June 26– July 26– July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden

Programme

www.febs2010.org

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Table of contents

Welcome to

Welcome letter

3

Committees

5

Sponsors and exhibitors

6

Key information

8

Social programme and tours

11

Poster presentations

12

Programme outline

14

Plenary lectures

17

Detailed programme

18

Venue floorplan

32

Welcome to 35th FEBS Congress 2010. For the first time a FEBS Congress is organised jointly by two FEBS Constituent Societies. Your hosts are the Swedish Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology and the Norwegian Biochemical Society. We are very grateful to our colleagues from the Baltic Countries Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia as well as Poland, Finland and Denmark, who all supported us in our task. FEBS Congresses are showcases of the advances in the molecular bio and medical sciences. We have arranged for – as we believe – an attractive and exciting scientific programme that reflects the most recent advances in molecular biology and biochemistry. More than 140 invited speakers will present their research, among them four Nobel Laureates, nine additional plenary speakers and many further top scientists. We are also proud that one third of our speakers are women (a proportion twice as high as that of women among professors in Europe). At the same time FEBS Congresses play important roles in networking between scientists from Europe and the whole world. Importantly, FEBS Congresses also serve the purpose of training young scientists and integrating them into the larger scientific community. We are dedicated to make 35th FEBS Congress 2010 a forum for young scientists to interact with peers in the field. The Young Scientist Forum is dedicated to this purpose but also the main Congress will encompass many relevant activities, such as for instance the speaker’s corners. Göteborg/Gothenburg is a most effective congress city where everything is truly in walking distance – the congress centre is located in the heart of the city. Our efficient Congress organisation will allow you to focus on the scientific programme and interact with colleagues and young researchers. Gothenburg is a lively, friendly and open city with many attractions. 35th FEBS Congress 2010 starts on the midsummer weekend, the most important celebration in the Nordic countries. Daylight almost around the clock! These attributes together with the open and friendly atmosphere will make sure that scientific interaction and communication will thrive at 35th FEBS Congress 2010!

We do our best to make 35th FEBS Congress 2010 a memorable Nordic experience. For the organising committee Stefan Hohmann, University of Gothenburg (Chairman SFBM) Winnie Eskild, University of Oslo (Chairperson NBS)

sciencemag.org DESIGN: N.FORM, COVERPHOTOS: © 2005 CLAES AXSTÅL, BJÖRN LARSSON ROSVALL, PRINT: INFORMTRYCKET, 2010

June 26 – July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden

It’s more than genetic analysis. It’s the unstoppable drive to know more. To find answers. To be the first.

June 26– July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden

Committees

The power of sequencing. The speed of arrays. Limitless applications harnessed with intensity and implemented with imagination.

Local organising committee Stefan Hohmann (chair), Winnie Eskild (co-chair), Bengt Nordén, Catharina Hiort, Claes Gustafsson, Erik Boye, Gunnar C. Hansson, Jan Rydström, Jens Lagerstedt, Jens Nielsen, Karin Lindkvist, Marija Cvijovic, Martin Lidell, Maria Enge, Per Elias, Per Sunnerhagen, Richard Neutze, Sven-Olof Olofsson, Therese Jacobson.

The intangible force that fuels the dynamic Illumina Community.

YSF organising committee

That’s

genetic energy

Erta Kalanxhi, Madelene Palmgren, Malin Johansson, Urszula Kosinska Eriksson.



Nordic programme committee

www.illumina.com/geneticenergy

Anna Blom, Bengt Persson, Bertil Andersson, Britt Marie Sjöberg, Carl Tryggvasson, Carl-Henrik Heldin, Cecilia Holm, Cecilia Hägerhäll, Christer Jansson, Claes Gustafsson, Dan Hultmark, Dick Heinegård, Elisabet Sauer-Eriksson, Elzbieta Glaser, Geir Slupphaug, Gunnar Bjursell, Gunnar von Heijne, Göran Hansson, Hans Jörnvall, Harald Stenmark, Jaak Järv, Katri Niemi, Kjetil Tasken, Lars Hederstedt, Lars Thelander, Lars Wieslander, Leif Bülow, Lena Kjellén, Lorenz Poellinger, Magnus Ingelman-Sundberg, Marc Baumann, Mats Hansson, Måns Ehrenberg, Nils Göran Larsson, Ove Nilsson, Peter Brzezinski, Sara Linse, Slawomir Pikula, Staffan Eriksson, Stefan Björklund, Stefan Ståhl, Stein Ove Døskeland, Steinar Johansen, Sven Enerbäck, Thomas Nyström, Torleif Härd, Tuula Kallunki, Ulf Landegren, Vincent Eijsink, Ylva Engström.

