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Friday, February 1, 2013
8:30 AM - 9:30 AM
Microbial Sciences Initiative (MSI) Chalktalk: "The Ure phenotype"
Description: Speaker: Dan Fraenkel (Harvard Medical School)
Location: HUCE Seminar Room (24 Oxford St, 3rd Floor, Room 310), Harvard University
Host: Roberto Kolter
Contact: Nora Millan Rivas
2:00 PM - 3:00 PM
Pathology Seminar Series
Description: Location: CLS (Center Life Sciences), 4th floor, Room 421, Children's Hospital
Contact: Cristina Bonilla
Tuesday, February 5, 2013
12:30 PM - 1:30 PM
How are hosts programmed to recover from infections?
Description: Dr. David Schneider, Stanford University
New Research Building - Room 1031, Harvard Medical School, 77 Ave. Louis Pasteur
Hosted by Dr. David Rudner
Contact: Jessica Conner
4:00 PM - 5:00 PM
Seminars in Oncology: "Dedifferentiation, Reprogramming and Transdifferentiation: Lessons from Glioblastoma"
Description: Charles I. Siegal Memorial Lecture
Guest Speaker: Inder Verma, PhD, Professor, Laboratory of Genetics, Salk Institute for Biological Studies

Location: Jimmy Fund Auditorium 35 Binney Street - Boston Hosted by: David Livingston, MD, PhD 617-582-7646
Contact: Claudia Steele
Wednesday, February 6, 2013
Noon - 1:00 PM
Novartis Weekly Seminar Series - Stem cells, molecular control of pluripotency and the promise for regenerative medicine
Description: Speaker: Rudolf Jaenisch, MD, Member, Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research, and Professor of Biology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Location: Novartis, 250 Massachusetts Avenue, Auditorium Enter on foot between 220 and 250 Massachusetts Avenue. The auditorium is located in the second building on your left.
Contact: Meghan Somers
Friday, February 8, 2013
12:30 PM - 1:30 PM
PCMM Seminar Series
Description: Cell Biological Aspects of Innate Immunity
Jonathan Kagan, Ph.D.
Fred S. Rosen Conference Room, CLSB, 3 Blackfan Circle – 3rd Floor, Room 3069
Hosted by: Sun Hur, Ph.D.
Contact: Zac DiPasquale
Monday, February 11, 2013
Noon - 1:00 PM
Aging and changes in kidney function
Description: Speaker: Mark Sarnak, Tufts Medical Center
All HNRCA Seminars will be held at 12 noon in the Auditorium of the HNRCA and will be followed by a student and post-doc luncheon on the 9thfloor, 711 Washington St. Boston
Contact: John Heine
Tuesday, February 12, 2013
12:30 PM - 1:30 PM
Metabolic Regulation of T Cell Function
Description: Dr. Erika Pearce, Washington University
New Research Building - Room 1031, Harvard Medical School, 77 Ave. Louis Pasteur
Hosted by Dr. Arlene Sharpe
Refreshments served at 12:15 pm outside the room
Contact: Jessica Conner
4:00 PM - 5:00 PM
Cancer Cell Signaling and Metabolism: Integrated Networks with Emerging Implications for Cancer Therapy
Description: Robert T. Abraham, PhD, Senior Vice President and Chief Scientific Officer, Oncology Research Unit, Pfizer

Location: BIDMC, Center for Life Sciences Bldg., Conference Room 421, Three Blackfan Circle, Boston, MA
Contact: Cristina Bonilla
Wednesday, February 13, 2013
6:00 PM - 9:00 PM
WEST: Anatomy of a Blindside
Description: Workshop given by Bonnie Marcus, Executive Coach

The workplace is a highly politicized environment where key decisions about who gets ahead and who gets plum assignments, who gets the scarce resources are not just decided on merit, but politics.

Everyone talks about the glass ceiling and how women need to knock on the glass ceiling to get ahead. What’s really going on is that there is a political power grid that holds women back, not a glass ceiling, and this power grid is so hidden and buried that women don’t even know it exists. And because they don’t know it exists, they can accidentally step on something and get blindsided.

