Month

Fri. 8 Dec, 2017

TIME CHANGE! Nat and Internat Seminar Series - Who regulates HilD, the main regulator of SPI-1 in Salmonella?

Fri. 8 Dec, 2017 15:00 - 16:00

NOTE: The seminar starts at 15:00 and not at 14:00 as announced earlier

National and International Seminar Series 2017/2018

Speaker
Carlos Balsalobre
Universitat de Barcelona, Spain

 

Title:
Who regulates HilD, the main regulator of SPI-1 in Salmonella?

Host: Victoria Shingler

Place: Lecture Hall A5, Målpunkt R

 

NOTE: Before the seminar, from 14.30-15.00, coffee/tea will be served! Welcome!

This National and International Seminar Series is organised by Andrea Puhar, MIMS and Molecular Biology, and Mattias Forsell
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. and This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

 

pdfUpdated schedule of the seminar series

pdfHow to find to A5

Sat. 9 Dec, 2017

International Symposium on Cryo-EM – past and future challenges

Sat. 9 Dec, 2017 9:00 - 17:15

Celebrating the Nobel Prize in Chemistry 2017
Arrhenius Laboratory, Stockholm University, December 9, 2017

Visualizing the structures of biological molecular machines is an absolute requirement in order to understand their mechanism. Cryo-EM is a key method for this visualization, and due to the recent technical developments it can provide refined atomic structures even for structure-based drug design. The symposium coincides with the Nobel Prize that has been awarded for the development of the cryo- EM and will present the methodological progress as well as the applications to central biological questions. It brings together world-leading experts, Swedish researchers, and industrial scientists to discuss ideas for further advancement in this exciting and rapidly evolving field.

The symposium is free of charge but requires registration via symposium website: http://www.mmk.su.se/cryo-em-symsposium. All researchers are welcome to take active part and contribute with posters. Deadline for registration: November 20, 2017.

The Nobel Lectures given by this year’s Nobel Laureates in Physics and Chemistry will be held 9.00-14.00, December 8, Aula Magna, Stockholm University, which are open to public. The Nobel Prize Award Ceremony will be held on December 10.

09.00 – 09.10
Welcome and introduction – Sven Hovmöller, Stockholm University

09.10 – 09.45
Nigel Unwin, MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology, UK The structural basis of fast synaptic transmission explored by cryo-EM

09.45 – 10.20
Marin van Heel, Leiden University and LNNano, Campinas Brazil TBA

10.20 – 10.40
Shintaro Aibara, SciLifeLab/Stockholm University, Sweden From pharmaceutical compounds to ribosomes

10.40 – 11:00 Coffee break

11.00 – 11.35
Chris Russo, MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology, UK Determining and avoiding some of the physical limits in electron cryomicroscopy

11.35 – 12.10
Christian Spahn, Charité-Universitätsmedizin, Germany The ribosome - a paradigm for a macromolecular machine

12.10 – 12.30
Bjorn Forsberg, SciLifeLab/Stockholm University, Sweden Current and future processing paradigms in cryo-EM

12.30 – 14.00 Lunch and poster session, Arrhenius Laboratory

14.00 – 14.35
Yoshinori Fujiyoshi, Nagoya University, Japan Structure-Guided Drug Development by CryoEM

14.35 – 15.10
Peijun Zhang, University of Oxford and eBIC, Diamond Light Source, UK Structural Basis of HIV Capsid Assembly, Maturation and Host Cell Interactions

15:10 – 15:30
Janna Bigalke, AstraZeneca Pharmaceuticals, Möndal, Sweden The secret to cell regeneration: structural basis for RET activation by Neurturin

15.30 – 15.50 Coffee break

15:50 – 16:15
Hongwei Wang, Tsinghua University, China New opportunities that the phase plate brings to Cryo-EM

16:15 – 16:40
Dan Shi, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, USA< MicroED – a new application of electron crystallography in structural biology

16:40 – 17:00
Hongyi Xu, Stockholm University, Sweden Electron crystallography for studying protein structures

17.00– 17:15 Concluding remarks

Organisers:
Alexey Amunts (SciLifeLab/SU)
Erik Lindahl (SciLifeLab/SU & KTH)
Hans Hebert (KTH & KI)
Sven Hovmöller, Hongyi Xu, Xiaodong Zou (SU)
Contact: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Wed. 13 Dec, 2017

The science that gave me a Nobel prize and the science that didn’t - Lecture with Nobel laureate Jacques Dubochet

Wed. 13 Dec, 2017 14:00 - 15:00

Welcome to an open lecture of
Jacques Dubochet
Nobel laureate in Chemistry 2017

Title:
The science that gave me a Nobel prize and the science that didn’t

Place: Aula Nordica, Universum

 

Jacques Dubochet, who is based at the University of Lausanne in Switzerland, will be awarded the Nobel prize on December 10 together with Joachim Frank and Richard Henderson, for developing cryo-electron microscopy for the high-resolution structure determination of biomolecules in solution.

Umeå University and the Umeå Core Facility for Electron Microscopy (UCEM) has one of two cryo-electron microscopes in Sweden.

Hosts for the visit are Linda Sandblad, Director of UCEM and researcher at UCMR, MIMS and the Department of Microbiology, and Lars-Anders Carlson, researcher at WCMM and the Department of Medical Biochemistry and Biophysics.

During his visit, Professor Dubochet will also meet Umeå-based researchers and school students.

More information about the 2017 chemistry prize is available at the Nobel committé website