19th Annual Structural Biology Symposium
Saturday, May 17th, 2014
Levin Hall Auditorium, UTMB Galveston
http://scsb.utmb.edu/symposium
You and your colleagues are cordially invited to join us for the 19th
Annual Structural Biology Symposium to be held in Levin Hall at the
University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston on Saturday, May 17th,
2014. The meeting is organized by the Sealy Center for Structural
Biology & Molecular Biophysics and co-sponsored by the Keck Center for
Computational & Structural Biology. In previous years, over 300
scientists from the U.S. and abroad, have participated in this annual
event. The goal of the symposia is to bring together leaders in all
areas of structural biology to present current topics. This year’s
speakers include:
P. Andrew Karplus, Ph.D., Oregon State University
“Getting Better Protein Models from a Given Diffraction Data Set: Moving
Beyond Conventional Practices”
Timothy M. Lohman, Ph.D., Washington University School of Medicine
“Dynamics of SSB Proteins and Translocating Motors on Single Stranded
DNA”
J. Patrick Loria, Ph.D., Yale University
“Micro- and Milli-second Motions in Regulation of Phosphoryl Transfer
and Allostery”
José Onuchic, Ph.D., Rice University
“From Protein Folding to Molecular Machines in Biology”
Gabrielle Rudenko, Ph.D., Univ. of TX Med. Branch
“Synapse Organizing Complexes”
Sriram Subramaniam, Ph.D., National Cancer Institute
“3D Biological Electron Microscopy Comes of Age: Applications to
HIV/AIDS, cancer and neuroscience”
To register, visit http://scsb.utmb.edu/symposium
--
Yours sincerely,
Mark A. White, Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology,
Manager, Sealy Center for Structural Biology and Molecular Biophysics
Macromolecular X-ray Laboratory,
Basic Science Building, Room 6.660 C
University of Texas Medical Branch
Galveston, TX 77555-0647
Tel. (409) 747-4747
Cell. (281) 734-3614
Fax. (409) 747-1404
mailto://[email protected]
http://xray.utmb.edu
QQ: "Success is the ability to go from failure to failure without
loosing your enthusiasm."
- Winston Churchill (1965)