318.4
Optimizing the gross laboratory experience:
dissection group rotation and peer evaluation.
H.G. Ressetar
and B. Palmer. West Virginia Univ. Sch. of Med.
5:30
318.5
Dissecting through interprofessional barriers.
B. Wainman and A. Palombella. McMaster Univ., Canada.
5:45
318.6
Assessing the quality of dissection: a method
for improving anatomy knowledge of first year medical students.
C. Nwachukwu, N. Lachman and W. Pawlina. Mayo Med.
Sch.
(960.44)
319. DEVELOPMENT AND DISEASE - IT’S ALL
ABOUT ANATOMY
Platform
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. 4:30
pm
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rainor
Developmental Biology
4:30
Genetic dissection of Treacher Collins
syndrome: Polr1c and Polr1d.
A. Achilleos, K. Watt and P.
Trainor. Stowers Inst. for Med. Res., Kansas City, MO. (21.3)
4:45
319.1
The novel zebrafish mutant fantome/wdr43 as
a human craniofacial ribosomopathy model.
M. LaBonty, C.
Zhao, K. McCann, V. Andreeva, S.J. Baserga and P.C. Yelick.
Tufts Univ., Boston and Yale Med. Sch.
5:00
319.2
Bent bone dysplasia syndrome defines a
nuclear role for FGFR2 in skeletal development.
A.E. Merrill, B.
Idoni, C. Neben, J. Salva, R. Roberts and D. Krakow. Sch. of
Med. and Sch. of Dent., Univ. of Southern California and UCLA.
5:15
319.3
Embryonic origins of novelty and constraint
in the amniote upper jaw.
N. Young, D. Hu, A. Lainoff, B.
Hallgrímsson and R. Marcucio. UCSF and Univ. of Calgary,
Canada.
5:30
319.4
The developmental basis for jaw size
variation in evolution and disease.
J.L. Fish, R.S. Sklar, K.C.
Woronowicz and R.A. Schneider. UCSF.
5:45
319.5
Essential genes in the development and
maintenance of the temporomandibular joint.
P. Purcell, A.
Hill, A. Jheon, M. Vivero, J. Duran, C.J. Tabin, O.D. Klein and
M.L. Warman. Harvard Med. Sch., Boston Children’s Hosp.
and UCSF.
320. NEUROVASCULAR DEVELOPMENT
Symposium
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. 4:30
pm
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: J. m
C
C
arty
Neurobiology
Cardiovascular
4:30
Chair’s introduction.
4:35
320.1
Cell adhesion and signaling pathways in
neurovascular development.
J.H. McCarty. MD Anderson
Cancer Ctr.
5:00
320.2
Roles for pericytes at the neurovascular unit.
R. Daneman. UCSF.
5:25
320.3
Cerebral cavernous malformations and the
neurovascular unit.
A. Louvi. Yale Sch. of Med.
5:50
Discussion.
LAST DAY TO
VISIT EXHIBITS
Tuesday, April 23
9:00 AM – 4:00 PM
ANATOMY TUESDAY
87
T
U
E
Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
11:20
Replication and transcription of SV40 direct
distinct epigenetic signaling.
B. Milavetz, L. Kallestad, A.
Gefroh, E. Woods and K. Christensen. Univ. of North Dakota.
(981.8)
11:35
324.3
The role of the Paf1 complex in controlling
transcription-coupled histone modifications.
K.M. Arndt, A.S.
Piro, M.K. Mayekar, B.N. Tomson, A.D. Wier, A.P. VanDemark,
L.E. Heisler, M. Gebbia and C. Nislow. Univ. of Pittsburgh and
Univ. of Toronto.
12:00
Discussion and closing remarks.
325. RNA IN THE CYTOPLASM: TRANSLATION AND
DEGRADATION
Symposium
t
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. 9:55
am
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oston
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onvention
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enter
, 253a
C
haired
: K. l
ynCh
9:55
Chair’s introduction.
10:00
325.1
Control of mRNA metabolism by deadenylation.
J. Coller, N. Al-Husaini, V. Presnyak, J. Smith, L. Saju and
K.E. Baker. Case Western Reserve Univ.
10:25
Widespread regulation of translation by
elongation pausing in heat shock.
R. Shalgi, S. Lindquist and
C.B. Burge. MIT and Whitehead Inst. for Biomed. Res. (986.7)
10:40
325.2
Mis-translation as a potential, new mechanism
of adaption and stress response.
