Special Seminar
Dr. Hanspeter Naegeli
(Institute of Pharmacology and Toxicology, University of Zurich)
"Nucleotide excision repair: Chromatin connections"
Wednesday, April 15, 2015
11:00 am
1022 Life Sciences
Special Seminar
Dr. Hanspeter Naegeli
(Institute of Pharmacology and Toxicology, University of Zurich)
"Nucleotide excision repair: Chromatin connections"
Wednesday, April 15, 2015
11:00 am
1022 Life Sciences
Just got pointed to this Wired article by Katie Collins — Eden Project’s ‘Human Biome’ is a gross, musical microbe showcase (Wired UK)
Fascinating project that I actually don’t think is gross in any way. From the article
Invisible You: The Human Biome will explore the community of microbes that live in and on each and every one of us. Artistic and interactive displays will show bacteria, fungi and viruses, with 11 artists commissioned to create works for the exhibition.
I want to just quote the entire story but I think that is not allowed so let’s just say you really should read the whole thing and look at the gallery.
Thursday, April 23, 2015
3:00PM – 4:00PM
1005 GBSF
The David L. Weaver Endowed Lectures in Biophysics and Computational Biology present:
Professor Stephen Quake
Lee Otterson Professor,
Bioengineering and Applied Physics, Stanford University
Investigator, Howard Hughes Medical Institute
“Single Cell Genomics”
An exciting emerging area revolves around the use of microfluidic tools for single-cell genomic analysis. We have been using microfluidic devices for both gene expression analysis and for genome sequencing from single cells. In the case of gene expression analysis, it has become routine to analyze hundreds of genes per cell on hundreds to thousands of single cells per experiment. This has led to many new insights into the heterogeneity of cell populations in human tissues, especially in the areas of cancer and stem cell biology. These devices make it possible to perform “reverse tissue engineering” by dissecting complex tissues into their component cell populations, and they are also used to analyze rare cells such as circulating tumor cells or minor populations within a tissue. We have also used single-cell genome sequencing to analyze the genetic properties of microbes that cannot be grown in culture – the largest component of biological diversity on the planet – as well as to study the recombination potential of humans by characterizing the diversity of novel genomes found in the sperm of an individual. We expect that single cell genome sequencing will become a valuable tool in understanding genetic diversity in many different contexts.
Dr. Quake studied physics (BS 1991) and mathematics (MS 1991) at Stanford University, after which he earned a doctorate in theoretical physics from Oxford University (1994) as a Marshall Scholar. He then returned to Stanford University, where he spent two years as a postdoc in Steven Chu’s group.He joined the faculty of the California Institute of Technology in 1996, where he was ultimately appointed the Thomas and Doris Everhart Professor of Applied Physics and Physics. At Caltech, Quake received “Career” and “First” awards from the NSF and NIH and was named a Packard Fellow.These awards supported a research program that began with single molecule biophysics and soon expanded to include the inventions of single molecule sequencing and microfluidic large scale integration, and their applications to biology and human health. He moved back to Stanford University in 2005, where he is now the Lee Otterson Professor and an investigator of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.
Dr. Quake is a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the National Academy of Inventors, the National Academy of Sciences, the National Academy of Engineering, the Institute of Medicine, the American Institute for Medical and Biological Engineering and of the American Physical Society.
Reception to follow
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The lecture is free and open to the community. The series honors the memory of David L. Weaver, a distinguished biophysicist and professor at Tufts University for whom the endowment was established in 2006. Its objective is to bring prominent scientists to UC Davis whose original research has been widely recognized as having a major impact in the fields of Biophysics and Computational Biology.
The Center for Science, Technology, Medicine, & Society announces our annual Graduate Student Organized Symposium
Faking It: Counterfeits, Copies, and Uncertain Truths in Science, Technology, and Medicine
Friday – Saturday
10 Apr – 11 Apr 2015
470 Stephens Hall
We invite colleagues to join us for a two day symposium at the University of California, Berkeley on “faking it”–here construed broadly as fudging, imitating, juking, playing the trickster, pretending, feigning, re-creating, manipulating, falsifying. Our aim is to bring together a wide variety of scholars whose work, in some way, touches upon this issue. We invite colleagues to consider any aspect of the practices, epistemologies, ontologies, and politics of faking, copying, counterfeiting, or quackery. We seek to amplify and incubate a growing attention to the theory and practice of fake truths on Berkeley’s campus and beyond.
Keynote address: Joseph Masco, University of Chicago
More information and registration (free) can be found here:
http://cstms.berkeley.edu/current-events/faking-it-counterfeits-copies-and-uncertain-truths-in-science-technology-and-medicine/
Received this email about a talk by Alessandro Duranti on "How disruptive can we be? Intended and unintended effects of changing academic practices"
Dear UC Davis Faculty, Staff, Students, and Community Members,
We are delighted to announce that the next lecture in the 2014-2015 season of the Provost’s Forums on the Public University and the Social Good will take place on Thursday, April 16, 2015.
The third lecture of the season features Alessandro Duranti, Distinguished Professor of Anthropology and Dean of Social Sciences at UCLA. His research projects have focused on the role of verbal and visual communication in political arenas, everyday life, and music performance and rehearsals. Dean Duranti will review a number of projects and initiatives at UCLA that have to some extent disrupted traditional views of collaboration in research and teaching; how to engage a non-academic audience; the separation between basic and applied research; the goals of graduate education; and the role played by alumni and donors in helping students along their career paths. In each of these areas, Dean Duranti will use examples of success and failure to assess some intended and unintended effects of experimentation. The goal of his presentation is to stimulate a productive conversation with faculty, students, staff, alumni, and friends of the UC system about the best ways to face a number of pressing challenges—including a rapidly changing job market, institutional competition from private universities, and current political realities in California.
