1 friday, april 19 Biochemistry and Molecular Biology asbmb graduate and postdoctoral travel award keynote lecture special Session



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Metabolic Diseases

3:15 


Yin and Yang: the gastric X-A like cells as possible dual 

regulator of food intake. 



Y. Tache. UCLA.

3:45 


The neuronal mechanism by which Roux-en-Y gastric 

bypass reduced food intake and body weight. 



L. 

Kaplan. Harvard Med. Sch.

4:15 


Gastric fuel sensing and food intake. 

W. Zhang. Univ. of 

Michigan.

4:45 

Cross talk between the gut and adipose tissue leptins. 



M. Bendavan. Univ. of Montreal.

303.  HYPERTENSION: FROM FLIES TO HUMANS

Symposium

(Sponsored by: APS Water and Electrolyte Homeostasis 

Section)

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3:15 

Renal proximal tubule cells exfoliated into the urine 

predict the salt-sensitive phenotype. 

R. Felder. Univ. 

of Virginia Sch. of Med.

3:45  Epigenetics in human essential hypertension. 

A. 

Baccarelli. Havard Sch. of Publ. Hlth.

4:15 


Pharmacogenomics of essential hypertension. 

P. A. 

Jose. Univ. of Maryland Sch. of Med., Baltimore.

4:45 


Drosophila and humans. 

M. F. Romero. Mayo Clin. Col. 

of Med.


PHYSIOLOGY MONDAY

83

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304.  JOSEPH ERLANGER DISTINGUISHED 

LECTURESHIP OF THE APS CENTRAL 

NERVOUS SYSTEM SECTION

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Blood Pressure Regulation

Title:  Verney’s Osmoreceptor: An Integrated Unit 

Comprising Ion Channels, Glial Cells and 

Mechanosensitive Neurons

Speaker: 

C. W. Bourque. McGill Univ. and Montreal Gen. 

Hosp.

305.  MICROBIAL REGULATION OF MEMBRANE 

TRANSPORT

Symposium

(Sponsored by: APS Cell and Molecular Physiology 

Section)

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Transporters and Ion Channels

3:15 


Respiratory epithelial cell responses to virus infection. 

A. Pekosz. Johns Hopkins Univ.

3:45 


Respiratory virus-mediated iron secretion promotes 

chronic bacterial colonization in the lung. 



J. 

Bomberger. Univ. of Pittsburgh.

4:15 


Impact of enteropathogenic E. coli on intestinal epithelial 

tight junctions and transporters. 



G. Hecht. Univ. of 

Illinois Col. of Med. at Chicago.

4:45 

The role of CFTR in bacterial-macrophage interactions. 



M. O’Riordan. Univ. of Michigan Med. Sch.

306.  MOLECULAR BIOENGINEERING

Symposium

(Sponsored by: Biomedical Engineering Society)

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3:15 

Engineering the immune response through hitch-hiking 

therapeutics. 

D. Irvine. MIT.

3:40 


Engineered proteins as next-generation diagnostics and 

therapeutics. 



J. Cochran. Stanford Univ.

4:05 


Improving adoptive T cell therapy for cancers through 

synthetic biology. 



W. Wong. Boston Univ.

4:30 


Single-molecule approaches to dissecting networked 

multiple protein functions. 



M. Diehl. Rice Univ.

4:55 


Engineering cellular mechanotransduction. 

C. Chen. 

Univ. of Pennsylvania.



307.  NOVEL SIGNALING MOLECULES IN VASCULAR 

INJURY AND INFLAMMATION

Featured Topic

(Sponsored by: APS Cardiovascular Section)

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Inflammation and Immune Responses

Translational Physiology

3:15 


Role of CCN proteins in aldosterone-mediated vascular 

injury. 


J. Leopold. Brigham and Women’s Hosp.

3:45 


Enhanced angiotensin-aldosterone activation of mTOR/

S6K-1 promotes vascular inflammation, oxidative 

stress and endothelial dysfunction. 

J. Sowers. Univ. 

of Missouri-Columbia.