International advisory committee Aaron Ciechanover, Bengt Samuelsson, Claudina Pousadas, Fotis Kafatos, Israel Pecht, Julio Celis, Karl Kuchler, Saskia van der Vies, Tim Hunt.

Professional congress organiser Göteborg Convention Centre.

Congrex Sweden AB [email protected]

Contact details

FEBS executive committee

FEBS2010 Organising committee c/o Prof. Stefan Hohmann Cell and Molecular Biology University of Gothenburg Box 462 SE-405 30 Göteborg, Sweden

Secretary General

Professor Israel Pecht, Weizmann Institute, Rehovot, ISRAEL

Treasurer

Professor John Mowbray, University College, London, UK

Chairman

Professor Emmanuel Fragoulis, University of Athens, GREECE

Vice Chairman

Professor Tomas Zima, Charles University, Prague, CZECH REPUBLIC

http://www.febs2010.org

Congress Counsellor Professor Adam Szewczyk, The Nencki Institute of Experimental Biology, Warsaw, POLAND Chairman Advanced Courses Committee

Professor Karl Kuchler, Medical University Vienna, AUSTRIA

Congrex Sweden AB Ref: FEBS 2010 Box 5078 402 22 Göteborg Sweden

Chairman Science and Society Committee

Professor Giorgio Semenza, ZOLLIKON, SWITZERLAND

Chairman Fellowships Committee

Professor Maciej Nalecz, UNESCO, Paris, FRANCE

Chairman Publications Committee

Professor Félix M. Goni, Universidad del Pais Vasco, Laioa, SPAIN

Chairman Education Committee

Professor Gül Güner Akdogan, Dokuz Eylül University, TURKEY

Fax: +46 317086025 [email protected]

Chairman YSF (Young Scientists’ Forum)

Dr. Daniela Corda, National Research Council, Napoli, ITALY

Chairman WISE (Women in Science)

Professor Ruth H. Paulssen, University of Tromsø, NORWAY

Chairman of the Working Group on Assistance to Central & Eastern Europe (WOGCEE)

Professor Mathias Sprinzl, Universität Bayreuth, GERMANY

Congress secretariat:

Congrex Sweden AB Box 5078, SE 402 22 Göteborg, Sweden

E-mail: [email protected] Fax: +46 31 708 60 25

5

June 26 – July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden

June 26 – July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden

June 26– July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden

June 26– July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden

Sponsors

Exhibitors

Main sponsor

www.enzolifesciences.com

Silver sponsor

Bronze sponsors

Other sponsors

6

Congress secretariat:

Congrex Sweden AB Box 5078, SE 402 22 Göteborg, Sweden

E-mail: [email protected] Fax: +46 31 708 60 25

Congress secretariat:

Congrex Sweden AB Box 5078, SE 402 22 Göteborg, Sweden

E-mail: [email protected] Fax: +46 31 708 60 25

7

June 26 – July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden

June 26 – July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden

June 26– July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden

June 26– July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden

Key information A–Z Airport bus

Meals

Speakers/Presentations

Tourist information

Leaves from Landvetter airport to the city centre every 15 min. and takes approximately 20 min. The first stop (Korsvägen) is in front of the conference center. A return ticket is SEK 150.

Coffee and lunch are included in the Registration fee and will be served in the Exhibition hall during the Congress.

Tourist information can be found in the following locations:

Badges

Emergency healthcare

All speakers are asked to hand in their presentation on a CD or a USB stick at the speaker desk, located opposite the registration desk in the Congress foyer at Svenska Mässan. Computer (PC) and power point projection will be available in all session halls.

Each participant will receive a name badge upon registration. For security reasons all participants are requested to wear their badge during all the Congress activities and social events.

Banks Banks are open between 09.30 and 15.00 on weekdays. Some banks in central Göteborg are open between 09.00 and 17.00.

