Panelists:
T. A. Baker, MIT,
D. Cavalier, Science Cheerleader,
C. Mello, HHMI/Univ. of Massachusetts Med. Sch.
94. WILLIAM C. ROSE AWARD LECTURE
Award
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un
. 2:55
pm
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oston
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onvention
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enter
, 258a
2:55
Introductory remarks.
J. D. Scott.
3:00
94.1
Decoding ubiquitin networks in regulation of
inflammation and autophagy.
I. Dikic. Goethe Univ. Frankfurt.
95. COORDINATING FUNCTIONS AT THE
REPLICATION FORK
Symposium
s
un
. 3:45
pm
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 252aB
C
haired
: s. B
ell
3:45
Chair’s introduction.
3:50
95.1
Pif1 helicases: helping replication forks
maneuver past replication barriers.
M.L. Bochman, K.
Paeschke, P. Garcia and V.A. Zakian. Princeton Univ.
4:15 Interplay of DNA polymerase lambda, protection of
telomeres 1 and TERRA in telomere elongation.
G. Maga, J.
Lingner and U. Hübscher. Inst. of Molec. Genet., CNR, Pavia,
Fed. Polytech. Sch. of Lausanne and Univ. of Zürich-Irchel.
(538.4)
4:30
95.2
Chromatin replication and epigenome
maintenance.
C. Alabert and A. Groth. Univ. of Copenhagen.
4:55
Coordinated degradation of replisome
components ensures genome stability upon replication stress.
E. Noguchi, L. Roseaurlin and T. Toda. Drexel Univ. Col. of
Med. and Cancer Res. UK, London.
(968.4)
5:10
Probing the nucleic acid binding modes of
the single-stranded DNA binding protein of the bacteriophage
T4 replication complex.
D. Jose, S.E. Weitzel and P.H. von
Hippel. Inst. of Molec. Biol., Eugene, OR. (541.2)
5:25
95.3
Mechanism of replication-coupled DNA
interstrand cross-link repair.
J. Walter. Harvard Med. Sch.
5:50
Discussion and closing remarks.
96. HOW RNA MOLECULES BEHAVE AND
MISBEHAVE
Symposium
s
un
. 3:45
pm
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 253a
C
haired
: D. h
ersChlaG
3:45
Chair’s introduction.
3:50
96.1
Predictive understanding of RNA dynamic
behavior: bringing order to disorder.
H. Al-Hashimi, K. Petzold,
J. Chugh, T. Mustoe, E. Dethoff and C. Brooks III. Univ. of
Michigan.
4:15
Comprehensive mechanistic analysis of the
RNA-lariat debranching enzyme.
E.M. Ransey, S. Dey, S. Das
and M. Macbeth. Carnegie Mellon Univ. (988.3)
4:30
96.2
‘Hidden’ states are pervasive in RNA folding:
detection and dissection through mutate-and-map experiments.
R. Das, S. Doniach, M. Ali, P. Cordero and C. VanLang.
Stanford Univ. Sch. of Med. and Stanford Univ.
4:55
Molecular dynamics study of the stability of the
sarcin/ricin domain of RNA.
M.F. Bruist and C. Cavanaugh.
Univ. of Sciences in Philadelphia.
(989.1)
5:10
Alternative substrate kinetics of Escherichia
coli ribonuclease P: determination of relative rate constants
by internal competition.
L.E. Yandek, H-C. Lin and M. Harris.
Case Western Reserve Univ.
(988.4)
5:25
96.3
RNA chaperone activity of dead-box ‘helicase’
proteins.
R. Russell, C. Pan and I. Jarmoskaite. Univ. of Texas
at Austin.
5:50
Discussion and closing remarks.
BIOCHEMISTRY SUNDAY
27
S
U
N
97. LIPID SIGNALING IN HEALTH AND DISEASE
Symposium
(Supported by an educational grant from Avanti Polar
Lipids, Inc.)
s
un
. 3:45
pm
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 254aB
3:45
Chair’s introduction.
3:50
97.1
PtdIns(4)P, the Golgi, and cancer.
S.J. Field.
UCSD.
4:15
Casein kinase II phosphorylation of yeast
Pah1p phosphatidate phosphatase.
L-S. Hsieh and G.M.
Carman. Rutgers Univ. (822.6)
4:30
97.2
Regulation of glucocorticoid production by
nuclear lipid metabolism.
M.B. Sewer. UCSD.
4:55
Sphingosine kinase 1 is regulated by PPAR
a in
response to free fatty acids and mediates skeletal muscle IL-6
production and signaling in diet-induced obesity.
J.S. Ross, W.
