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Physics of Living Matter - PLM
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Description to be confirmed If you have a question about this list, please contact: Duncan Simpson. If you have a question about a specific talk, click on that talk to find its organiser. 0 upcoming talks and 132 talks in the archive. Closing RemarksProfessor Alfonso Martinez Arias ( Department of Genetics, University of Cambridge). MR2, Centre for Mathematical Sciences, Wilberforce Road, Cambridge. Tuesday 20 September 2011, 17:30-17:35 Planar cell polarity: From cell biology to human diseaseProfessor John Wallingford, University of Texas, Austin, Texas, USA. MR2, Centre for Mathematical Sciences, Wilberforce Road, Cambridge. Tuesday 20 September 2011, 17:00-17:25 Mechanical forces driving zebrafish epibolyDr Carl-Philipp Heisenberg, IST Austria, Klosterneuburg, Austria. MR2, Centre for Mathematical Sciences, Wilberforce Road, Cambridge. Tuesday 20 September 2011, 16:30-16:55 Collective migration of neural crest cells: a balance of repulsion and attractionProfessor Roberto Mayor, University College London, UK. MR2, Centre for Mathematical Sciences, Wilberforce Road, Cambridge. Tuesday 20 September 2011, 16:00-16:25 Mechanisms of morphogenesis in early embryosDr Benedicte Sanson, Department of Physiology Development and Neuroscience, University of Cambridge, UK. MR2, Centre for Mathematical Sciences, Wilberforce Road, Cambridge. Tuesday 20 September 2011, 15:00-15:25 Mechanical regulation of the cytoskeletonDan Fletcher, UC Berkeley, USA. MR2, Centre for Mathematical Sciences, Wilberforce Road, Cambridge. Tuesday 20 September 2011, 14:30-14:55 Zooming into the molecular networks that regulate cellular morphogenesisDr Rafael Carazo Salas, Gurdon Institute, University of Cambridge, UK. MR2, Centre for Mathematical Sciences, Wilberforce Road, Cambridge. Tuesday 20 September 2011, 12:45-13:10 Modeling cytoskeletal systems.Dr Francois Nedelec, EMBL, Heidelberg, Germany. MR2, Centre for Mathematical Sciences, Wilberforce Road, Cambridge. Tuesday 20 September 2011, 12:15-12:40 Transport in random fields and applications to Drosophila melanogasterDr Isabel Palacios, Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge, UK. MR2, Centre for Mathematical Sciences, Wilberforce Road, Cambridge. Tuesday 20 September 2011, 11:45-12:10 Patterns in active fluidsDr Stephan Grill, Max Planck Institute of Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics, Dresden, Germany. MR2, Centre for Mathematical Sciences, Wilberforce Road, Cambridge. Tuesday 20 September 2011, 10:30-10:55 Chromatin, nuclear mechanics and the cytoskeletonDr Megan King, Yale, USA. MR2, Centre for Mathematical Sciences, Wilberforce Road, Cambridge. Tuesday 20 September 2011, 10:00-10:25 Chemotaxis: linking cell shape, behaviour and strategyRobert Endres, Imperial College, London, UK. MR2, Centre for Mathematical Sciences, Wilberforce Road, Cambridge. Tuesday 20 September 2011, 09:30-09:55 Controlling the Cell CyclePlease note this seminar is Fully Booked The Lawrence Bragg Lecture 2011 Professor Sir Paul Nurse, The Royal Society, UK. MR2, Centre for Mathematical Sciences, Wilberforce Road, Cambridge. Monday 19 September 2011, 16:50-18:00 Systems Analysis in Single CellsProfessor Mike White, University of Manchester, UK. MR2, Centre for Mathematical Sciences, Wilberforce Road, Cambridge. Monday 19 September 2011, 16:20-16:45 Tracking stem cells at the single cell level: New tools for old questionsDr Timm Schroeder, Institute of Stem Cell Research, Helmholtz, Munich, Germany. MR2, Centre for Mathematical Sciences, Wilberforce Road, Cambridge. Monday 19 September 2011, 15:50-16:15 'Measuring the molecular dynamics of endocytosis using light microscopyDr Christien Merrifield, MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Cambridge, UK. MR2, Centre for Mathematical Sciences, Wilberforce Road, Cambridge. Monday 19 September 