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Monday, December 6, 2010
(All Day)
2010 French American Innovation Day on Alzheimer's disease
Description: U.S. & France join efforts in the field of Alzheimer’s Disease (AD)

The French American Innovation Day (FAID) is the flagship seminar of the Office of Science and Technology of the French Embassy in the U.S. (Boston section). The 2010 edition of FAID will be a full-day science & innovation seminar addressing a major public health issue and devastating neurodegenerative disorder, Alzheimer's disease (AD).

The topic of this year’s edition is of particular relevance, as 2010 marks the second anniversary of the French National Plan for Alzheimer’s and related diseases (2008-2012), launched in February 2008 by French President Nicolas Sarkozy, and given the implications of the two countries in the fight against this disease.

On this occasion, we will be pleased to have Professor Philippe Amouyel as scientific director of the seminar, the head of the National Scientific Foundation for Alzheimer’s disease and related disorders. The foundation was created to implement the research part of the National Plan for Alzheimer’s disease. Professor Philippe Amouyel is also President of the Lille Pasteur Institute.

His U.S. counterpart is Professor John H. Growdon, Founding Director of the Massachusetts Alzheimer's Disease Research Center, Director of Memory and Movement Disorders Units at Massachusetts General Hospital, and Professor of Neurology at Harvard Medical School.

Entitled “Alzheimer’s disease: The Pursuit of Personalized Medicine”, the seminar will consist of 6 interactive sessions where the latest research and innovative therapeutic strategies will be explored. 2010 FAID will gather the most prominent scientists, both from the U.S. and France, in the field of AD. A total of four corporate sponsors (Pfizer, Guerbet, EnVivo pharmaceuticals and Elan) together with two renowned Mass. institutions (Broad Institute, Mass. Life Sciences Center) partnered with the O.S.T. to organize the event.

The meeting is designed to take stock of the most recent developments in AD research and translational activities. 2010 FAID is also intended to focus and develop more collaborative joint activities between France and the U.S.
Contact: Lynda Inseque
Noon - 1:00 PM
Research Seminar Series:Presentation topic: Changes in prefrontal axons may disrupt the network in autism
Description: Speaker: Vasileios (Basilis) Zikopoulos, Sargent College, Department of Health Sciences, Boston
LOCATION: Room 220, Boston UniversityCollege of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences: Sargent College, 635 Commonwealth Avenue
HOST: Dr. Helen Barbas
Refreshments will be served
For more information on Dr. Zikopoulos go to: http://people.bu.edu/zikopoul/
Contact: Danka Charland
Noon - 1:00 PM
Biolomolecular Seminar Series
Description: Genetic Forms of Parkinson's Disease
Dr. Sreeganga Chandra, Program in Cellular Neuroscience,
Neurodegeneration and Repair, Yale University
Boston University
24 Cummington St, LSE B01
Boston, MA 02215

http://people.bu.edu/celenza/Biomolecular.html

Contact: Professor Chip Celenza
1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
The Program in Genetics and Genomics Annual Symposium
Description: The Program in Genetics and Genomics presents its 2nd annual symposium, featuring the research of past and current students.

Joseph B. Martin Conference Center
Rotunda Room, 3rd floor
Monday, December 6th, 1:00 - 5:00 pm

Poster session with wine and cheese to follow.

Speakers:
Rachel Green, Johns Hopkins
"Quality control during translation in bacteria and eukaryotes"

Erica Gerace, Moazed Laboratory, HMS
"Linking RNAi to histone acetylation"

Sean Garrity, Hochschild Laboratory, HMS
"Behavior of a yeast prion protein in bacterial cells"

Ralph Isberg, Tufts University
"What Legionella learned from growing in amoebae...and what it did not"

David Altshuler, HMS
"Human genome sequence variation and the inherited basis of type 2 diabetes"
Contact: Leah Brault
4:00 PM - 5:00 PM
Linking genetic features of human cancers to cancer therapeutics
Description: Stuart Schreiber, Ph.D.
Director of Chemical Biology
The Broad Institute of Harvard and MIT
Contact: Bonnie Carroll
Tuesday, December 7, 2010
8:00 AM - 5:00 PM
BU Pharmacology & Experimental Therapeutics - Pfizer Symposium, "Inflammation Breaking Out: Molecular Mechanisms for Therapeutic Discovery
Description: Featuring: Paul M Allen, PhD, Washington U Sch/Med; Melissa A Brown, PhD, Northwestern U Sch/Med; Tsuneya Ikezu, MD/PhD, Boston U Sch/Med; James G Krueger, MD/PhD, Rockefeller U; Joost J Oppenheim, MD, NCI/NIH; John O'Shea, MD, NIAMSD/NIH; Serge Przedborski, MD/PhD, Columbia U CPS; Sachiko Sato, PhD, Centre de Recherche Infectiologie du CHUL, Laval U; M Celeste Simon, PhD, U Penn Sch/Med/HHMI; Thaddeus S. Stappenbeck, MD/PhD, Washington U Sch/Med.