Hu, B. Rosen, A.J. Snider, L.M. Obeid and L.A. Cowart. Med.
Univ. of South Carolina, Boston Univ. Sch. of Med., Ralph H
Johnson VA Ctr., Charleston, Stony Brook Univ. and Northport
VA Ctr., NY. (
813.18)
5:10
Rescue of sphingosine kinase-1-knockout
phenotype by 2-acetyl-5-tetrahydroxybutyl imidazole following
murine cardiac arrest is linked to changes in sphingosine-1-
phosphate and behenoylceramide levels.
E.V. Berdyshev,
I.A. Gorshkova, V. Natarajan, H. Wang, D.G. Beiser and T.L.
Vanden Hoek. Univ. of Illinois at Chicago and Univ. of Chicago.
(813.17)
5:25
97.3
Sphingosine-1-phosphate signaling in
inflammation and cancer.
T. Kordula. Virginia Commonwealth
Univ. Sch. of Med.
5:50
Discussion and closing remarks.
98. BIOENERGY
Symposium
s
un
. 3:45
pm
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 253C
C
haired
: J. s
tuBBe
3:45
Chair’s introduction.
3:50
98.1
Water oxidation chemistry of photosystem II.
G. Brudvig. Yale Univ.
4:15
Mind the gap: long range charge transfer across
the periplasm of Shewanella oneidensis.
S.J. Elliott, M. Firer-
Sherwood, N. Ando, K. Bewley, J.Y. Mock and C. Drennan.
Boston Univ., MIT and HHMI, Cambridge, MA.
(787.1)
4:30
98.2
Biogenesis of the H-cluster of the [FeFe]-
hydrogenase.
J.B. Broderick, E.M. Shepard, B.R. Duffus, S.
Ghose, N. Joshi, E.S. Boyd and J.W. Peters. Montana State
Univ.
4:55
Develop spatially-interactive multienzyme
complex on selfassembled DNA nanostructures.
J. Fu.
Biodesign at Arizona State Univ.
(1002.4)
5:10
Kinetic and spectroscopic studies of bicupin
oxalate oxidase and putative active site mutants.
E.W.
Moomaw, E. Hoffer, P. Moussatche, J. Salerno, M. Grant,
B. Immelman, R. Uberto, A. Ozarowski and A. Angerhofer.
Kennesaw State Univ., Univ. of Florida and Natl. High Magnetic
Field Lab., Tallahassee.
(789.9)
5:25
98.3
Crystallographic snapshots of metalloenzyme
complexes involved in biological carbon dioxide sequestration.
C.L. Drennan, Y. Kung, N. Ando, T. Doukov, G. Bender and
S.W. Ragsdale. MIT/HHMI, SSRL, Menlo Park and Univ. of
Michigan.
5:50
Discussion and closing remarks.
99. MECHANISMS OF CELL GROWTH AND
AUTOPHAGY REGULATION
Symposium
s
un
. 3:45
pm
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 253B
C
haired
: J. s. G
uKinD
3:45
Chair’s introduction.
3:50
99.1
AMPK and mTOR in nutrient signaling and
autophagy regulation.
J. Kim, R. Russell, H. Yuan and K-L.
Guan. UCSD.
4:15
A tumor suppressor complex withGAP activity
for the Rag GTPases that signal amino acid sufficiency to
mTORC1.
L. Bar-Peled, L. Chantranupong, A. Cherniack,
W. Chen, K. Ottina, B. Grabiner, E. Spear, S. Carter, M.
Meyerson and D.M. Sabatini. Whitehead Inst. for Biomed.
Res., Broad Inst. of Harvard and MIT, John Hopkins Med. Sch.,
Dana-Farber Cancer Inst. and HHMI, Cambridge, MA.
(832.1)
4:30
99.2
Formation and maturation of the
autophagosome.
N. Mizushima. Univ. of Tokyo.
4:55
Caveolin-1 is a critical determinant of
autophagy and oxidative stress.
N. Romero, T. Shiroto, H.
Kalwa, J. Sartoretto, T. Sugiyama and T. Michel. Brigham
and Women’s Hosp., Harvard Med. Sch.
(831.21)
5:10
Control of mitochondria destiny by autophagy
and a novel mitochondrial dynamics.
X-M. Yin and W-X. Ding.
Indiana Univ. Sch. of Med. and Univ. of Kansas Med. Ctr.
(832.3)
5:25
99.3
Reconstitution of the class III
phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase in autophagy.
Q. Zhong. Univ. of
California, Berkeley.
5:50
Discussion and closing remarks.