2011, 14:50-15:15 Fate restriction and multipotency in retinal stem cellsDr Jochen Wittbrobt, Department of Molecular and Developmental Biology and Physiology, University of Heidelberg, Germany. MR2, Centre for Mathematical Sciences, Wilberforce Road, Cambridge. Monday 19 September 2011, 14:20-14:45 Embryonic patterning with an oscillating cell populationDr Andrew Oates, Max Planck Institute of Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics, Dresden, Germany. MR2, Centre for Mathematical Sciences, Wilberforce Road, Cambridge. Monday 19 September 2011, 13:50-14:15 Introduction to Physics of Living Matter Symposium 6Registration is Required for this Meeting Professor Alfonso Martinez Arias, Department of Genetics, University of Cambridge. MR2, Centre for Mathematical Sciences, Wilberforce Road, Cambridge. Monday 19 September 2011, 13:30-13:45 “Spinal cord regeneration in amphibians (Xenopus)”Professor Juan Larrain, Chile. Brain Repair Centre, Forvie Site, Robinson Way. Thursday 08 September 2011, 14:00-15:00 Lecture on Systems Biology 6/6Professor Jeremy Gunawardena (Department of Systems Biology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, US). Part 2 Seminar Room, Department of Genetics. Thursday 14 April 2011, 14:30-15:30 Lecture on Systems Biology 5/6Professor Jeremy Gunawardena ( Department of Systems Biology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, US). Part 2 Seminar Room, Department of Genetics. Tuesday 12 April 2011, 14:30-15:30 Lecture on Systems Biology 4/6Professor Jeremy Gunawardena (Department of Systems Biology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, US). Part 2 Seminar Room, Department of Genetics. Thursday 07 April 2011, 14:30-15:30 Lecture on Systems Biology 3/6Professor Jeremy Gunawardena, Department of Systems Biology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, US. Part 2 Seminar Room, Department of Genetics. Tuesday 05 April 2011, 14:30-15:30 Lecture on Systems Biology 2/6Professor Jeremy Gunawardena, Department of Systems Biology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, US. Part 2 Seminar Room, Department of Genetics. Thursday 31 March 2011, 14:30-15:30 Lecture on Systems Biology 1/6Professor Jeremy Gunawardena, Department of Systems Biology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, US. Part 2 Seminar Room, Department of Genetics. Tuesday 29 March 2011, 14:30-15:30 Quantitative Cell Imaging with Digital Holographic MicroscopyBjörn Kemper, University of Münster, Germany. Physics of Medicine Seminar Room, PoM Building, Cavendish Laboratory, Department of Physics. Wednesday 09 February 2011, 10:15-11:15 AFM-Raman-SNOM and Tip Enhanced Raman imaging studies of modern nanostructures. Pavel Dorozhkin, NT-MDT Co. Kapitza Building Seminar Room, Cavendish Laboratory, Department of Physics. Wednesday 02 February 2011, 11:00-12:00 Ill communication: tuning the vertebrate segmentation clockLuis Morelli, Max Planck Institute of Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics, Dresden. Part 2 Seminar Room, Department of Genetics. Thursday 13 January 2011, 15:30-16:30 Physics of Medicine (PoM) Seminar Series The physics of nerves and lipid ion channelsThomas Heimburg, Niels Bohr Institute, University of Copenhagen, Denmark. Seminar Room, Centre for Physics of Medicine (PoM). Wednesday 08 December 2010, 11:30-12:30 Physics of Medicine (PoM) Seminar Series STORM below the localisation limitSusan Cox, Kings College London. Seminar Room, Centre for Physics of Medicine (PoM). Wednesday 27 October 2010, 11:30-12:30 Physics of Medicine (PoM) Seminar Series Single cell physiology: the control of protein activity at the singleCANCELLED will be rescheduled later in the Year CANCELLED Professor, David Bensimon, Laboratoire de Physique Statistique of the Ecole Normale Supérieure, Paris. Seminar Room, Centre for Physics of Medicine (PoM). Sunday 17 October 2010, 11:30-12:30 The social biology of sucrose utilization in yeast: I might