T. Pan, T. Jones, C. Weisberg,
E. Wiltrout and M. Schwartz. Univ. of Chicago.
11:05
Actin bundling mutants in translation elongation
factor 1A induce altered protein synthesis at both the initiation
and elongation steps.
W.B. Perez and T.G. Kinzy. UMDNJ-
Robert Wood Johnson Med. Sch.
(986.2)
11:20
Selective mRNA translation by eIF2
phosphorylation during ER stress.
R.C. Wek, T.D. Baird and
L.R. Palam. Indiana Univ. Sch. of Med. (551.10)
11:35
325.3
mRNA surveillance is driven by translation.
R.
Green and N. Guydosh. Johns Hopkins Univ. and HHMI.
12:00
Discussion and closing remarks.
326. MECHANISMS OF BACTERIAL PATHOGENESIS
Symposium
t
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. 9:55
am
—B
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onvention
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, 254aB
C
haired
: n. a
lto
9:55
Chair’s introduction.
10:00
326.1
Probing mechanisms of cell polarity and
membrane trafficking using bacterial effector molecules.
N.
Alto. Univ. of Texas Southwestern Med. Ctr.
10:25
Manipulation of host cell signaling by bacterial
FIC proteins.
K. Pieles, A. Harms and C. Dehio. Bioctr., Univ.
of Basel.
(554.3)
10:40
326.2
Biochemical dissection of bacterial virulence
and macrophage innate immunity.
F. Shao. Natl. Inst. of Biol.
Sci., Beijing.
11:05
Recognition of the WXG substrate YukE by the
type VII secretion system in Bacillus subtilis.
T.A. Sysoeva,
L.A. Huppert, T.L. Ramsdell, S.M. Fortune and B.M. Burton.
Harvard Univ. and Harvard Sch. of Publ. Hlth.
(554.6)
321. LIPIDOMICS TECHNOLOGIES AT THE
BEGINNING OF THE NEXT DECADE
Workshop
t
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. 8:00
am
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, 151aB
C
haired
: a. m
errill
, J
r
.
8:00
Our perception of the lipidome after the first decade of
lipidomics.
E. A. Dennis. UCSD.
8:30
Lipid analysis by multiple “omic” mass spectrometry
platforms.
J. McDonald. Univ. of Texas Southwestern
Med. Ctr.
9:00
Lipidomics databases and other online tools.
E. Fahy.
UCSD.
9:30
Lipidomics comes of age in nutrition and other
translational sciences.
A. H. Merrill. Georgia Tech.
322. ASBMB PLENARY LECTURE
Plenary
t
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. 8:30
am
—B
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8:30
Introductory remarks.
C. Lange.
8:35
322.1
ERKonomics: MAPK assets and liabilities.
M.H. Cobb, E. Zaganjor, E. Dioum, E.M. Wauson and M. He.
Univ. of Texas Southwestern Med. Ctr.
323. EARL AND THRESSA STADTMAN
DISTINGUISHED SCIENTIST AWARD
t
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. 9:05
am
—B
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onvention
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9:05
Introductory remarks.
R. J. Lefkowitz.
9:10
323.1
Structural insights into the dynamic process
of G-protein-coupled receptor activation.
B. Kobilka. Stanford
Univ.
324. CO-TRANSCRIPTIONAL COUPLING
MECHANISMS
Symposium
t
ue
. 9:55
am
—B
oston
C
onvention
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, 252aB
C
haired
: s. B
uratoWsKi
9:55
Chair’s introduction.
10:00
324.1
Regulating CTD-interactions by Ess1-
dependent prolyl isomerization.
S. Hanes, D. Atencio and C.
Barnes. SUNY Upstate Med. Univ.
10:25
Argonaute 2-loaded promoter-targeted double
stranded RNA mediates gene activation by interacting with the
core transcriptional machinery.
V. Portnoy and L-C. Li. UCSF.
(547.6)
10:40
324.2
Structural and functional studies of mRNA
processing and quality control.
L. Tong. Columbia Univ.
11:05
Comprehensive characterization of
posttranslational modifications of histones using a novel high-
throughput middle-down proteomics approach.
S. Hess, A.
Kalli, A. Moradian and M.J. Sweredoski. Caltech. (772.5)
TUESDAY BIOCHEMISTRY
88
11:20
Contribution of an inner core hydrogen-
bonding network to
b-helix stability within the two-partner
secretion exotoxin family.
