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Events 2005
Hua
Hu's PhD defense
[Announced 13 December 2005]
Hua Hu, MD, will defend his PhD dissertation
with the title
Functions of Ca2+-activated
and KCNQ/M-type potassium channels in the brain
on Thursday 15 December 2005 at 1015 in
New auditorium 13, Domus Medica, University of Oslo.
The trial lecture with the title
KCNQ (Kv7) potassium channels and medicine:
clinical and therapeutic significance
will be held on Wednesday 14 December 2005
at 1415, also in New auditorium 13, Domus Medica, University
of Oslo.
Further
information. |
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Guest
lecture by David Brown
[Announced 13 December 2005]
Professor David Brown, Department of Pharmacology,
University College, London, will give a guest lecture on Friday
16 December 2005 at 13.30 at the Department of Physiology,
IMB, Domus Medica, with the title:
K(M) to KCNQ to Kv7: twenty-five years in the
life of a potassium channel
Twenty-five years ago, David Brown and Paul Adams discovered
a novel voltage-sensitive potassium current: the M-current.
They found that, unlike previously described K+
currents, the M-current was regulated by neurotransmitters,
thus mediating a new type of synaptic transmission. Since
then, a family of M-like channels has been identified, and
mutations in these channels have been found to underlie several
kinds of hereditary human disease: epilepsy, cardiac arrhythmia,
deafness, etc. In his talk, Prof. David Brown will review
the development of this exciting field of research. |
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Juris
Allunans' PhD defense
[Announced 13 December 2005]
Cand.real. Juris Allunans, will defend his
PhD dissertation with the title
Bacteriocinogeny in Neisseria meningitidis
isolates associated with the epidemic starting in North
Norway in the mid-1970's
on Monday 19 December 2005 at 1015 in the
Blue auditorium, Rikshospitalet.
The trial lecture with the title
Bacteriocins of Gram-positive bacteria
will be held on Wednesday 14 December 2005
at 1400 in Auditorium A3.3067, Rikshospitalet.
Further
information. |
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MedCoast
Symposium – Neuroscience and metabolism
[Announced 1 November 2005]
The
MedCoast Symposium is arranged on Friday 4 November
as part of ScanBalt
Forum 2005. It will take place in the Main Auditorium
at Rikshospitalet.
A major scientific event in the ScanBalt Forum is a plenary
symposium in Neuroscience and Metabolic Disorders. This unique
meeting has world leading scientists, including two Nobel
Laureates, Arvid Carlsson (see image) and Peter Agre and a
presentation of the latest findings in molecular biology.
This symposium will discuss new hypothesis and findings about
synaptic functions and brain water balance. The metabolic
Syndrome will be discussed in light of new findings in molecular
biology, and the importance of conditions in pregnacy and
early life for later development of metabolic disorders (Obesity,
diabetes and heart disease) will be disussed.
Full
Program for Friday. See also the EMBIO
announcement. |
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Guest
lecture by Peter Roepstorff
[Announced 3 October 2005]
Professor in protein chemistry, Peter Roepstorff,
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University
of Southern Denmark, will give a guest lecture on Wednesday
26 October 2005 at 13.00 in the lunch room (1330), Department
of Anatomy, Domus Medica, with the title:
Mass spectrometry in proteomics, studies of
protein modification and interaction
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Guest
lecture by Ryuichi Shigemoto
[Announced 9 September2005]
Ryuichi Shigemoto
will give a guest lecture on Wednesday 28 September 2005
at 14.00-16.00 in the lunch room (1330), Department of Anatomy,
Domus Medica, with the title:
High resolution and quantitative localization
of membrane proteins by SDS freeze-fracture replica labeling
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Guest
lecture by Marianne Fyhn
[Announced 8 September 2005]
Postdoc
Marianne Fyhn, Centre for the Biology of Memory,
NTNU, Trondheim, will give a guest lecture on Monday 12
September 2005 at 10.00 in the lunch room (1330), Department
of Anatomy, Domus Medica, with the title:
Spatial representation in the entorhinal cortex
- the discovery of grid cells
The Centre for the Biology of Memory, which is lead by Professors
May-Britt and Edvard Moser, brings together internationally
leading neuroscientists. The goal is to investigate how neuronal
ensembles in the hippocampus and neocortex give rise to specific
memory operations such as encoding, storage, consolidation
and retrieval.