like you better if we stuck togetherThe Bragg Lecture 2010 Andrew Murray, Department of Molecular Cell Biology, Harvard University, Boston, USA. MR2, Centre for Mathematical Sciences, Wilberforce Road, Cambridge. Wednesday 29 September 2010, 17:30-18:30 Collective Cell Migration: Leadership, Invasion and SegregationAlexandre Kabla, Department of Engineering, University of Cambridge. MR2, Centre for Mathematical Sciences, Wilberforce Road, Cambridge. Wednesday 29 September 2010, 17:00-17:30 Tissue tectonics: quantitative morphogenesis across spatial and temporal scalesGuy Blanchard, Department of Physiology, Development and Neurobiology, University of Cambridge. MR2, Centre for Mathematical Sciences, Wilberforce Road, Cambridge. Wednesday 29 September 2010, 16:30-17:00 The physical forces behind collective cell migrationXavier Trepat, University of Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain. MR2, Centre for Mathematical Sciences, Wilberforce Road, Cambridge. Wednesday 29 September 2010, 15:30-16:00 Rigidity comes with age: biomechanical models of tip growthBela Mulder, Fundamental Research on Matter Institute, Amsterdam, Holland. MR2, Centre for Mathematical Sciences, Wilberforce Road, Cambridge. Wednesday 29 September 2010, 15:00-15:30 Forces and Regulation for Cell Sheet Movements in Dorsal ClosureDan Kiehart, Department of Biology, Duke University, Durham USA. MR2, Centre for Mathematical Sciences, Wilberforce Road, Cambridge. Wednesday 29 September 2010, 14:30-15:00 Experimental studies and simulations of factors that power and steer mitotic spindle movementsViji Draviam, Department of Genetics, University of Cambridge. MR2, Centre for Mathematical Sciences, Wilberforce Road, Cambridge. Wednesday 29 September 2010, 14:00-14:30 Tracking stem cells at the single cell level: new tools for old questionsTimm Schroeder, Helmholtz Center Munich, Germany. MR2, Centre for Mathematical Sciences, Wilberforce Road, Cambridge. Wednesday 29 September 2010, 11:30-12:00 A role for structured noise in developmental pattern refinementBuzz Baum, LMCB University College London, London. MR2, Centre for Mathematical Sciences, Wilberforce Road, Cambridge. Wednesday 29 September 2010, 11:00-11:30 Variability in the cellular response to death receptor ligandsSuzanne Gaudet, Dana Farber Harvard Cancer Center, Boston, USA. MR2, Centre for Mathematical Sciences, Wilberforce Road, Cambridge. Wednesday 29 September 2010, 10:00-10:30 Universal patterns of stem and progenitor cell fate in adult tissueAllon Klein, Department of Systems Biology, Harvard University, Boston, USA. MR2, Centre for Mathematical Sciences, Wilberforce Road, Cambridge. Wednesday 29 September 2010, 09:30-10:00 The gene regulatory logic for reading the Sonic Hedgehog morphogen gradient in the neural tubeJames Briscoe, NIMR Mill Hill, London. MR2, Centre for Mathematical Sciences, Wilberforce Road, Cambridge. Wednesday 29 September 2010, 09:00-09:30 PLM5 Day 2.. MR2, Centre for Mathematical Sciences, Wilberforce Road, Cambridge. Wednesday 29 September 2010, 08:55-18:30 Development of connections in the Drosophila nervous system - from growth to functionMichael Bate, Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge. MR2, Centre for Mathematical Sciences, Wilberforce Road, Cambridge. Tuesday 28 September 2010, 17:30-18:00 Mechanics in neuronal developmentKristian Franze, Department of Physics. The Cavendish Lab, University of Cambridge. MR2, Centre for Mathematical Sciences, Wilberforce Road, Cambridge. Tuesday 28 September 2010, 17:00-17:30 Cell dynamics driving gastrulation in the mouse embryoKat Hadjantonakis, Sloan Kettering Memorial, New York, USA. MR2, Centre for Mathematical Sciences, Wilberforce Road, Cambridge. Tuesday 28 September 2010, 16:30-17:00 Understanding How Cell Movements Direct Early Mouse EmbryogenesisShankar Srinivas, Department of Physiology, anatomy and genetics, University of Oxford. MR2, Centre for Mathematical Sciences, Wilberforce