4:15 

Novel mitochondrial mechanisms mediate enhanced 



vasodilation of rat middle cerebral arteries to 

mitochondrial depolarization following ischemia-

reperfusion injury. 

I. Rutkai, E.A. Wappler, P.V.G. 

Katakam, D. Liu and D.W. Busija. Tulane Univ. Sch. 

of Med. 


(1131.10)

4:30 


Activation of formyl peptide receptors induces relaxation 

and reduces contraction in resistance arteries. 



C.F. 

Wenceslau, C.G. McCarthy, S. Goulopoulou and 

R.C. Webb. Georgia Hlth. Sci. Univ. (1131.11)

4:45 


FoxO induced inhibition of secreted molecule signaling 

pathways: role in promoting angiostasis in the 

ischemic muscle. 

E.A. Roudier, M. Milkiewicz and 

T.L. Haas. York Univ., Canada and Pomeranian Med. 

Univ., Poland. 



(1131.13)

5:00 


Telomere uncapping causes cellular senescence and 

inflammation in arteries: implications for arterial 

aging. 

R.G. Morgan, S.J. Ives, L.A. Lesniewski, 

R.M. Cawthon, R.H.I. Andtbacka, R.D. Noyes, E.L. 

Denchi, R.S. Richardson and A.J. Donato. Univ. 

of Utah, George E. Wahlen DVA Med. Ctr. and The 

Scripps Res. Inst. 

(1131.1)

308.  PROGRAMMING THE LUNG: EPIGENETIC 

MECHANISMS

Symposium

(Sponsored by: APS Respiration Section)

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3:15  Epigenetic mechanisms in lung development. 

M. 

Ramirez. Boston Univ. Sch. of Med.

3:45  Prenatal programming of airway reactivity. 



J. 

Hollingsworth. Duke Univ.

4:15 


Epigenetic immune programming in early life by 

environmental exposures. 



B. P. Lawrence. Univ. of 

Rochester Sch. of Med. and Dent.

4:45 

Reversing prenatal programming for allergy. 



H. Renz. 

Phillips Univ., Marburg.



MONDAY PHYSIOLOGY

84

TUESDAY, APRIL 23

Across Societies – Experimental Biology

310.  CAREER DEVELOPMENT SEMINARS AND 

WORKSHOPS

Workshop

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Career Development

The following Seminars and Workshops will be held in the 

EB2013/FASEB Career Center. There is no fee or pre-registration 

associated with the workshops and seminars; just walk in and sit 

down!

Critiquing of CV/Resumes is by appointment and starts at 

9:30 AM on Sunday and continues until 5:00 PM on 

Wednesday. Sigh up on-site in the EB2013/FASEB 

Career Center, Hall B.

9:15  Developing your core message/elevator pitch. 

J. 

Lombardo.

9:15 

NIH career development (K) award programs and early-

stage investigators.

 H. Khachaturian.

9:30 


Ten tough industrial interview questions: ten good 

responses. 



J. Tringali.

9:30 


Successful behaviors for winning an interview. 

J. 

Blumenthal.

9:30 


Managing conflict. 

S. Milgram, L. Conlan.

11:00  Postdocs: what should you be looking for and how to 

find them. 

A. Green.

11:00  Compensation negotiation in an industry setting. 



B. 

Lindstaedt.

11:00 


Making the grade: job talk/chalk talk. 

D. Behrens.

11:00 


What you seek is what you get. 

H. Adams.

1:00 


The industrial hiring process: learn the nuances, get the 

offer. 


J. Tringali.

1:00 


Utilizing LinkedIn in the PhD job search. 

A. Green.

1:00 


The right attitude and behaviors while job searching: 

from the resume to the job. 



J. Blumenthal.

1:00 


The federal job hunt. 

S. Milgram, L. Conlan.

2:00  Navigating graduate work: protocol/milestones/

requirements. 

H. Adams.

2:00 


Managing a lab. 

S. Milgram, L. Conlan.

2:30 


Job hunting in the biotech industry. 

B. Lindstaedt.

2:30 


Revealing your character through your resume. 

J. 

Blumenthal.