During this presentation, attendees will learn:

How to identify the power grid in their workplace<
How to navigate the power grid and avoid the landmines
How to get ahead and stay ahead in today’s workplace

Location:
The Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, Monadnock Room 7 Cambridge Center, Cambridge, MA 02142

Cost: Members: $40; Non-Members: $60

A light dinner will be served.
Contact: Jaime Mayo
Thursday, February 14, 2013
5:30 PM - 7:00 PM
Microbial Sciences Initiative (MSI) Seminar: If at first you don't succeed.....Fructose uptake into E.coli and its regulation
Description: Speaker: Hans Kornberg (Boston University)
Location: HUCE Seminar Room (24 Oxford St, 3rd Floor, Room 310), Harvard University
Reception at 5:30PM, seminar at 6:00PM
Host: Michael Gilmore
Contact: Nora Millan Rivas
Tuesday, February 19, 2013
12:30 PM - 1:30 PM
Merkel Cell Polyomavirus Replication, DNA Damage Response and Cancer
Description: Jianxin You, University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine
Location: Harvard Medical School, New Research Building, 1031, 77 Avenue Louis Pasteur, Boston, MA. 02115
Hosted by Peter Howley
Contact: Jessica Conner
Thursday, February 21, 2013
Noon - 1:00 PM
Single Molecule Arrays (Simoa) for the ultrasensitive detection of proteins and nucleic acids
Description: Speaker: David C. Duffy, PhD, Vice President, Research, Quanterix Corporation
Location: The Forsyth Institute, Seminar Room A, 245 First Street, Cambridge
Summary:We will describe the single molecule array technology —or Simoa—that allows multiple proteins to be detected at concentrations 1000-fold lower than is possible with current diagnostic technology. The technology has single molecule resolution, and is based on capturing and labeling protein molecules on magnetic beads, and imaging those beads in arrays of thousands of femtoliter wells. The ability to detect proteins at subfemtomolar concentrations enables biomarkers that are discovered using proteomic and genomic strategies to be measured in bodily fluids, and used as clinical diagnostics. We will provide examples of biomarker detection in cancer, neurological disorders, and infectious diseases, highlighting the collaboration with the Forsyth to detect biomarkers from Mycobacterium tuberculosis. A fully automated Simoa instrument, capable of multiplexed biomarker detection will be described, as well as Simoa assays for DNA and RNA.

Educational/Learning Objectives •The audience will be educated on the fundamentals of an innovative single molecule technology for detecting protein and nucleic acid biomarkers. •They will hear how the translation of biomarkers from discovery to measurement in the clinic is a major technological challenge facing the development of diagnostics. •They will hear how more sensitive measurements of proteins in bodily fluids can be applied in cancer, neurology, and infectious diseases. •They will also be educated on instrumentation used to make single molecule measurements.

