה
The importance of deciphering natural processes in sites: understanding sedimentary structures and fabrics
More information שעה 13:30 - 13:30מיקום Benoziyo Building for Biological Science, Room 590מרצה Panagiotis Karkanas
Malcolm H. Weiner Laboratory for Archaeological Science, American School of Classical Studies in Athens, Greeceצרו קשר -
Date:11ראשוןדצמבר 202215חמישידצמבר 2022כנסים
MPGD 2021
More information שעה 08:00 - 08:00יושב ראש Shikma Bresslerדף בית -
Date:11ראשוןדצמבר 2022הרצאה
GPR75-20-HETE pairing: A novel therapeutic target for cardiometabolic diseases
More information שעה 15:00 - 16:00מיקום Lopatie Comparative medicine buildingמרצה Prof. Michal Laniado-Schwartzman
Department of Pharmacology New York Medical College School of Medicineצרו קשר -
Date:12שנידצמבר 2022סימפוזיונים
Mapping protein conformations using EPR/DEER spectroscopy
More information שעה 11:00 - 12:15מיקום אולם הרצאות ע"ש גרהרד שמידטמרצה Prof. Stefan Stoll
Department of Chemistry, University of Washingtonמארגן הפקולטה לכימיהדף בית צרו קשר תקציר Show full text abstract about For many proteins, flexibility and motion form the basis of ...» For many proteins, flexibility and motion form the basis of their function. In our lab, we quantify the conformational landscapes of proteins and their changes upon interaction with external effectors. Using Double Electron-Electron Resonance (DEER) spectroscopy, a form of Electron Paramagnetic Resonance (EPR) spectroscopy, we directly measure absolute distances and distance distributions between pairs of spin labels within proteins. From the data, we build quantitative structural and energetic models of the protein's intrinsic flexibility, conformational substates, and the structural changes induced by ligands and binding partners. In this talk, I present some of our recent results on the allosteric regulation of ion channels, the function of de novo designed protein switches, and novel methods for measuring protein conformations directly in their native cellular environment. -
Date:12שנידצמבר 2022הרצאה
Seminar for Thesis defense
More information שעה 15:30 - 16:30כותרת “Deciphering the role of translation supply and demand in human physiology”מיקום בניין ארתור ורושל בלפר למחקר ביורפואימרצה Noa Aharon-Hefetz מארגן המחלקה לגנטיקה מולקולריתצרו קשר -
Date:13שלישידצמבר 2022הרצאה
Flip to Insert: The role of helix flipping in membrane proteins folding
More information שעה 10:00 - 11:00מיקום בניין לביוכימיה על שם נלה וליאון בנוזיומרצה Dr. Hadas Zehavi
Dept. of Biomolecular Sciences-WISמארגן המחלקה למדעים ביומולקולרייםצרו קשר תקציר Show full text abstract about Helical membrane proteins make up a quarter of the proteome ...» Helical membrane proteins make up a quarter of the proteome in every living organism, performing a huge array of essential functions. The transmembrane helices (TMHs) of these proteins are typically inserted co-translationally, giving each protein its unique membrane topology. This topology is assumed to be constrained by the membrane and remain unchanged after translation. However, our results suggest that some TMHs are surprisingly dynamic, and can flip across the membrane. This unexpected conformational freedom might mediate important biological roles in the folding mechanisms of membrane proteins. -
Date:13שלישידצמבר 2022הרצאה
How movement regulates defensive behaviours in a social context
More information שעה 12:30 - 12:30מיקום אולם הרצאות ע"ש גרהרד שמידטמרצה Prof. Marta Moita
Behavioural Neuroscience Champalimaud Center, Lisbonמארגן המחלקה למדעי המוחצרו קשר תקציר Show full text abstract about Our work concerns the general problem of adaptive behavior i...» Our work concerns the general problem of adaptive behavior in response to predatory threats, and of the neural mechanisms underlying a choice between strategies. Interacting predators and prey tightly regulate their motion, timing with precision when to hold, attack or escape. Motion cues are thus paramount in these interactions. Speed and (un)predictability have shaped the evolution of sensory and motor systems, the elucidation of which a great deal of research has been devoted. Much less attention has been paid to the role of motion as a social cue of threat or safety. We and others have found that prey animals use the movement of their neighbors to regulate their defensive responses. We have studied social regulation of freezing in rodents and found that rats use cessation of movement evoked sound, resulting from freezing, as a cue of danger. In addition, auto-conditioning, whereby rats learn the association between shock and their own freezing, during prior experience with shock, facilitates the use of freezing by others as an alarm cue. To further explore the social regulation of defensive responses we resorted to the use fruit flies as it easily allows testing of groups of varying sizes, the collection of large data sets and genetic access to individual neuronal types. We established that fruit flies in response to visual looming stimuli, simulating a large object on collision course, make rapid freeze/flee choices accompanied by lasting changes in the fly’s internal state, reflected in altered cardiac activity. Freezing in flies is also strongly modulated by the movement of surrounding neighbours. In contrast with rodents that use auditory cues, female flies use visual motion processed by visual projection neurons. Finally, I will discuss more preliminary findings suggesting that there are multiple states of freezing as measured by muscle activity in the fly legs. Having established the fly as a model to study freezing/fleeing decisions, we are in a great position to perform large scale integrative studies on the organization of defensive behaviours.