2:30 


Talking about yourself: interviewing well. 

N. Saul.

2:45 CV 


→ Resumé. A. Green.

4:00 


Job search in academia and industry. 

D. Behrens.

4:00 


Successful behaviors for winning an interview. 

J. 

Blumenthal.

4:00 


Managing up. 

S. Milgram, L. Conlan.

309.  NIH K AWARDS

Seminar

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NIH Grants Seminar Workshop Series

Career Development

This presentation will focus on the NIH’s Career Development 

Awards (K) including the most recent K99/00 Pathways to 

Independence Award (for postdoctoral scientists) and other K 

awards targeted to individuals with research doctoral degrees 

(Ph.D. and equivalent) and clinical doctoral degrees (M.D. and 

equivalent). Among the K awards discussed will be the K01 

Mentored Research Scientist Development Award, the K02 

Independent Scientist Award, the K22 Career Transition Award, 

the K08 Mentored Clinical Scientist Development Award, the K23 

Mentored Patient Oriented Career Development Award, the K24 

Mid-Career patient Oriented Career Award, and K25 Mentored 

Quantitative Scientist Career Development Award. The interactive 

discussion will give attendees an opportunity to ask questions of 

and obtain insight from an NIH representative on these and other 

awards available for beginning investigators.



Join Us Next Year!

Experimental Biology

 

2014

April 26 – 30

San Deigo, CA



Visit The Exhibits

Sunday–Tuesday

9:00 AM–4:00 PM


85

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Anatomy

314.  CURRICULAR INTEGRATION: HOW HAS IT 

AFFECTED TEACHING AND LEARNING IN 

GROSS ANATOMY?

Symposium

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Education & Teaching

2:30 


 

Chair’s introduction.

2:35 

314.1 

Transitioning to an integrated curriculum: 

challenges, opportunities and student performance in gross 

anatomy. 



T.M. Hoagland. Med. Col. of Wisconsin.

3:00 


314.2 

The challenge of teaching anatomy in a organ-

based curriculum: mistakes made and lessons learned. 

W.J. 

Adamas-Rappaport, M.H. Czuzak, J. Alvarado and D. 

Darnell. Univ. of Arizona Col. of Med.

3:25 


314.3 

Extreme makeover – anatomy edition: how a 

paradigm shift in pedagogy reshaped an anatomy program. 

J.J. Wisco and M.E. Stark. Brigham Young Univ. and David 

Geffen Sch. of Med. at UCLA.

3:50  

Discussion.



315.  DEVELOPMENTAL BACKGROUNDS 

UNDERLYING THE MORPHOLOGICAL 

EVOLUTION OF VERTEBRATES

Symposium

(Cosponsored by: Developmental Dynamics)

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Developmental Biology

2:30 


315.1 

Embryonic origin of the skull: has the pattern of 

neural crest derivation changed during vertebrate evolution? 

J. 

Hanken and N. Piekarski. Harvard Univ.

3:15 


315.2 

What we can learn from hagfish embryology. 



S. 

Kuratani. Ctr. for Develop. Biol. and RIKEN, Kobe, Japan.

316.  EXCELLENCE IN CANADIAN RESEARCH – 

NEUROBIOLOGICAL ASPECTS OF AGING

Hybrid Symposium

(Sponsored by: Canadian Association for Anatomy, 

Neurobiology and Cell Biology)

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Neurobiology

2:30 


 

Chair’s introduction.

2:35 

316.1 

Improvement of cholinergic function during 

normal and pathological aging. 

P.M. Nagy and I. Aubert. 

Sunnybrook Res. Inst., Univ. of Toronto.

2:50 

316.2 

Sympathosensory sprouting in aged mice that 

over express nerve growth factor. 

L.J. Smithson and M.D. 

Kawaja. Queen’s Univ., Canada.

311. NEUROSCIENCE

Plenary

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Neurobiology

8:00  


Introduction. 

L. DonCarlos. Loyola Univ. 

Chicago.


8:06 

311.1 

Imaging the connectome. 



J.W. Lichtman. 

Harvard Univ.