100. NAVIGATING MID-CAREER TRANSITIONS
Symposium
s
un
. 3:45
pm
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
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C
enter
, 251
C
haired
: D. z
uK
3:45
Chair’s introduction.
3:50
100.1
Mid-career adventure: making a successful
transition.
D. Koen. Naturejobs, Rochester, NY.
4:20
UF CPET: professional development for
secondary science teachers.
H.A. Darwiche, J. Bokor, D.
Joseph and M.J. Koroly. Univ. of Florida. (838.7)
4:35
100.2
One life scientist’s experience with mid-career
transitions.
A.D. Robertson. Natl. Psoriasis Fndn., Portland,
OR.
5:05
A picture is worth a thousand data points:
an analysis of textbook visualizations in the molecular life
sciences.
E. Offerdahl and J. Arneson. North Dakota State
Univ.
(838.13)
5:20
100.3
From mom to prof: make an effort.
O.J. Finn.
Univ. of Pittsburgh.
5:50
Discussion and closing remarks.
SUNDAY BIOCHEMISTRY
28
101. WELCOME RECEPTION SPONSORED BY THE
ASBMB MINORITY AFFAIRS COMMITTEE
Special Event
s
un
. 6:30
pm
—W
estin
B
oston
W
aterFront
h
otel
,
C
ommonWealth
B
allroom
The ASBMB Minority Affairs Committee welcomes PI’s,
industry professionals, educators, trainees and undergraduates
to enjoy a networking and mentoring reception.
Graduate Minority Travel Award recipient research posters
will be on display.
104. ARE DIETARY BIOACTIVES READY FOR
REVIEW FOR RECOMMENDED INTAKES?
Symposium
(Supported by an educational grant from the International
Life Sciences Institute, North American Branch)
s
un
. 8:00
am
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 157aBC
C
haired
: J. e
rDman
C
oChaired
: D. B
alentine
Clinical Nutrition
8:00 Introduction.
D. Balentine. Unilever.
8:05
Elements to consider in developing a path forward for
bioactive components.
K. Ellwood. Consultant.
8:25
Flavonoids and their contribution to health: a look at the
scientific support.
F. Hu. Harvard Sch. of Publ. Hlth.
8:45
Flavonoids as a case study.
J. Dwyer. Tufts Univ.
9:05
Intake recommendations for dietary bioactives: Have we
made progress in the last 20 years?
J. Erdman. Univ.
of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
9:45
Where to now? A panel discussion.
R. M. Russell. Tufts
Univ. and NIH.
105. EXPLORING CULTURE IN THE WORLD OF
INTERNATIONAL NUTRITION AND NUTRITION
SCIENCES
Symposium
(Sponsored by: Global Nutrition Council)
s
un
. 8:00
am
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 151aB
C
haired
: D. h
umphries
Global and Public Health Nutrition
8:00 Introduction.
D. Humphries. Yale Univ.
8:05
A political economy of food security measurement:
notes from the field.
M. C. Stefani, A. Herforth. Stony
Brook Univ., World Bank.
Nutrition
102. BEVERAGES AND HEALTH: BEYOND WATER
Special Event
(Sponsored by: PepsiCo.)
s
un
. 6:30
am
—W
estin
B
oston
W
aterFront
h
otel
,
h
arBor
B
allroom
ii/iii
103. ROLE OF GUT NUTRIENT SENSING IN
METABOLIC DISEASES
Symposium
(Supported by educational grants from Lucta, Bristol-
Myers Squibb and AstraZeneca)
s
un
. 8:00
am
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
,
B
allroom
e
ast
C
haired
: D. B
urrin
Biochemical, Molecular and Genetic Mechanisms
8:00
Chemosensing in the gut: nutrients, microbiota and the
gut-brain axis.
H. Raybould. Sch. of Vet. Med., Univ.
of California, Davis.
8:30
Gut hormone responses to bariatric surgery impacts
treatment of obesity and type 2 diabetes.
A. Miras.
Imperial Col. of London.
9:00
Metabolic improvements after bariatric surgery: role of
the gut-brain axis.
D. Sandoval. Univ. of Cincinnati.
9:30
Role of GLP-1 in body weight regulation: lessons from
human trials.
A. Astrup. Univ. of Copenhagen.
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EB 2013?
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.
BIOCHEMISTRY/NUTRITION SUNDAY
29
S
U
N
8:40
From efficacy research to large-scale impact on
undernutrition: the roles of community, disciplinary
and organizational cultures.
D. Pelletier, R. Uauy.
Cornell Univ., London Sch. of Hyg. and Trop. Med.
9:15
The role of critical discourse analysis in understanding
food policy: why narratives matter.