Road, Cambridge. Tuesday 28 September 2010, 16:00-16:30 Matricellular Elasticity and Nuclear Rigidification with Epigenetic implicationsDennis Discher, Biophysical Engineering lab at University of Pennsylvania, Philadephia, USA. MR2, Centre for Mathematical Sciences, Wilberforce Road, Cambridge. Tuesday 28 September 2010, 15:00-15:30 Sequential activation of apical and basolateral contractility drives ascidian endoderm invaginationPatrick Lemaire, University of Marseille. MR2, Centre for Mathematical Sciences, Wilberforce Road, Cambridge. Tuesday 28 September 2010, 14:30-15:00 Growth, Form and Patterning in DevelopmentBoris Shraiman, KITP University Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, USA. MR2, Centre for Mathematical Sciences, Wilberforce Road, Cambridge. Tuesday 28 September 2010, 14:00-14:30 Day 1 PLM5.. MR2, Centre for Mathematical Sciences, Wilberforce Road, Cambridge. Tuesday 28 September 2010, 13:30-18:00 Physics of Medicine (PoM) Seminar Series Diffusion in confining geometries: Counter-intuitive analytical results and supporting experiments with ion channelsSergey M. Bezrukov, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD, USA. Small Lecture Theatre, Cavendish Laboratory (**Note non-standard location**). Tuesday 14 September 2010, 13:30-14:30 Physics of Medicine (PoM) Seminar Series Physical Model of Contractile Ring Initiation in Dividing CellsRoie Shlomovitz, Weizmann Institute, Israel). Seminar Room, Centre for Physics of Medicine (PoM). Tuesday 27 July 2010, 14:00-15:00 Physics of Medicine (PoM) Seminar Series Nanostructured-Enhanced Raman Spectroscopy (NERS) for Surface Science and Molecular ElectronicsCancelled, sorry for short notice Professor Z Q Tian, Director, State Key Laboratory for Physical Chemistry of Solid Surfaces, Xiamen University. Kapitza Building Seminar Room, Cavendish Laboratory, Department of Physics. Tuesday 20 July 2010, 10:00-11:00 Physics of Medicine (PoM) Seminar Series Physical principles in biological sensing and signallingRobert Endres, Department of Systems Biology, Imperial college London. Part 2 Seminar Room, Department of Genetics. Friday 09 July 2010, 12:30-13:30 Physics of Medicine (PoM) Seminar Series DNA replication: for better or for worseJohn Bechhoefer, Dept. of Physics, Simon Fraser University, BC, Canada. Seminar Room, Centre for Physics of Medicine (PoM). Thursday 01 July 2010, 11:00-12:00 Physics of Medicine (PoM) Seminar Series Signal Encoding at the Single-Cell LevelMichael Elowitz, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena. Part 2 Seminar Room, Department of Genetics. Tuesday 15 June 2010, 15:30-16:30 Physics of Medicine (PoM) Seminar Series Active Forces and Flow for Cellular PolarizationStephan Grill, MPI CBG, Dresden. Part 2 Seminar Room, Department of Genetics. Wednesday 09 June 2010, 11:30-12:30 Physics of Medicine (PoM) Seminar Series dSTORM: Super-resolution imaging with small organic fluorophoresProf. Dr. Markus Sauer, Department of Biotechnology and Biophysics, University of Wuerzburg. Seminar Room, Centre for Physics of Medicine (PoM). Wednesday 26 May 2010, 11:30-12:30 Physics of Medicine (PoM) Seminar Series Modelling protrusion phenotypes and the force velocity relation to motile cellsThis talk is jointly organised with TCM Dr. Martin Falcke, Mathematical Cell Physiology, Max-Delbruck Centre for Molecular Medicine, Berlin. Seminar Room, Centre for Physics of Medicine (PoM). Wednesday 12 May 2010, 11:30-12:30 Physics of Medicine (PoM) Seminar Series Dynamics of Dpp signaling and growth controlDr Marcos Gonzalez Gaitan, Department of Biochemistry, University of Geneva. Part 2 Seminar Room, Department of Genetics. Tuesday 11 May 2010, 16:30-17:30 Physics of Medicine (PoM) Seminar Series Probing the dynamics of chronic disease using stable isotopes and mass spectrometryDr Robert Busch, ARC Senior Research Fellow, Department of Medicine, University of Cambridge. Seminar Room, Centre for Physics of Medicine (PoM). Wednesday 28 April 2010, 11:30-12:30 Physics of Medicine (PoM) Seminar Series Emerging Concepts in Cancer Biology: Merging Glycobiology and NanotechnologyShiladid Sengupta, Harvard and MIT. Part 2 Seminar Room, Department of Genetics. Wednesday 31 March 2010, 11:30-12:30 Physics of Medicine (PoM) Seminar Series "Retinal axon guidance in substrate-bound ephrin patterns.".Prof Martin Bastmeier, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT). Seminar Room, Centre for Physics of Medicine (PoM). Monday 22 March 2010, 11:30-12:30 Physics of Medicine (PoM) Seminar Series Eukaryotic chemotaxis - how amoebae use non-equilibrium physics to figure out where to goProfessor Herbert Levine, Department of Physics, University of California San Diego, California. Seminar Room, Centre for Physics of Medicine (PoM). Thursday 28 January 2010, 11:00-12:00 Physics of Medicine (PoM) Seminar Series Nuclear structural networks: The hardware for regulation of gene expression and stem cell fateHarald Hermann, German Cancer Research Centre (Deutsches Krebsforschungszentrum, DKFZ), Heidelberg. Pippard Lecture Theatre, Cavendish Laboratory, Department of Physics. Friday 22 January 2010, 14:00-15:00 Physics of Medicine (PoM) Seminar Series Patterning embryos with oscillationsAndrew Oates, Max Planck Institute of Molecular Cell Biology and Genetics, Dresden. Seminar Room, Centre for Physics of Medicine (PoM). Tuesday 10 November 2009, 14:00-15:00 Physics of Medicine (PoM) Seminar Series Information processing in small gene regulatory networks and cascadesAleksandra Walczak, Centre for Theoretical Science, Princeton. Seminar Room, Centre for Physics of Medicine (PoM). Monday 09 November 2009, 11:00-11:30 Physics of Medicine (PoM) Seminar Series Statistical physics modeling of the bacterial flagellar motorThierry Mora, Princeton. Seminar Room, Centre for Physics of Medicine (PoM). Monday 09 November 2009, 10:30-11:00 Physics of Medicine (PoM) Seminar Series Single cells and single molecules in microdropletsDr Jung-uk Shim, Microdroplets Group, Department of Chemistry. Seminar Room, Centre for Physics of Medicine (PoM). Tuesday 06 October 2009, 14:45-15:30 Physics of Medicine (PoM) Seminar Series Terahertz technology: Shedding light on cancerDr Philip Ashworth, Guy's Hospital. Seminar Room, Centre for Physics of Medicine (PoM). Tuesday 06 October 2009, 14:00-14:40 Cell cortex mechanics: of blebs and other intriguing aspects of cell shapeDr Ewa Paluch, MPI-CBG, Dresden. Seminar Room, Centre for Physics of Medicine (PoM). Thursday 24 September 2009, 13:30-14:30 Physics of Living Matter 4 (day2)see abstract for detials. MR2, Centre for Mathematical Sciences, Wilberforce Road, Cambridge. Wednesday 23 September 2009, 09:00-18:00 Physics of Living Matter 4 (day1)see abstract for details. MR2, Centre for Mathematical Sciences, Wilberforce Road, Cambridge. Tuesday 22 September 2009, 13:00-18:10 L. Bragg lecture: "Single-Molecule Approach for Biochemistry, Molecular Biology ... and Beyond"Chair: Professor Peter Littlewood Professor Sunney Xie, Department of Chemistry and Chemical Biology University of Harvard. Pippard Lecture Theatre, Cavendish Laboratory, Department of Physics. Wednesday 17 December 2008, 16:00-17:00 Shape, Polarity and Individuation of Animal CellsDr Michel Bornens, Institute Curie, France. Pippard Lecture Theatre, Cavendish Laboratory, Department of Physics. Wednesday 17 December 2008, 15:00-15:30 Title to be confirmedDr. Damian Brunner, EMBL, Heidelberg, Germany. Pippard Lecture Theatre, Cavendish Laboratory, Department of Physics. Wednesday 17 December 2008, 14:30-15:00 Title to be confirmedChair: Professor Alfonso Martinez Arias Dr Krystyne J. Van Vliet, Department of Materials Science & Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Pippard Lecture Theatre, Cavendish Laboratory, Department of Physics. Wednesday 17 December 2008, 14:00-14:30 Patterns of stem and progenitor cell fate in adult tissuesProfessor Ben