The event will begin at 3 p.m. in the Multipurpose Room of the Student Community Center and will end at 4:30 p.m. There will be an hour-long reception with light refreshments directly following the end of the lecture. The event is free and open to the public.
For more details on this event please see the attached flyer, visit the Provost’s Forums website, or contact Casey Castaldi. In addition, please forward this information to any interested parties, as all events are open to the public.
We look forward to seeing you at this exciting event!
Just got this email and thought some of the talks would be of interest. Note – I love Ann Reid – having worked with her when she was at the American Academy of Microbiology. She is simply awesome.
————–
Dear northern California friends of NCSE,
NCSE’s executive director Ann Reid will be speaking on “OMG Virus!
Flu, Ebola, Measles, and When You Really Should Be Afraid” as part of
SkeptiCal 2015, the Northern California Science and Skepticism
Conference, held all day on June 6 at the Oakland Asian Culture
Center, 388 9th Street #290 in Oakland.
A description of her talk: “Ebola, influenza, bird flu, SARS, HIV,
West Nile, Hantavirus, measles — one could go on. Each of these
viruses has, at one time or another (or in some cases repeatedly),
been the subject of breathless front-page scare headlines. Fear, after
all, grabs our attention. And fear, when it comes to viruses, can be a
highly appropriate response. But our fears are often disproportionate
to the actual degree of risk. Furthermore, because fear is a highly
effective tool for manipulation, emphasizing — sometimes exaggerating
— risks plays a big part in public communications about viruses. So
what’s a layman to do? When is it appropriate to be afraid, and what
kinds of precautions are reasonable? Three case studies will
illustrate the complicated ways that fear can get in the way of a
clear-eyed view of how much risk a virus poses, and what a reasonable
person should do about it. First, the 1918 influenza virus killed
between 20 and 50 million people worldwide. What made it so lethal,
and are warnings that bird flu could cause a similar outbreak
justified? Second, how concerned should we be about Ebola, and what is
an appropriate response? And finally, how has fear of vaccination
superseded fear of the diseases it prevents?”
Also speaking at the conference will be plenary speakers Peggy G.
Lemaux on “Angst in the Grocery Aisle,” Natalie Batalha on “Toward
Other Earths, Other Life,” and John P. A. Ioannidis on “Reproducible
Research: True or False?” and breakout speakers Ron Hipschman on
“Science (in) Fiction,” Isil Arican on “International Skeptical
Activism,” Kenzi Amodei on “Your Inner Simulator,” and Frank Mosher on
“Workshop for Producing Skeptical Children.” Plus there’ll be
entertainment from Robert Strong the Comedy Magician.
Tickets are available now. If purchased before May 1, regular tickets
are $35.00, $25.00 for students. For further details and to purchase
tickets, visit:
http://www.skepticalcon.com/
Thursday April 9 366 Briggs
12:10
“ Dengue control: from spray ‘em and slay ‘em to rear and release”.
Prof. Scott Ritchie
James Cook University in Cairns, Australia
Chief medical entomologist of Scott O’Neill’s Wolbachia-based program to control the spread of dengue (http://www.eliminatedengue.com/program ).
“Applications of next generation sequencing in animal science”
Speaker: Timothy Smith
Research Chemist
US Meat Animal Research Center
Monday, April 6, 2015
4:10-5:00 PM
1022 Life Sciences
Who: Tracy Teal (tkteal@datacarpentry.org)
When: April 21, 2015.
Times: 9am-5pm .
Where: 2030 Valley Hall, UC Davis campus.
Description:
We will be running a mothur workshop focused on analyzing MiSeq
amplicon data. This workshop is intended for anyone new to amplicon
analysis or mothur or those want to more efficiently analyze MiSeq
data. We will work with sample data in this workshop and follow the
standard SOP, but by the end you should be able to do these analyses
with your own data. We will show you how to run mothur using cloud
computing and some multivariate statistics for analysis of OTU-based
community data.
This workshop is open to everyone, including graduate students,
postdocs, staff, faculty, and community members. We have reserved
space for UC Davis VetMed affiliates; please contact the lead
instructor if you are affiliated with the SVM.
More at:
http://dib-training.readthedocs.org/en/pub/2015-04-21-mothur.html
Registration link:
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/mothur-workshop-registration-16380968919
The Genome Center Systems and Synthetic Biology Seminar Series present:
Title: From minimal cells to reconfigurable systems
Speaker: Cheemeng Tan
Assistant Professor
Department of Biomedical Engineering
UC Davis
Date: Friday, April 3rd, 2015, 10am – 11am
Location: 1005 GBSF
Abstract:
Reconfigurability refers to the ability of natural systems to dynamically change their properties, including spatial distribution of cells, cellular structures, and organization of cellular networks. While cells achieve such reconfigurability with relative ease, synthetic biological systems are primarily engineered and studied using the classical paradigm of engineered systems, in which circuit components are connected through static biochemical wiring. Can we take advantage of reconfiguration mechanisms of natural cells to create a new class of reconfigurable synthetic systems? What are the tradeoffs between versatility and fidelity of reconfigurable biological systems? To address the questions, my lab uses synthetic biology approaches to investigate the reconfigurability of natural cells. I will discuss our effort in creating reconfigurable cellular dynamics using synthetic gene circuits, as well as controlling population dynamics using artificial cells. Our results will challenge the classical paradigm of synthetic biology, which has focused primarily on fixed topology of intracellular gene circuits. Furthermore, our results will establish the foundation toward reconfigurable synthetic systems that can be switched between distinct functions and dynamics using external signals.