L. Jarosz, S.
Young. Univ. of Washington, Cornell Univ.
9:45 Conclusion.
106. EPIDEMIOLOGICAL RESEARCH ADDRESSING
DIET AND HEALTH OUTCOMES I
Minisymposium
(Sponsored by: Nutrition Epidemiology RIS)
s
un
. 8:00
am
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 152
C
haired
: l.m. t
roy
C
oChaired
: a. m
illen
8:00
106.1
Changes in coffee intake and subsequent risk
of type 2 diabetes in women.
S.N. Bhupathiraju, A. Pan, W.C.
Willett, R.M. van Dam and F.B. Hu. Harvard Sch. of Publ. Hlth.
and Saw Swee Hock Sch. of Publ. Hlth., Singapore.
8:15
106.2
Intakes of dietary flavonoid sub-classes and
incidence of type 2 diabetes.
P.F. Jacques, A. Cassidy, G.
Rogers, J.B. Meigs and J.T. Dwyer. USDA at Tufts Univ.,
Norwich Med. Sch., Univ. of East Anglia, U.K., Massachusetts
Gen. Hosp. and Tufts Med. Ctr.
8:30
106.3
Meal and snack patterns associated with
biomarkers of glucose metabolism, diet quality and weight
status in U.S. adults.
D. Shin, S.J. Song, H-Y. Paik and W.O.
Song. Michigan State Univ. and Seoul Natl. Univ.
8:45
106.4
Prospective associations of biomarkers
of glucose metabolism and obesity-related cancers in the
Framingham Heart Study (1971-2008).
N. Parekh, Y. Lin, M.
Vadiveloo, R. Hayes, G. Lu-Yao and Y. Lin. NYU, UMDNJ,
Piscataway, NYU Med. Ctr. and Cancer Inst. of New Jersey,
New Brunswick.
9:00
106.5
Effect of dairy intake on bone mineral density is
only beneficial with higher vitamin D intakes: the Framingham
Original Cohort.
S. Sahni, K.L. Tucker, D.P. Kiel, L. Quach,
V. Casey and M.T. Hannan. IFAR, Hebrew SeniorLife and
Harvard Med. Sch. and Notheastern Univ.
9:15
106.6
Dietary patterns, omega-3 fatty acids intake
from seafood and high anxiety symptoms during pregnancy:
findings from the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and
Children.
J.S. Vaz, G. Kac, P.M. Emmett, J.M. Davis, J.
Golding and J.R. Hibbeln. Fed. Univ. of Rio de Janeiro, Univ.
of Bristol, Univ. of Illinois at Chicago and NIAAA, NIH, Rockville.
9:30
106.7
Are physical activity levels linked to nutrient
adequacy? Implications for cancer risk.
I. Csizmadi, L.E.
Kelemen, T. Speidel, Y. Yuan, L.C. Dale, C.M. Friedenreich
and P.J. Robson. Univ. of Calgary, Alberta Hlth. Svcs.-Cancer
Care, Calgary and Univ. of Alberta.
9:45
106.8
The impact of preschoolers on household food
and beverage purchases changed significantly between 2000
and 2011.
C.N. Ford, S. Ng and B.M. Popkin. Univ. of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill.
107. GLOBAL NUTRITION: BIOMARKERS FOR
ASSESSING INTERVENTIONS
Minisymposium
(Sponsored by: Global Nutrition Council)
s
un
. 8:00
am
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
, 153a
C
haired
: D. l
ópez
De
r
omaña
C
oChaired
: s. h
ess
8:00
107.1
High plasma homocysteine increases risk of
metabolic syndrome in 6- to 8-year-old children in rural Nepal.
M. Yakub, K.J. Schulze, P. Christian, C.P. Stewart and K.P.
West. Johns Hopkins Bloomberg Sch. of Publ. Hlth. and Univ.
of California, Davis.
8:15
107.2
Maternal and breastmilk vitamin B12
correlated with infant status but was not influenced by maternal
supplementation among HIV- infected Malawian women in the
Breastfeeding, Antiretrovirals and Nutrition Study.
S. Shahab-
Ferdows, L.H. Allen, D. Hampel, M.E. Bentley, L.S. Adair,
V.L. Flax, D. Kayira, C.S. Chasela, Z. Kacheche, G. Tegha,
A.P. Kourtis, D.J. Jamieson and C. van der Horst. USDA,
Davis, Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, UNC Proj., Malawi
and Ctrs. for Dis. Control and Prevent.
8:30
107.3
Zinc absorption from Sprinkles™ is not affected
by iron in Kenyan infants in malaria endemic area.
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