The 17th International Congress of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology will be held in conjunction with the 1997 Annual Meeting of the American Society of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology in San Francisco, CA, on August 24-29, 1997. The topic of the Congress is "Science for the 21st Century".
ASBMB has asked ABRF to expand on the annual jointly sponsored symposium on emerging technologies that have been well attended at past ASBMB annual meetings. ABRF has accepted the challenge to prepare for this international meeting an entire day of technology symposia and workshops that will present the use of modern technologies to solve today's and tomorrow's scientific problems. The symposia and workshops will occur on August 27 and will highlight technological advances that underlie success in scientific discoveries. ABRF members Ruth Hogue Angeletti, Mark Lively, and Ronald L. Niece have expanded the number of topics over what has previously been announced to accommodate the large international audience of scientists.
Organizers of the individual minisymposia and workshops will develop individual programs of speakers, who will highlight the methods, technology, automation, computer control, instrumentation, or other bench topics upon which the science presented is based. Symposia speakers will articulate the importance and significance of their topic in a manner that is understandable to the general scientific audience at the meeting and yet will retain the interest of the specialist. Workshops will focus more on the technical aspects of implementing the technologies, emphasizing strategies, experimental design, development of novel tools, interpreting and evaluating data, instrumentation, organization, and costs. Part of the goal of these workshops is to provide a forum for those wishing to incorporate these technologies into their research programs to learn from experts in their fields.
|
Minisymposium |
Workshop/Tutorial |
Organizer |
|
Atomic Force Microscopy |
Title to be announced |
Eric Henderson, University of Iowa |
|
Biotechnology of Parasitic |
Title to be announced |
Diseases David Parkin, ILRI, Nairobi |
|
Biotechnology of Viral Diseases |
Title to be announced |
Steven Monroe, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention |
|
Carbohydrate Biochemistry |
Carbohydrate analysis tutorial |
R. Reid Townsend, University of California, San Francisco |
|
Combinatorial Biochemistry |
Design and construction of combinatorial peptide libraries |
Mark Navre, Affymax |
|
Computational Biology |
Title to be announced |
Helen Berman, Rutgers |
|
Gene Knockouts and Epitope Tagging |
Which epitope should I use? |
Michael R. Sussman, University of Wisconsin |
|
Genome Sequencing |
Genomics and mapping basics |
Bruce Roe, University of Oklahoma |
|
Mass Spectrometry |
Mass spectrometry for biochemists |
A. L. Burlingame, University of California, San Francisco |
|
Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy |
What could your laboratory do with NMR? |
John L. Markley, University of Wisconsin |
|
Protein Chemistry |
From gels to structure |
Kenneth A. Walsh, University of Washington |
|
Transgenics and Conditional Gene Knockouts |
Practical approaches to creating transgenic animals |
Jamey Marth, HHMI/University of California, San Diego |
|
Two-Dimensional Gels |
Title to be announced |
Joël Vendekerckhove, University of Ghent |
|
X-Ray Crystallography |
Title to be announced |
Organizer to be announced |
|
- |
Internet tools for biochemistry* and molecular biology |
Kenneth I. Mitchelhill, University of Melbourne |
|
- |
Laboratory data management* |
Judith Nolan, Genentech |
|
- |
Quantitative PCR* |
James Snider, Perkin-Elmer/Applied Biosystems |
*Workshop only
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