Simons, Department of Physics, University of Cambridge, Cambridge UK. Pippard Lecture Theatre, Cavendish Laboratory, Department of Physics. Wednesday 17 December 2008, 12:00-12:30 Multipotency and Cell Fate decision on the Epigenetic Landscape: From Metaphor to Molecules and Mathematical ModelDr Sui Huang, Institute for Biocomplexity and Informatics, University of Calgary, Calgary, Canada. Pippard Lecture Theatre, Cavendish Laboratory, Department of Physics. Wednesday 17 December 2008, 11:30-12:00 Excitable systems in cell populationsDr. Jordi Garcia Ojalvo, Polytechnical University of Barcelona, Spain. Pippard Lecture Theatre, Cavendish Laboratory, Department of Physics. Wednesday 17 December 2008, 11:00-11:30 Antitrypsin deficiency and the serpinopathiesProfessor David A Lomas, Department of Medicine, Cambridge Institute for Medical Research, University of Cambridge, Cambridge UK. Pippard Lecture Theatre, Cavendish Laboratory, Department of Physics. Wednesday 17 December 2008, 10:00-10:30 DNA: Not just a double helixDr Julian Huppert, Physics of Medicine, Cavendish Laboratory, University of Cambridge, Cambridge UK. Pippard Lecture Theatre, Cavendish Laboratory, Department of Physics. Wednesday 17 December 2008, 09:30-10:00 Glimpses of quantum mechanics in biologyPhysics, Molecules and Cells - Chair: Dr David Summers Professor Mike Payne, Theory of Condensed Matter, Cavendish Laboratory, University of Cambridge, Cambridge UK. Pippard Lecture Theatre, Cavendish Laboratory, Department of Physics. Wednesday 17 December 2008, 09:00-09:30 GRAND OPENING of the Physics of Medicine BuildingProfessor Alison Richard, Vice Chancellor, University of Cambridge Professor Sir Aaron Klug, MRC LMB, Cambridge Professor David Delpy, Chief Executive of EPSRC. Pippard Lecture Theatre, Cavendish Laboratory, Department of Physics. Tuesday 16 December 2008, 16:00-18:30 Computer modelling of the heartProfessor Denis Noble, Department of Physiology, Anatomy & Genetics, University of Oxford, Oxford UK. Pippard Lecture Theatre, Cavendish Laboratory, Department of Physics. Tuesday 16 December 2008, 15:00-15:30 Reverse engineering the brain: what photons and electrons can tell us about thought.Professor Winfried Denk, Max-Planck Institute for Medical Research, Biomedizinische Optuik, Germany. Pippard Lecture Theatre, Cavendish Laboratory, Department of Physics. Tuesday 16 December 2008, 14:30-15:00 Of mice, men, and microscopes: Watching the brain dynamics of motor control at the cellular scale in behaving subjectsDr Mark Schnitzer, Department of Biological Sciences, Stanford University, Stanford, USA. Pippard Lecture Theatre, Cavendish Laboratory, Department of Physics. Tuesday 16 December 2008, 14:00-14:30 Medical MaterialsPhysics and Medicine (cont) – Chair Professor Athene Donald Dr Ruth Cameron, Department of Materials Science and Metallurgy, University of Cambridge, Cambridge UK. Pippard Lecture Theatre, Cavendish Laboratory, Department of Physics. Tuesday 16 December 2008, 13:30-14:00 New materials for regenerative medicine applicationsProfessor Kevin Shakesheff, Professor of Advanced Drug Delivery and Tissue Engineering, School of Pharmacy, University of Nottingham, UK. Pippard Lecture Theatre, Cavendish Laboratory, Department of Physics. Tuesday 16 December 2008, 12:00-12:30 Mechanical manipulation of single molecules in nanoporesDr Ulrich Keyser, Institute for Experimental Physics, University of Leipzig, Leipzig, Germany. Pippard Lecture Theatre, Cavendish Laboratory, Department of Physics. Tuesday 16 December 2008, 11:00-11:30 Novel Photonics for the Biomedical SciencesProfessor Kishan Dholakia, School of Physics and Astronomy, University of St Andrews, St Andrews, UK. Pippard Lecture Theatre, Cavendish Laboratory, Department of Physics. Tuesday 16 December 2008, 10:30-11:00 Imaging biology in the cancer patientSession 1: Physics and Medicine – Chair Professor Peter Littlewood Professor Kevin Brindle Department of Biochemistry, University