_1_ Continuing education credits provided by The Forsyth Institute.*
*The Forsyth Institute is an ADA CERP recognized provider . ADA CERP is a service of the American Dental Association to assist dental professionals in identifying quality providers of continuing dental education. ADA CERP does not approve or endorse individual courses or instructors, nor does it imply acceptance of credit hours by boards of dentistry. Concerns or complaints about a CE provider may be directed to the provider or to ADA CERP at www.ada.org/cerp. The Forsyth Institute designates _1_continuing education credits.
Contact: Pam Quattrocchi
Friday, February 22, 2013
8:30 AM - 9:30 AM
Microbial Sciences Initiative (MSI) Chalktalk: "Microbial electrophysiology"
Description: Speaker: Adam Cohen (FAS-CCB)
Location: HUCE Seminar Room (24 Oxford St, 3rd Floor, Room 310), Harvard University
Host: Emily Balskus
Contact: Nora Millan Rivas
Monday, February 25, 2013
Noon - 1:00 PM
New directions in HCI, adaptive user interfaces, and brain-computer interaction
Description: All HNRCA Seminars will be held at 12 noon in the Auditorium of the HNRCA and will be followed by a student and post-doc luncheon on the 9thfloor, 711 Washington St. Boston, MA 02111
Contact: John Heine
4:00 PM - 5:00 PM
The Hippo signaling pathway: from developmental biology to translational implications
Description: Duojia D.J. Pan, Ph.D., Professor Department of Molecular Biology and Genetics, Department of Oncology, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.
Location: MGH East - Building 149 13th Street - Isselbacher Auditorium 7th Floor Charlestown, MA 02129
Contact: Vivian Theodoracopoulos
4:30 PM - 5:30 PM
TY Shen Lectures-A radical strategy for antibiotic resistance: Mechanistic dissection of a novel post-transcriptional modification of 23S ribosomal RNA
Description: Squire J. Booker, Penn State
Room 6-120, MIT
Contact: Laura Doughty, 617 258-7851
Contact: Laura Doughty
Tuesday, February 26, 2013
12:30 PM - 1:30 PM
DNA replication and cell division in the third domain of life
Description: Stephen D. Bell, Indiana University
Location: Harvard Medical School, New Research Building, 1031, 77 Avenue Louis Pasteur, Boston, MA. 02115
Hosted by David Rudner
Contact: Jessica Conner
4:00 PM - 5:00 PM
TY Shen Lectures-Taking a hit for the team: Self-sacrifice as an enzymatic strategy in anaerobic functionalization of unactivated C-H bonds
Description: Squire J. Booker, Penn State
Room 6-120, MIT
Contact: Laura Doughty, 617 258-7851
Contact: Laura Doughty
4:00 PM - 5:00 PM
Seminars in Oncology: "Oncogenic Pathways, Drug Resistance and Targeted Therapies in T-All"
Description: Guest Speaker: Adolfo Ferrando, MD, PhD, Associate Professor of Pathology and Pediatrics, Columbia University New York, NY
Location: Jimmy Fund Auditorium, (35 Binney Street - Boston)
Hosted by: William Hahn, MD, PhD, 617-582-7646.
Contact: Claudia Steele
Wednesday, February 27, 2013
11:30 AM - 1:00 PM
Bioinformatics Seminar Series:RNA conformational switches and the Fast Fourier Transform
Description: Peter Clote, Boston College
TOC Lab, MIT's Stata Building 32 Room G575

RNA secondary structure forms a scaffold for tertiary structure formation, hence is a major determinant for both structure and function of an RNA molecule. While protein secondary structure is predicted by machine learning methods, RNA secondary structure can be predicted by dynamic programming methods that use an ab initio energy model will experimentally measured free energy parameters. Such thermodynamics-based methods constitute important tools especially when confronted with novel RNAs of unknown function. In this talk, we describe two recent results. First, we briefly describe a new algorithm, RNAsc, to optimally predict RNA secondary structure when integrating chemical/enzymatic probing data, such as in-line probing or SHAPE data (selective 2'-hydroxyl acylation analyzed by primer extension). Secondly, we describe a thermodynamics-based algorithm, FFTbor, for conformational switch prediction that employs the FFT to determine partition functions by polynomial interpolation.
Contact: Patrice Macaluso
Thursday, February 28, 2013
8:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Health Equity Symposium: Science & Medicine in Africa
Description: Date: February 28, 2013
Location: Novartis, 250 Massachusetts Avenue, Auditorium, Cambridge, MA 02144

How do we create a new scenario in which every nation in the developing world has the power to improve the health of its population in the face of challenges?

Attend HES 2013 to learn about new, more effective approaches of increasing science and technology capabilities within the developing world.

Keynote Speaker: Sir Nigel Crisp, Member of the UK House of Lords and former Director of the UK National Health Service

Presentations and panel discussions will address the following topics:
• Scientific capability development as a bidirectional effort. • What industrialized and developing nations can learn from each other

Two visions: the future of basic science and clinical research in Africa
• An in-depth discussion with the audience on open questions and innovative solutions to infrastructure building and capabilities development
• Emerging challenges – dealing with the rise of chronic diseases in Africa and the developing world
• African genome projects - optimizing treatment for genetically diverse populations
• What lessons can be learned from efforts to eradicate disease?
• Exploring the benefits of healthier nations – an economic dividend
For the full program and to register visit www.healthequitysymposium.com
Contact: Meghan Somers
12:15 PM - 1:45 PM
Systems Biology Seminar
Description: Hongzhe Li, Professor of Biostatistics in Biostatistics and Epidemiology, University of Pennsylvania
All talks to be held in LSE room 103, Boston University (24 Cummington St., Boston, MA) on Thursdays.
A free lunch will begin at 12:15; talks will begin at 12:45 unless otherwise noted.
Contact: Paige Fults
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