Medical services

For weather forecast please visit http://www.smhi.se/en

CityAkuten Nordstadstorget 6, +46 (0) 31 10 10 10 www.cityakuten.se

Currency

Emergency Dental care

Climate

The official currency is Swedish Krona (SEK). USD 1 = SEK 7,82 (June 2010) EUR 1 = SEK 9,62 (June 2010) Cash machines (bankomat) are common and accept major credit and debit cards. Credit cards is accepted almost everywhere. You can use the card on buses, trams, taxi’s and shopping. The chip and pin is the common method. Cash machines (bankomat) are common and takes major credit and debit cards. They can be found in the main shopping centres, the airport and in main streets such as Kungsportsavenyn. Forex is the largest foreign exchange company located at the airport, Kungsportsavenyn 22, the Central Station, Nordstan Shopping Centre and Kungsports­platsen.

Disclaimer The Organising Committee and Congrex Sweden AB accept no liability for injuries/losses of whatever nature incurred by participants and/or accompanying persons, nor loss of, or damage to, their luggage and/or personal belongings.

Tickets trams and buses

Capio Axess Akuten Södra Allégatan 6, +46 (0) 31 425 00 50 www.capioaxessakuten.se

There are several ways to buy tickets. In the area of Göteborg, Mölndal and Partille, you cannot buy tickets from the driver. Instead you need to buy your ticket from newsagents such as Pressbyrån, 7-Eleven or anywhere displaying the Västtrafik sign. You can also buy tickets by text message (if you have a Swedish mobile phone operator) and via credit card on board (one way). If you are going to travel several times you can by a shortterm top-up card. This card enables you to travel wherever you want within specified areas, and as much as you want, within one or three 24-hour periods. They are valid on all Västtrafik vehicles, including all trains except the X2000. For more information on trams and buses please visit www.vasttrafik.se.

Tandvården Göteborg Akuttandvården Odinsgatan 10 +46 (0)31 80 78 00

Tipping

Messages

Ten per cent of the bill or taxi fare is the usual and appreciated.

A message board will be located in the registration area. You can post your message here.

On site registration will start on Saturday, 26 June at 12.00–18.30 hrs and will then be open during congress hours. The registration desk and congress secretariat are located at Svenska Mässan, Entrance 8, Mässans gata 8 in Gothenburg. The registration fee for participants includes: congress bag, congress materials, abstract book, daily coffee/tea, lunches, welcome reception and entrance to the poster/exhibition area.

Sweden use 220V AC, 50Hz. Laptops from US using only 110V will need a transformer.

Programme changes

Emergency number

The organisers cannot assume liability for any changes in the programme due to external or unforeseen circumstances.

To call ambulance, police or fire brigade, simply call 112. Main police station, +46 (0) 31 114 14 (24 hours)

Shops

Language The official language of the Congress is English (no translation facilities will be provided).

8

Transportation Taxi We recommend that you use one of the following taxi companies: Taxi Göteborg +46 (0) 31-65 00 00 VIP-taxi +46 (0) 31-27 16 11 Taxi kurir +46 (0) 31-27 27 27 Do not use taxis that lack clear labelling and that approach you in late evenings.

Travellers with disabilities

Poster exhibition

Electricity

WiFi will be available at the Congress Centre for all participants attending the Congress.

Bransch office Nordstan Shopping Centre, +46 (0) 31 61 25 00

Most hotels have good disabled facilities, with top-end establishments providing access to all areas, including swimming pools and spa facilities. Public transports poses few problems but most trams have often one carriage which is low enough for wheel chairs.

On site registration in Göteborg

The poster exhibition will be placed in direct connection to the conference rooms and the exhibition area. Your poster should be on display throughout the Congress.

Internet access

Main office Kungsportsplatsen2, +46 (0) 31 61 25 00, www.gothenburg.com

Most Swedish shops open between 9.00 and 10.00 (many grocery stores open at 7.00) and close between 18.00 and 20.00. There is usually no lunch break. Shops in the historical centre are also open during the weekend. Shopping centres are usually open during the weekend and some shops and restaurant Offer 24 hour service. Commonly, most Swedish shops and service providers accept major credit cards (e.g. VISA, Euro card/MasterCard, American Express).

Congress secretariat:

Congrex Sweden AB Box 5078, SE 402 22 Göteborg, Sweden

E-mail: [email protected] Fax: +46 31 708 60 25

Venue Svenska Mässan The Swedish Exhibition & Congress Centre Mässans gata 20 SE-412 51 Göteborg

Congress secretariat:

Congrex Sweden AB Box 5078, SE 402 22 Göteborg, Sweden

E-mail: [email protected] Fax: +46 31 708 60 25

9

E L E C T R O PH O R E S I S

June 26 – July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden June 26– July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden

Social programme and tours

electrophoreasy. 15 Minute SDS-PAGE

Social programme Welcome reception – Opening mixer Date: Saturday June 26, at 18.00 hrs. Location: Svenska Mässan, Göteborg The Welcome Reception is free of charge but please indicate upon registration if you will attend in order to guarantee your place. Finger food and one glass of wine/bear will be served.