Registration/Breakfast at 8:00 am. Program begins at 8:30 am. Free and Open to the public. Register: www.bumc.bu.edu/busm-pm/bupfizerinflammation
Contact: Sara Johnson
12:30 PM - 1:30 PM
Metabolomic Analysis; Fat Management by Human Cytomegalovirus
Description: Speaker: Thomas Shenk, Princeton University
Location: Harvard Med School, Warren Alpert Bldg, Room 341
Host: Dr. David Knipe
Coffee and snacks served at 12:15 PM outside the room
Contact: Shannon Humphreys
2:30 PM - 4:00 PM
The Singleton Lectures: Geometry and the Brain Series: Patterns in the brain Cortical organization and pattern formation
Description: Speaker: L. Mahadevan, Visiting Professor, BCS, MIT
Location: MIT, Picower Room, 46-3310
Brain anatomy is immediately distinguished by its geometrically complex rugged landscape of sulci and gyri. Brain function is associated with how neurons are wired together and how they fire. Understanding the origins of the structure and connectivity in the brain requires the natural language of shape, i.e. geometry, combined with aspects of physics. This set of four lectures will provide a brief (and biased) introduction to some questions about the geometry of the brain and geometry in the brain. How can one describe these features quantitatively? How can one understand their origin? How might we compare brains from different organisms in a species and across different species? How can we characterize the patterns associated with sensory modalities in different cortii? And what is the current state of answers to these and related questions.
http://bcs.mit.edu/newsevents/calendar.php
Contact: Kathleen Dickey
4:00 PM - 5:00 PM
Seminars in Oncology: Transcription Networks and Chromatin Remodeling Controlling Adipocyte Differentiation
Description: Guest Speaker: Susanne Mandrup, PhD
Professor
Department of Biochemistry & Molecular Biology
University of Southern Denmark

Hosted by: Myles A. Brown, MD
617-582-7646
Contact: Claudia Steele
Wednesday, December 8, 2010
6:00 PM - 9:00 PM
"Professional Turbocharge: Entrepreneurially Manage Your Career and Life" Panel Discussion
Description: Don't miss this special opportunity to take a more entrepreneurial
approach to your career in science and technology! Gain tools and
understanding for how to best evolve your professional plans
so you can reach your full potential. Learn how to actively
manage your career to achieve greater satisfaction, more
productivity, and increased effectiveness. Topics include
successful work/life balance, finding and pursuing your passion
tips and tools for leaving and re-entering the workforce and
effectively networking & establishing mentoring relationships for
greater professional success.

Our speakers:
• Carol Fishman Cohen, Author, Back On The Career Track
• Lauren Celano, Co-founder & CEO, Propel Careers
• Joanne Kamens, PhD, 2010 Catalyst Award Winner
• Barbara Carter (moderator) Principal, Barbara Carter Consulting

http://www.westorg.org/mc/page.do?sitePageId=120435

Don't wait for new years' resolutions to be more intentional about
your professional plans – jumpstart your career now!

Contact: Susan Silberman
Thursday, December 9, 2010
9:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Computational Aspects of Biological Information 2010
Description: Computational Aspects of Biological Information (C.A.B.I. 2010) is a one day workshop on challenges in computational biology. C.A.B.I. 2010 will be held at Microsoft Research New England on December 9, 2010 and will bring together experts in the Boston/Cambridge area to discuss computational and modeling challenges in biology with a focus on systems biology, phylogeny and neuroscience. The workshop is open to everyone and registration is free of charge.

http://research.microsoft.com/en-us/events/cabi2010/
Contact: Oznur Tastan
Noon - 1:00 PM
Interactions between Candida albicans and the commensal bacterial flora in an oral-like environment
Description: Location: The Forsyth Institute
245 First St., 17th Fl., Seminar Room A
Cambridge, MA 02142

