[3dem] Penn State Imaging Symposium

Bob Ashley boashley at psu.edu
Wed Apr 3 08:19:36 PDT 2013


A last minute update for those attending or interested in attending the Penn
State College of Medicine Imaging Symposium:

The symposium is free to attend but registration is kindly requested:

Register for the Imaging Symposium Here
<http://forms.pennstatehershey.org/playerf.htm?f=8cpCAgsI>

More information: 
http://www.pennstatehershey.org/web/core/microscopy-histology

Penn State College of Medicine Imaging Symposium
Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Penn State Hershey University Conference Center
Agenda
8:00 ­ 8:30 a.m. Registration and Continental Breakfast

8:30 ­ 8:45 a.m. Welcome and Introductions

Keynote
8:45 ­ 9:45 a.m. ³Visualizing the life cycle of Dengue virus with electron
microscopy²
Michael G. Rossmann, Ph.D.
Hanley Distinguished Professor of Biological Sciences
Department of Biological Sciences
Purdue University

9:45 ­ 10:15 a.m. ³Sensing a REAL virus ­ Trafficking of Poxviral DNA and
the Innate Immune Sensor TLR9"
Christopher Norbury, Ph.D.
Professor,
Microbiology and Immunology,
Penn State College of Medicine

10:15 ­ 10:30 a.m. Break

10:30 ­ 11:00 a.m. ³A picture is worth a thousand blots: Using imaging to
study late steps in retroviral replication"
Darrin Bann, B.A.
M.D./Ph.D. Candidate,
Penn State College of Medicine

10:00 ­ 11:30 a.m. ³To Be Announced²
Keith Cheng, M.D./Ph.D.
Chief, Division of Experimental Pathology,
Penn State Hershey

11:30 ­ 12:00 p.m. ³Localization of Myosin III in Photoreceptors:
Conservation from Drosophila to Humans²
Christopher Yengo, Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Cellular and Molecular Physiology,
Penn State College of Medicine

2:00 ­ 1:30 p.m. Lunch & Posters

Keynote
1:30 ­ 2:30 p.m. ³The biogenesis of HIV-1: lessons from imaging the assembly
one virus at a time²
Sanford M. Simon, Ph.D.
Professor,
Head, Laboratory of Cellular Biophysics
The Rockefeller University, New York

2:30 ­ 3:00 p.m. "How do multiphoton and harmonic generation microscopy
methods enable biologists to understand complex cellular processes"
Thomas Abraham, Ph.D.
Director, Imaging Core,
Penn State College of Medicine

Keynote
3:00 ­ 4:00 p.m. ³High resolution cryo-electron microscopy applied to the
icosahedral capsids of tailed bacteriophages and herpesviruses²
James F. Conway, Ph.D.
Associate Professor
Department of Structural Biology
University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine



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