The work of Fyhn focuses on the entorhinal cortex, which
gives the main cortical input to the hippocampus. The work
has received a lot of attention both nationally and internationally,
and the discovery of "grid cells" which comprise
a neural map of the spatial environment will appear in neuroscience
textbooks. The discovery of 'grid cells' opens up many avenues
of enquiry about the computations underlying our sense of
place, and how the hippocampus and entorhinal cortex contribute
to episodic memory. |
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Guest
lecture by Kader Thiam
[Announced 8 August 2005]
Dr Kader Thiam, Genoway,
Lyon, France, will give a guest lecture on Thursday 18
August 2005 at 14.30 in Auditorium A3.3067, Rikshospitalet,
with the title:
Use of genetically modified rodents for gene
validation -
New approaches for time saving and models of higher relevancy
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Guest
lecture by Shankar Subramaniam
[Announced 12 August 2005]
Professor
Shankar
Subramaniam, University of California at San
Diego & San Diego Supercomputing Center, will give a guest
lecture on Tuesday 16 August 2005 at 12.00 in Auditorium
A3.3067, Rikshospitalet, with the title:
From Transcriptome to Phenotypes in Mammalian
Biology
Cells and tissues function in context. Under a given growth
or survival medium they perform tasks, replicate and die.
Given a stimulus they respond by invoking myriad biomolecular
networks that result in a specified cellular outcome. At any
given instant it can be argued that the cell is in a “state”
defined by its components – their concentrations and
locations, the interactions between components – that
are modulated in space and time, and the complex circuitry
– that involves a large number of interacting networks
and a snapshot of the dynamical processes – such as
gene expression, cell cycle, transport of components, etc.
The manifestation of these processes is a phenotype such as
a disease. How can we reconstruct the circuitry of the cell
to qualitatively and quantitatively assess the phenotype from
measurements of cellular constituents? This talk will address
new methods for mapping genotypes to phenotypes and illustrate
the power of these methods for studying insulin resistance
in humans. |
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Tonje
Davidsen's PhD defense
[Announced 21 June 2005]
Cand.scient. Tonje Davidsen will defend
her PhD dissertation with the title
Genome instability and maintenance in Neisseria
meningitidis
on Thursday 23 June 2005 at 1015 in Gamle
Festsal, Universitetet i Oslo.
The trial lecture with the title
The biological basis of adaptation of Neisseria
meningitidis
will be held on Wednesday 22 June 2005
at 1300 in Auditorium A3.3067 at Rikshospitalet.
