
Program -- Challenges in Biology -- 1:00PM Monday Oct 20, 2008 -- Davis Auditorium, Columbia UniversityA series of nomadic / peripatetic lectures in New York by distinguished lecturers.1:00 PM Introduction and Welcome – Professor Arthur Palmer, Columbia 1:10 PM Scientific Introduction, Chairman, Professor Robert Darnell, Rockefeller University 1:20 PM Professor David Ron, NYU Medical Center, " A physiological perspective on the cellular response to unfolded protein load " 2:20 PM Professor Robert | ||||||||
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| < < | Singer, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, " *Watching Messenger RNA in | |||||||
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| < < | Action* " | |||||||
| 3:20 PM Coffee Break | ||||||||
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| < < | 3:40 PM Professor Joachim Frank, Columbia University, " *Toward a mechanistic | |||||||
| > > | 3:40 PM Professor Joachim Frank, Columbia University, " Toward a mechanistic understanding of protein synthesis in the cell " | |||||||
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| < < | understanding of protein synthesis in the cell* " | |||||||
| 4:40 - 5:30 PM Reception
Speaker Biosketches:
David Ron, MD, PhD directs a research laboratory
at Molecular Pathogenesis Program of the Kimmel Center for Biology and Medicine of the Skirball
Institute. He is professor
of Medicine and Julius Raynes professor of Cell Biology at New York University’s School of Medicine. He has board certifications in Endocrinology
and Metabolism as well as in Internal Medicine. His research focuses on malfolded proteins and
cellular degeneration and human disease.
http://saturn.med.nyu.edu/research/mp/ronlab/index.html
Robert H Singer, PhD is professor of Cell Biology and Neuroscience at Albert
Einstein College of Medicine at Yeshiva University and Co-Chair of Anatomy and
Structural Biology. He uses fluorescent labels in
both fixed and living cells to study RNA expression and movement in single
cells. He also develops microscopy techniques and digital image analysis algorithms
to visualize many RNAs simultaneously. http://singerlab.aecom.yu.edu Dr. Joachim Frank is a HHMI investigator, and also a Professor of Biochemistry and Molecular Biophysics and of Biological Sciences at Columbia University. Dr. Frank developed the single-particle reconstruction approach and applied it to the ribosome. http://www.columbia.edu/cu/franklab Sponsored by Columbia University and the New York Structural Biology Center Organized with Profs. John Hunt and Arthur G. Palmer III. | ||||||||