T.M. Weaver. Univ. Wisconsin-La
Crosse.
(996.13)
11:35
326.3
Mycobacterium tuberculosis proteasomes,
pupylation and pathogenesis.
K.H. Darwin. NYU Sch. of Med.
12:00
Discussion and closing remarks.
327. MANIPULATING METABOLIC NETWORKS
Symposium
t
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. 9:55
am
—B
oston
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onvention
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, 253C
C
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: s. C
opley
9:55
Chair’s introduction.
10:00
327.1
Towards a comprehensive understanding
of cellular metabolism.
J. Rabinowitz, Y. Xu, M.F. Clasquin,
S. Johnson, W. Lu, S.R. Campagna, A.F. Yakunin, A.A.
Caudy and F. Letisse. Princeton Univ., Agios Pharmaceut.,
Cambridge, MA, Univ. of Tennessee, Knoxville, Univ. of Toronto
and Univ. of Toulouse.
10:25
Chemical biology analysis of borrelidin
identifies an essential translational enzyme as a pro-angiogenic
modulator of tumor progression in multiple human cancers.
C.S. Francklyn, K. Lounsbury, T. Williams and A. Mirando.
Univ. of Vermont.
(805.7)
10:40
327.2
Exploiting the synthetic capacity of microbes
for the production of novel value-added biochemicals.
K.L.
Prather. MIT.
11:05
Thiol-based antioxidants trigger transient
mitochondrial oxidation.
J.N. Beaudoin, V.L. Kolossov, W.
Hanafin, S. DiLiberto, Jr., P.G. Kenis and H.R. Gaskins. Univ.
of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
(1011.14)
11:20
Mitochondria-targeted antioxidant mitoTEMPO
inhibits glycolysis and induces melanoma cell death by
blocking ROS-sensitive survival and metabolic pathways.
R.R.
Nazarewicz, A.E. Dikalova, A.T. Bikineyeva, S.V. Ivanov and
S.I. Dikalov. Vanderbilt Univ. Med. Ctr. and Yale Cancer Ctr.
(793.7)
11:35
327.3
Metabolic pathway analysis in cancer.
R.J.
DeBerardinis. Univ. of Texas Southwestern Med. Ctr.
12:00
Discussion and closing remarks.
328. BREAST CANCERS THAT ELUDE SUCCESSFUL
TREATMENTS: TRIPLE NEGATIVE BREAST
CANCER
Symposium
t
ue
. 9:55
am
—B
oston
C
onvention
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C
enter
, 253B
C
haired
: C. h
iCKs
9:55
Chair’s introduction.
10:00
328.1
Molecular classification of triple negative
breast cancer.
B.D. Lehmann, J.A. Bauer, S. Chen, Y. Shyr,
M. Sanders and J.A. Pietenpol. Vanderbilt Univ.
10:25
Regulation of Akt/AMPK/mTOR signaling by
grape polyphenols in triple negative breast cancer.
A. Rivera-
Rivera, L. Castillo-Pichardo and S. Dharmawardhane. Univ.
of Puerto Rico Med. Sci. Campus.
(607.1)
10:40
328.2
Somatic genome alterations in triple-negative
breast cancer.
M. Meyerson. Dana-Farber Cancer Inst.
11:05
Thyroid hormone status interferes with
estrogen target gene expression in breast cancer samples of
menopausal women.
S.J. Conde, R.A.M. Luvizotto, M.T. de
Síbio and C.R. Nogueira. São Paulo State Univ., Botucatu.
(609.3)
11:20
Deregulation of the non-canonical pathway in
triple-negative breast cancer.
J-P. Borg, E. Belotti, A. Daulat,
F. Lembo, F. Bertucci, E. Charafe-Jauffret and D. Birnbaum.
INSERM U1068, Marseille and Inst. Albert Bonniot, La Tronche,
France.
(610.1)
11:35
328.3
Translational nucleotide excision repair in triple
negative breast cancer.
E. Reed. USA Mitchell Cancer Inst.,
Mobile, AL.
12:00
Discussion and closing remarks.
329. PROMOTING CONCEPT-DRIVEN TEACHING
STRATEGIES IN BMB THROUGH CONCEPT
ASSESSMENTS
Symposium
t
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. 9:55
am
—B
oston
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onvention
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C
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: e. B
ell
9:55
Project update.
E. Bell. Univ. of Richmond.
10:05
329.1
Will this be on the test? Characterizing the
cognitive levels of undergraduate biology courses.