Short Bio
Marta Moita received her BSc degree in Biology at the University of Lisbon, in 1995. As part of Gulbenkian’s PhD programme in Biology and Medicine she developed her thesis work, on the encoding by place cells of threat conditioning under the supervision of Prof. Joseph Ledoux, at the New York University (1997-2002). In 2002, Marta Moita worked as a postdoctoral fellow in Dr. Tony Zador’s laboratory, at the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, to study the role of auditory cortex in sound discrimination. In 2004, she became a principal investigator, leading the Behavioral Neuroscience lab, at the Instituto Gulbenkian de Ciência. In 2008 her group joined the starting Champalimaud Neuroscience program. In 2018 and 2019 Marta Moita served as Deputy Director of Champalimaud Research. Her lab is primarily interested in understanding the mechanisms of behavior. To this end, the lab has focused on behaviors that are crucial for survival and present in a wide range of species, namely defensive behaviors triggered by external threats. Using a combination of state-of-the-art tools in Neuroscience (initially using rats and currently using fruit flies) and detailed quantitative descriptions of behavior, her lab aims to understand how contextual cues guide the selection between different defensive strategies and how the chosen defensive behavior and accompanying physiological responses are instantiated.
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Date:13שלישידצמבר 2022הרצאה
Using genomics to investigate radiation-related thyroid cancer following the Chernobyl accident in 1986
More information שעה 14:00 - 15:00מיקום בניין ע"ש מקס ולילאן קנדיוטימרצה Stephen J. Chanock, M.D.
Director Division of Cancer Epidemiology & Genetics National Cancer Institute Maryland, USAמארגן המכון לחקר הטיפול בסרטן עש דואקצרו קשר -
Date:14רביעידצמבר 2022הרצאה
Engineering Imaging Technologies and Discovering Biomarkers to Characterize Disease States
More information שעה 11:00 - 12:00מיקום אולם הרצאות ע"ש גרהרד שמידטמרצה Prof. Barbara S. Smith
School of Biological and Health Systems Engineering, Arizona State Universityמארגן המחלקה לכימיה מולקולרית ולמדע חומריםצרו קשר תקציר Show full text abstract about Neurodegenerative diseases are often clinically, genetically...» Neurodegenerative diseases are often clinically, genetically, and pathologically heterogeneous. The clinical impact of understanding heterogeneity is perhaps best observed in cancer, where subtype-specificity within diagnoses, prognoses, and treatments have had a critical impact on clinical decision making and patient outcomes. A better understanding of how mechanisms are related to or drive heterogeneity within diseases such as Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS), will have a direct impact on patient outcomes, with a conscious effort to move towards precision medicine and targeted therapeutics for patients, which are urgently needed. For this reason, neuroscientists and oncologists have long aspired to achieve an understanding of the mechanisms governing pathophysiology. Our interdisciplinary work integrates technologies across a wide range of fields to surpass the current barriers in understanding disease pathophysiology. This talk will highlight a series of optical and photoacoustic imaging tools as well as multi-omics analysis that have been developed and studied in Dr. Smith’s lab to address the urgent need for non-invasive cancer detection and the characterization of neurological disorders. Through this work, we aim to develop translational technologies and methodologies to better characterize, understand, and detect disease pathogenesis, beyond current capabilities. -
Date:15חמישידצמבר 2022סימפוזיונים
Physics Hybrid Colloquium
More information שעה 11:15 - 12:30כותרת Review of high energy density physics driven by advanced pulsed-power systemsמיקום בניין הפיזיקה ע"ש עדנה וק.ב. וייסמןמרצה Dr. Daniel B. Sinars
Sandia National Laboratories, USAמארגן הפקולטה לפיזיקהצרו קשר תקציר Show full text abstract about Pulsed power accelerators compress electrical energy in spac...» Pulsed power accelerators compress electrical energy in space and time to provide versatile experimental platforms for high energy density and inertial confinement fusion science. The 80-TW “Z” pulsed power facility at Sandia National Laboratories is the largest pulsed power device in the world today. Z discharges up to 22 MJ of energy stored in its capacitor banks into a current pulse that rises in 100 ns and peaks at a current as high as 30 MA in mm-scale targets. Considerable progress has been made over the last decade in the use of pulsed power as a precision scientific tool and for achieving extremely high-energy-density conditions. This talk reviews fundamental science research at Sandia in inertial confinement fusion, dynamic high-pressure material science, intense x-ray radiation science, and pulsed power technology. I will conclude with a few remarks on a Next Generation Pulsed Power project that the U.S. government is considering at this time. Comments will be given on the last-week announcement on the “major scientific breakthrough in Fusion ignition”.