9:03 

311.2 

From the connectome to the synaptome. 



J. 

DeFelipe. Polytech Univ. of Madrid and Inst. Cajal, Madrid.

312.  IMAGING MODALITIES

Plenary

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Imaging

10:30  


Introduction. 

K. Albertine. Univ. of Utah Sch. of 

Med.


10:32 

312.1 

Imaging the cellular dynamics and signals that 

pattern embryos. 

S.E. Fraser. Univ. of Southern California.

11:22 


312.2 

Recording and statistical analysis of early 

zebrafish developmental patterns using in vivo multiphoton 

microscopy. 



N. Peyriéras. CNRS-NED, Gif sur Yvette.

11:52 


312.3 

Integrating cell and tissue motion patterns 

during early embryogenesis: how much “cell migration” really 

occurs? 


C.D. Little. Kansas Univ. Med. Ctr.

12:22  


Discussion.

313.  IMAGING LIVE TISSUES

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Imaging

2:30 


 

Chair’s introduction.

2:35 

313.1 

Visualizing and perturbing the embryonic 

cardiovascular system with light. 

M.W.  Jenkins, Y.T. Wang, 

L.M. Peterson, S. Gu, G.H. Karunamuni, P. Ma, A.M. Rollins 

and M. Watanabe. Case Western Reserve Univ.

3:00 


313.2 

In vivo dynamic and hyperspectral microscopy. 



E.M. Hillman. Columbia Univ.

3:25 


313.3 

Imaging neurovascular interactions in the 

cerebral cortex in vivo. 

A. Devor. UCSD.

3:50  


Discussion.

TUESDAY ANATOMY 

86

3:05 


316.3 

Adult hippocampal neurogenesis: another 

target of scyllo-inositol treatment? 

L.A.M. Thomason and J. 

McLaurin. Univ. of Toronto.

3:20 


316.4 

Aberrant glycerophosphocholine metabolism 

is a primary and targetable pathology in Alzheimer disease. 

H. Xu, L.A. Swayne, K. Morin, S. Fai, D. Figeys and S.A.L. 

Bennett. Univ. of Ottawa, Univ. of Victoria and Carleton Univ., 

Canada.


3:35 

316.5 

Cholinergic basal forebrain circuit degeneration 

in Alzheimer’s disease. 

M. Fahnestock. McMaster Univ., 

Canada.


317.  NOVEL 3D IMAGING WITH MICRO COMPUTED 

TOMOGRAPHY

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Imaging

4:30 


 

Chair’s introduction.

4:35 

317.1 

Cartilage imaging and other novel assessments 

of bone repair. 

E.F-i. Morgan, L.N.M. Hayward, A.I. Hussein, 

L.C. Gerstenfeld and M.W. Grinstaff. Boston Univ. and Boston 

Univ. Sch. of Med.

5:00 

317.2 

Nondestructive microCT imaging of soft tissues 

using phosphotungstic acid-hematoxylin, intravascular contrast 

agent, and perfluorochemical. 



M.F. Barbe, S.J. Phillips, M.R. 

Ruggieri, L.S. Miller and M.R. Wolfson. Temple Univ. Sch. of 

Med. and North Shore Univ. Hosp., Long Island Jewish Med. 

Ctr.

5:25 


317.3 

In vivo imaging of cartilage and bone. 



H. 

Weinans. Erasmus Univ. Rotterdam.

5:50  


Discussion.

318.  TEACHING INNOVATIONS IN ANATOMY I

Platform

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Education & Teaching

4:30 


318.1 

Flipping the classroom: turning the traditional 

anatomy lecture on its head. 

V. Lyons and K. Muldoon. Geisel 

Sch. of Med. at Dartmouth and Dartmouth Col.

4:45 

318.2 

Gender and age bias in digital anatomical 

science education. 

L.M.J. Lee. Univ. of Colorado Sch. of Med.

5:00 


318.3 

Student-generated content in the gross 

anatomy laboratory. 

A.F. Doubleday. Univ. of Illinois at Chicago 

Col. of Dent.

5:15 


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