Further
information. |
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Guest
lecture by Richard Moxon
[Announced 21 June 2005]
Professor Richard Moxon, Molecular
infectious group, Department of Pediatrics, University
of Oxford, UK, will give a guest lecture on Wednesday 22
June 2005 at 14.30 in Auditorium A3.3067, Rikshospitalet,
with the title:
Reflections on the biology of Haemophilus influenzae:
its commensal and pathogenic behaviour
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Guest
lecture by Marit Otterlei
[Announced 21 June 2005]
Professor Marit Otterlei, Department
of Cancer Research and Molecular Medicine, Norwegian University
of Science and Technology (NTNU), will give a guest lecture
on Wednesday 22 June 2005 at 15.15 in Auditorium A3.3067,
Rikshospitalet, with the title:
In vivo dynamics and functional BER and SSBR
analysis of isolated XRCC1-EYFP complexes
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Guest
lecture by John Davies
[Announced 30 May 2005]
Professor John Davies, Department of Microbiology,
Monash University, Victoria, Australia, will give a guest
lecture on Thursday 2 June 2005 at 11.00 in Auditorium
A3.3067, Rikshospitalet, with the title:
Transcription profiling of two very different
bacterial pathogens:
Mycobacterium ulcerans and Neisseria gonorrhoea
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WIRED-symposium,
18-24 May 2005
[Announced 13 May 2005]
The WIRED symposium on Transport
processes in the CNS:
Emerging concepts will be arranged 18-24 May 2005. |
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Guest
lecture by Bert Sakmann
[Announced 13 May 2005]
Professor Bert Sakmann, Max-Planck Institute, Heidelberg,
Germany (Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1991), will
give a guest lecture on Friday 20 May 2005 at 14.00
in Store Auditorium, Rikshospitalet, with the title:
Cortical microcircuits in rat cortex and sparse
coding of sensory representation
The lecture is part of the WIRED
symposium on "Transport processes in the CNS: Emerging
concepts". |
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Guest
lecture by Peter Agre
[Announced 13 May 2005]
Professor Peter Agre, Johns Hopkins Medical School,
Baltimore, USA (Nobel Prize in Chemistry 2003), will give
a guest lecture on Wednesday 18 May 2005 at 10.00 in
Store Auditorium, Rikshospitalet, with the title:
Water transport and aquaporins: from molecules
to medicine
The lecture is part of the WIRED
symposium on "Transport processes in the CNS: Emerging
concepts". |
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BFYS2005
at Randsvangen, 15-17 April 2005
[Announced 11 November 2004]
The Bioinformatics
Forum for Young Scientists 2005 (BFYS2005) will be arranged
at Randsvangen, 15-17 April 2005. |
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CMBN
research seminar on mitochondrial function
[Announced 19 January 2005]
Thursday 14 - Friday 15 April 2005, CMBN research
seminar (forskerkurs) in Store Auditorium, Rikshospitalet:
Mitochondrial Function: Basic Mechanisms and
Clinical Aspects
Application deadline: 1 April 2005.
More information |
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Guest
lecture by Mikael Nilsson
[Announced 3 April 2005]
Associate professor Michael Nilsson, Göteborg
University, will give a guest lecture on Monday 4 April
2005 at 14.00 in new auditorium 13, Domus Medica, with
the title:
Astrocytes - integral players in neuroplasticity
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Guest
lecture by Françoise Dantzer
[Announced 8 February 2005]
Dr. Françoise Dantzer, Centre
National de la Recherche Scientifique, Universite Louis Pasteur,
Ecole Supériore de Biotechnologie de Strasbourg (ESBS),
France, will give a guest lecture on Monday 14 February
2005 at 14.00 in auditorium A3.3067 at Rikshospitalet,
with the title:
Late generation PARP-2-deficient mice display
male sterility associated with meiosis 1 abnormalities and
defect in spermiogenesis
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First
Norwegian Transgenic Animal Forum at Lysebu, Oslo, 10-11 February
2005
[Announced 30 December 2004]
The first Norwegian
Transgenic Animal Forum will be arranged at Lysebu, Oslo,
10-11 February 2005. |
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Guest
lecture by Wim Vermuelen
[Announced 24 January 2005]
Prof. Wim Vermuelen, Department of Cell
Biology and Genetics, Medical Genetic Center, Erasmus University
Rotterdam, The Netherlands, will give a guest lecture on Wednesday
9 February 2005 at 15.00 in auditorium A3.3067 at Rikshospitalet,
with the title:
Dynamic DNA repair protein interactions in
living cells
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Guest
lecture by Clive Bramham
[Announced 24 January 2005]
Prof. Clive Bramham, Department of Physiology,
University of Bergen, will give a guest lecture on Thursday
3 February 2005 at 12.15 in the new auditorium 13, Domus
Medica, with the title:
BDNF as a trigger for synaptic consolidation
in the adult brain
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