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Date:15חמישידצמבר 2022הרצאה
One possible reason why the petrous bone preserves ancient DNA relatively well is that it contains high concentrations of bone cells
More information שעה 13:30 - 13:30מיקום Room 590, Benoziyo Building for Biological Science, Weizmann Institute of Scienceמרצה Jamal Ibrahim
The Scientific Archaeology Unit, Weizmann Institute of Science, Israelצרו קשר -
Date:18ראשוןדצמבר 2022הרצאה
Structure and Dynamics of Polyelectrolyte Complex Network under Electric Field
More information שעה 11:00 - 12:00מיקום בניין פרלמן למדעי הכימיהמרצה Prof. Eyal Zussman
Dept Mechanical Engineering, Technionמארגן המחלקה לכימיה מולקולרית ולמדע חומריםצרו קשר תקציר Show full text abstract about Electrostatic interactions between polyelectrolyte (PE) ch...»
Electrostatic interactions between polyelectrolyte (PE) charges and dissociated counterions provide PEs with intriguing properties and significantly determine their conformation and dynamics. This research shows how weak PE chains form a global network when they are oppositely charged and how strong electric fields lead to orientational order. The development of controlled drug release and responsive structures is demonstrated by the use of ordered PE with tunable intermolecular interactions.
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Date:18ראשוןדצמבר 2022הרצאה
Estimating Climate Change Mitigation Potential Through Dryland Forestation Actions
More information שעה 13:00 - 14:00כותרת SAERI - Sustainability and Energy Research Initiative Seminar Seriesמיקום בניין לביוכימיה על שם נלה וליאון בנוזיומרצה Shani Rohatyn-Blitz, PhD
Coordinator for Research and Foreign Relations Forestry Division, KKL-JNF Israelמארגן בית הספר למחקר - מכון ויצמן למדעצרו קשר -
Date:18ראשוןדצמבר 2022הרצאה
From atomic imaging and functionalizing of inorganic 2D materials to molecular imaging of organic 2D materials
More information שעה 14:00 - 15:00מיקום בניין פרלמן למדעי הכימיהמרצה Prof. Ute Kaiser
Ulm University, Materials Science Electron Microscopyמארגן המחלקה לכימיה מולקולרית ולמדע חומריםצרו קשר תקציר Show full text abstract about In this lecture, the theoretical and technical base for atom...» In this lecture, the theoretical and technical base for atomic imaging of defects in inorganic 2D materials in the low-voltage transmission electron microscope SALVE will be discussed. Atomic defects can significantly change the properties of the material: Using 2D-TMDs and 2D-TMPTs and corresponding heterostructures, this is shown experimentally and verified by corresponding quantum mechanical calculations. We also use the electron beam for the targeted formation of new phases in the inorganic 2D matrix. Since the interaction cross-sections of electron beam and organic 2D materials differ strongly from the inorganic case, we explore highest-resolution imaging conditions for 2D polymers and various 2D MOFs and show that there is a trend towards lower voltage TEM as well. We may conclude that low-voltage TEM and low-dimensional materials are just made for each other. -
Date:19שנידצמבר 2022כנסים
EKARD symposium 2022
More information שעה 08:00 - 18:00יושב ראש Yardena Samuels -
Date:19שנידצמבר 2022הרצאה
A spectral T^{+}A^{-}G^{+} of episodic memory
More information שעה 13:00 - 14:00מיקום אולם הרצאות ע"ש גרהרד שמידטמרצה Prof. Michael J. Kahana
Edmund J. and Louise W. Kahn Term Professor of Psychology University of Pennsylvaniaמארגן המחלקה למדעים ביומולקולרייםצרו קשר -
Date:20שלישידצמבר 2022הרצאה
A direct MS approach for identifying damaged DNA in cancerous cells
More information שעה 10:00 - 11:00מיקום בניין לביוכימיה על שם נלה וליאון בנוזיומרצה Joanna Stimpson
Dept. of Biomolecular Sciences-WISמארגן המחלקה למדעים ביומולקולרייםצרו קשר תקציר Show full text abstract about DNA can be damaged by chemicals in our surroundings, and occ...» DNA can be damaged by chemicals in our surroundings, and occurs at the nucleophilic sites on the strand. Of particular interest is alkylation at the O6-position of guanine, which goes on to cause G:C -> A:T mutations. These mutations cause genomic instability and are linked to the onset of colorectal cancer (CRC). Identifying the extent and diversity of O6-guanine alkylation informs us on the exposure cancer patients have undergone.
Here we have developed a mass spectrometry based approached to identify damaged DNA. The method is based on the DNA repair protein MGMT, which directly removes alkylation from O6-alkyl guanine. MGMT can be used to probe the type and extent of O6-alkylation.