Speaker: Patricia I. Diaz, DDS, MS, PhD
Assistant Professor
Division of Periodontology
Dept. of Oral Health & Diagnostic Sciences
University of Connecticut Health Center

Summary: Candida albicans is the cause of oral opportunistic infections. C. albicans colonization of the oral cavity is bound to be influenced by resident oral bacterial communities. Non-hemolytic streptococci are the most common commensal bacteria in the oral cavity of humans and are found in close physical association with C. albicans in oral biofilms in vivo. This presentation will summarize our current work characterizing the inter-kingdom interactions between C. albicans and oral streptococci. Our research utilizes systems that mimic conditions in the oral environment such as saliva-supplemented standard flow cells and a newly designed flow cell system, which supports biofilm growth on a 3-D oral mucosa tissue analogue. We present data that support the notion that C. albicans and oral streptococci share a mutualistic relationship in which C. albicans enhances the biofilm growth of streptococci while the bacteria increase the virulence potential of C. albicans.
Contact: Pam Quattrocchi
2:30 PM - 4:00 PM
The Singleton Lectures: Geometry and the Brain Series: Representation and pattern theory
Description: Speaker: L. Mahadevan, Visiting Professor, BCS, MIT
Location: MIT, Picower Room, 46-3310

Brain anatomy is immediately distinguished by its geometrically complex rugged landscape of sulci and gyri. Brain function is associated with how neurons are wired together and how they fire. Understanding the origins of the structure and connectivity in the brain requires the natural language of shape, i.e. geometry, combined with aspects of physics. This set of four lectures will provide a brief (and biased) introduction to some questions about the geometry of the brain and geometry in the brain. How can one describe these features quantitatively? How can one understand their origin? How might we compare brains from different organisms in a species and across different species? How can we characterize the patterns associated with sensory modalities in different cortii? And what is the current state of answers to these and related questions.
http://bcs.mit.edu/newsevents/calendar.php
Contact: Kathleen Dickey
4:00 PM - 5:00 PM
Ciliogenesis and Cell Polarity in the Vertebrate Embryo
Description: Tufts University Program in Cell, Molecular and Developmental Biology Seminar Series.
Guest Speaker: Jarema Malicki, PhD, Division of Craniofacial and Molecular Genetics, Tufts University.
Location: Tufts University Posner Auditorium, 200 Harrison Avenue, Boston, MA 02111
Wine and cheese reception immediately following in the M&V 5th floor library, 136 Harrison Avenue, Boston, MA 02111
Contact: Sharon Titus
6:00 PM - 7:00 PM
The only constant is change: temporal dynamics of host-associated microbiota
Description: Harvard Microbial Sciences Initiative (MSI) Monthly Seminar Series!
Speaker: Patrick Schloss
Location: *Alternate Location this month is Haller Hall, Geological Museum 1st floor, 24 Oxford St, Cambridge**
Please join us for a wine and cheese reception at 5:30pm in the lobby outside Haller Hall, on the 1st floor of the Geological Museum.

http://www.msi.harvard.edu/events/thursdays.html
Contact: Andrea Lenco
6:00 PM - 7:00 PM
The only constant is change: temporal dynamics of host-associated microbiota
Description: Harvard Microbial Sciences Initiative Monthly Seminar Series! Please join us for a wine and cheese reception at 5:30PM.
Speaker: Patrick Schloss (University of Michigan)
Location: Harvard University Center for the Environment, 24 Oxford St, 3rd Floor, Room 310
http://www.msi.harvard.edu/events/thursdays.html
Contact: Andrea Lenco
Friday, December 10, 2010
8:00 AM - 9:00 AM
Management of Severe Lupus
Description: Management of Severe Lupus W. Joseph McCune, M.D. Professor, Internal Medicine University of Michigan Medical School Friday, December 10th, 2010, 8:00 AM BIDMC Rheumatology Grand Rounds 3 Blackfan Circle, CLS 921, Boston, MA 02215
Contact: Betty Chase
Noon - 1:00 PM
Predictions for Visual Coding and Performance from the Statistical Properties of Natural Scenes
Description: Wilson Geisler, Ph.D.
Professor of Psychology at University of Texas

Meltzer Auditorium, 3rd Floor
Massachusetts Eye & Ear Infirmary
243 Charles St., Boston, MA 02114
Contact: Nora Zatezalo
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