of Cambridge, UK. Pippard Lecture Theatre, Cavendish Laboratory, Department of Physics. Tuesday 16 December 2008, 10:00-10:30 Physics of Living Matter 3registration is now closed as the meeting is oversubscribed, thank you registration is now closed as the meeting is oversubscribed, thank you. Pippard Lecture Theatre, Cavendish Laboratory, Department of Physics. Tuesday 16 December 2008, 09:00-18:00 From words to literature in structural proteomicsL Bragg Lecture Wolfgang Baumeister Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry, Martinsried (Germany). Lubbock Room, Peterhouse, Cambridge. Friday 16 November 2007, 17:00-18:00 Molecular imaging using hyperpolarised carbon-13From molecules to cells Ferdia Gallagher Departments of Biochemistry and Radiology, University of Cambridge (UK). Lubbock Room, Peterhouse, Cambridge. Friday 16 November 2007, 16:30-17:00 No harm in looking? The effects of optical imaging on cytoplasmFrom molecules to cells Brad Amos MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology, University of Cambridge (UK). Lubbock Room, Peterhouse, Cambridge. Friday 16 November 2007, 15:30-16:00 The poroelastic properties of cytoplasm: theory and experimentsFrom molecules to cells Guillaume Charras UCL, London Centre for Nanotechnology, London (UK). Lubbock Room, Peterhouse, Cambridge. Friday 16 November 2007, 15:00-15:30 Structure and dynamics of the cell membrane and cytoskeletonFrom molecules to cells Pietro Cicuta Department of Physics, University of Cambridge (UK). Lubbock Room, Peterhouse, Cambridge. Friday 16 November 2007, 14:30-15:00 Where mechanics and biochemistry meet: probing the dynamics of cell polarization and morphogenesisDynamics of cell assemblies Ed Munro Center for Cells Dynamics, Friday Harbor Labs, University of Washington, Seattle (USA). Lubbock Room, Peterhouse, Cambridge. Friday 16 November 2007, 12:00-12:30 Coupling cell cycle morphogenesis and mitotic spindle orientation to regulate tissue morphogenesisDynamics of cell assemblies Yohanns Bellaiche Curie Institute, Paris (France). Lubbock Room, Peterhouse, Cambridge. Friday 16 November 2007, 11:30-12:00 Biomechanics of epithelial sheet movements (in Drosophila)Dynamics of cell assemblies Nicole Gorfinkiel, Department of Genetics, University of Cambridge (UK). Lubbock Room, Peterhouse, Cambridge. Friday 16 November 2007, 11:00-11:30 To see the light - living optical fibers in the vertebrate retinaDynamics of cell assemblies Jochen Guck Department of Physics, University of Cambridge (UK). Lubbock Room, Peterhouse, Cambridge. Friday 16 November 2007, 10:00-10:30 Morphogen transport and gradient formationDynamics of cell assemblies Frank Jülicher Max Planck Institute for the Physics of Complex Systems, Dresden (Germany). Lubbock Room, Peterhouse, Cambridge. Friday 16 November 2007, 09:30-10:00 Mesoscopic events in living cells: insights from bacterial chemotaxisDynamics of cell assemblies Dennis Bray Physiological Laboratory, University of Cambridge (UK). Lubbock Room, Peterhouse, Cambridge. Friday 16 November 2007, 09:00-09:30 Physics and the designs of brainsEmerging properties of biological networks Simon Laughlin Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge (UK). Lubbock Room, Peterhouse, Cambridge. Thursday 15 November 2007, 17:30-18:00 Spontaneous activity in the developing nervous system: form and functionEmerging properties of biological networks Stephen Eglen. DAMTP, University of Cambridge (UK). Lubbock Room, Peterhouse, Cambridge. Thursday 15 November 2007, 17:00-17:30 Creation and destruction of biological polymer networksEmerging properties of biological networks Dyche Mullins Cellular and Molecular Pharmacology, University of San Francisco (USA). Lubbock Room, Peterhouse, Cambridge. Thursday 15 November 2007, 16:30-17:00 Shift happens: A systems-level analysis of the gap gene network in DrosophilaEmerging properties of biological networks Johannes Jaeger Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge (UK). Lubbock Room, Peterhouse, Cambridge. Thursday 15 November 2007, 15:30-16:00 Evidence for the influence of nuclear architecture in shaping the organisation of genes in eukaryotic chromosomesEmerging properties of biological networks Madan Babu, MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology, University of Cambridge (UK). Lubbock Room, Peterhouse, Cambridge. Thursday 15 November 2007, 15:00-15:30 Learning from the worm: predicting phenotype from genotypeEmerging properties of biological networks Andrew Fraser, Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, Cambridge (UK). Lubbock Room, Peterhouse, Cambridge. Thursday 15 November 2007, 14:30-15:00 Closing RemarksProfessor Peter Littlewood (Department of Physics, Cambridge). Friday 17 November 2006, 17:15-17:30 The brain as a statistical machineThe Activity of Living Matter Professor Daniel Wolpert (Department of Engineering, Cambridge). Friday 17 November 2006, 16:45-17:15 Physical principles of sensory transductionThe Activity of Living Matter Dr Tom Duke, Department of Physics, Cambridge. Friday 17 November 2006, 16:15-16:45 Evolving mechanisms of Pattern Generation: Segmentation in AnimalsThe Activity of Living Matter Professor Michael Akam (Laboratory for Development and Evolution, Department of Zoology, Cambridge). Friday 17 November 2006, 15:15-15:45 Kinetics of Morphogen Gradient FormationThe Activity of Living Matter Dr Marcos Gonzalez Gaitan (Cell Biology, Geneva, Switzerland). Friday 17 November 2006, 14:45-15:15 Imaging embryonic morphogenesisThe Activity of Living Matter Dr Richard Adams (Department of Physiology Development and Neuroscience). Friday 17 November 2006, 14:15-14:45 Reaction diffusion and collective behavior in the self-organisation of the mitotic spindleThe Activity of Living Matter Professor Eric Karsenti (EMBL, Heidelberg). Friday 17 November 2006, 12:00-12:50 Multidimensional fluorescence imaging in living cellsWatching Living Matter Dr Clemens Kaminski (Department of Chemical Engineering, Cambridge). Friday 17 November 2006, 11:30-12:00 Studying Single Molecules on living cellsWatching Living Matter Dr David Klenerman (Department of Chemistry, Cambridge). Friday 17 November 2006, 11:00-11:30 Dissecting a protein-protein interaction in living cellsWatching Living Matter Professor Ashok Venkitaraman, MRC Hutchison Laboratory. Friday 17 November 2006, 10:00-10:30 Watching and modelling limb developmentWatching Living Matter Dr James Sharpe (Centre for Genomic Regulation, Barcelona). Friday 17 November 2006, 09:30-10:00 Visualisation and Modelling of Plant MorphogenesisWatching Living Matter Dr Jim Haseloff (Department of Plant Sciences, Cambridge). Friday 17 November 2006, 09:00-09:30 Imaging the Developmental Mechanics of the HeartThe Structure of Living Matter Professor Scott Fraser (California Institute of Technology, Pasadena). Thursday 16 November 2006, 17:15-18:00 How nature "designs" elastic polymersThe Structure of Living Matter Dr Jane Clarke, Department of Chemistry. Thursday 16 November 2006, 16:45-17:15 Can Polymer Physics Help Cellular Biomedicine?The Structure of Living Matter Professor Josef Käs (Soft Matter Physics, Leipzig). Thursday 16 November 2006, 16:15-16:45 Physical Aspects of Evolutionary Transitions to MulticellularityThe Structure of Living Matter Professor Ray Goldstein (DAMTP, Cambridge). Thursday 16 November 2006, 15:15-15:45 Soft Matter Physics of CellsThe Structure of Living Matter Professor Athene Donald (Department of Physics, Cambridge). Thursday 16 November 2006, 14:45-15:15 Understanding Biology from the Atomistic ScaleThe Structure of Living Matter Professor Mike Payne, Cavendish Laboratory. Thursday 16 November 2006, 14:15-14:45 Introduction and WelcomeProfessor Peter Littlewood (Department of Physics, Cambridge). Thursday 16 November 2006, 14:00-14:15 Please see above for contact details for this list. |
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