J. Momsen,
L. Montplaisir and E. Anderson. North Dakota State Univ.
10:30
329.2
Problem solving in biochemistry: assessment,
learning strategies, and preconceptions.
C.A. Sensibaugh
and M.P. Osgood. Univ. of New Mexico.
10:55
329.3
Biochemistry students’ misconceptions
regarding enzyme-substrate interactions.
K.J. Linenberger
and S.L. Bretz. Iowa State Univ. and Miami Univ.
11:20
329.4
Assessing student development of scientific
thinking skills using the EDAT and ADAT: the experimental
design and analysis of data ability tests.
K. Sirum, A. Majorczyk
and A. Andrews. Bowling Green State Univ.
11:45
Discussion.
330. SCIENCE CAFÉS 101: AN INTERACTIVE GUIDE
TO ORGANIZING YOUR OWN SCIENCE CAFÉ
Workshop
t
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. 12:30
pm
—B
oston
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Presented by the team at Sciencecafes.org, learn how
easy it is to organize a science café when you return home from
the meeting. ASBMB’s Science Café immediately follows the
presentation.
BIOCHEMISTRY TUESDAY
89
T
U
E
331
. PROTEOMICS OF POSTTRANSLATIONAL
MODIFICATION
Workshop
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. 12:30
pm
—B
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yGi
12:30 Phosphorylation analysis by mass spectrometry.
S. P.
Gygi. Harvard Med. Sch.
12:55
Wheat from chaff: finding modifications that matter most.
N. Kelleher. Northwestern Univ.
1:20
Chemical proteomics of cysteine modifications.
B.
Martin. Univ. of Michigan.
1:45
Discussion and closing remarks.
332. FRITZ LIPMANN LECTURESHIP
Award
t
ue
. 2:55
pm
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 258a
2:55
Introductory remarks.
D. Herschlag.
3:00
332.1
Tuning tRNA sequences for optimal translation.
O. Uhlenbeck. Northwestern Univ.
333. WALTER A. SHAW YOUNG INVESTIGATOR IN
LIPIDS AWARD LECTURE
Award
(Supported by an educational grant from Avanti Polar
Lipids, Inc.)
t
ue
. 3:50
pm
—B
oston
C
onvention
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C
enter
, 254aB
This award lecture will be presented in the symposium, Lipid
Trafficking and Sorting, 3:45 pm - 6:00 pm.
3:50
Introductory remarks.
P. Espenshade.
3:55
333.1
Cell biology of neutral lipid storage.
T. Walther.
Yale Med. Sch.
334. ACTIVATION OF DNA DAMAGE SIGNALING
Symposium
t
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. 3:45
pm
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 252aB
C
haired
: l. l
i
3:45
Chair’s introduction.
3:50
334.1
Holliday junction resolvases: the good, the bad
and the ugly.
S. West. London Res. Inst., South Mimms, U.K.
4:15 The DNA damage checkpoint triggers autophagy to
regulate the initiation of anaphase.
V.V. Eapen, F.J. Dotiwala,
J.C. Harrison, A.A. Eden, V. Ranade, S. Yoshida and J.E.
Haber. Brandeis Univ. (545.2)
4:30
334.2
Sensing of DNA breaks by the ATM and ATR
checkpoint kinases.
L. Zou. Massachusetts Gen. Hosp. Cancer
Ctr., Harvard Med. Sch.
4:55
Stimulation of the BLM-hDNA2 pathway of
DNA double-strand break end resection by TopoIII
a/RMI1/
RMI2.
J.M. Daley, X. Xue, T. Chiba and P. Sung. Yale Univ.
Sch. of Medicne.
(760.1)
5:10
Herpes simplex virus type 1 replication
proteins disable ATR signaling by binding to substrates that
would normally recruit 9-1-1 and topBP1 to activate ATRr.
S.K.
Weller and K.N. Mohni. Univ. of Connecticut Hlth. Ctr. (757.1)
5:25
334.3
Regulatory ubiquitylation during the response
to DNA double-strand breaks.
D. Durocher. Mount Sinai Hosp.,
Toronto.
5:50
Discussion and closing remarks.
335. ROLES FOR GLYCANS IN NOTCH SIGNALING
Symposium
t
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. 3:45
pm
—B
oston
C
onvention
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, 253a
C
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sieh
-W
ilson
3:45
Chair’s introduction.
3:50
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