10% Mini-PROTEAN TGX Precast Gels

The new Mini-PROTEAN® TGX™ Precast Gels not only offer long shelf life with a Laemmli buffer system, but the option to perform protein separation literally before your eyes! The unique TGX chemistry gives a very low gel resistance allowing the option of running your gels at up to 400 V to reduce the gel running time to just 11-14 minutes without loss of performance or excessive heating of the running buffer. Witness this amazing time saving for yourself! Visit the Bio-Rad booth where we will be doing live demonstrations of SDS-PAGE, visualisation, imaging and analysis - all in under 20 minutes with Mini-PROTEAN TGX Stain Free Precast Gels.

Social dinner – Midsummer party Date: Tuesday June 29, at 19.30 hrs. Location: Restaurant Trädgår’n, Göteborg All delegates are invited to join us for an evening with entertainment and a traditional Swedish Midsummer buffet at Restaurant Trädgår’n in the city centre of Göteborg. Price per person: 380 SEK (sign up for the dinner when registering for the Congress)

200 V - 37 minutes

Monday 28th June 2010, 10.00 – 12.00 hrs Meeting Point: The Swedish Exhibition & Congress Centre, entrance 8

300 V - 22 minutes

Electrophoresis can be effortless. Please visit www.miniprotean.com for more information. Research. Together.

To find your local sales office, visit www.bio-rad.com/contact/ or contact us at [email protected]

Visit us at www.bio-rad.com

JAMES HOLM

400 V - 12 minutes

Gothenburg City Tour by bus – 2 hours The guests will be picked up at the Congress Centre for a guided tour in the area of Gothenburg, the harbour, the old and new city and many other interesting places. Explore Gothenburg and see the city’s most interesting attractions. The tour begins at Gustav Adolfs Torg square were we find out more about the origins of the city and the importance of the canals to Gothenburg as a trading city. We continue down to the water to look at our beautiful Opera House. Then we travel westwards along the harbor to Klippan cultural reserve with its interesting history, through the old Majorna workers’ quarters and Masthugget where the harbor workers and sailors used to live with their families. We arrive back in the city centre via Gothenburg’s lung, Slottsskogen park and the trendy Linnéstaden district. Now it’s time to take in the sights and sound of fashionable Avenyn and see Carl Milles’ famous statue of Poseidon up on Götaplatsen square. Minimum number of participants: 25 Price per person: SEK 300 (approx. EUR 30). Includes: Coach, Guide and VAT

Tuesday 29th June 2010, 12.00 – 15.00 hrs Meeting Point: The Swedish Exhibition & Congress Centre, entrance 8 Vikings – 3 hours The coach departs from the convention centre to drive you back in time. The trip will take approx. 40 minutes, but that will be just the time you need to enter the 900th century. The staff at the Viking House welcomes you dressed in the clothes of the Viking age. You will get a guided tour around the surroundings, hearing the history of the Viking life. Games, music and woodcraft will get you in the Viking mood and give you an experience you never will forget. Coffee will be served in the café and afterwards the coach will drive you back to civilisation and the year 2010. Minimum number of participants: 25 Price per person: SEK 700 (approx. EUR 70) Includes: – Coach – Guide – Guided tour – Possibility to try some Viking games and dressing in contemporary clothing – Coffee and cake (please note this will be served in the cafeteria and not in the Viking house) – VAT You are most welcome to sign up for the events above at the Registration desk!

Congress secretariat:

Congrex Sweden AB Box 5078, SE 402 22 Göteborg, Sweden

E-mail: [email protected] Fax: +46 31 708 60 25

11

June 26 – July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden

June 26 – July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden

June 26– July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden

June 26– July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden

BP

Poster discussion sessions

G3

G

Poster sessions for short oral presentations are located in G2, G3 and G4. Please see below the schedule for Poster discussion sessions. All speakers are asked to hand in their presentation, three power-point slides, on a USB stick at the speaker desk, located opposite the registration desk in the Congress foyer at Svenska Mässan. Computer (PC) and power point projection will be available in all session halls.

Hall

Session 13.00

Session 14.15

D1,3-5

Tuesday, June 29

G2

A3

E3

G3

B1

E1

G3

B3

A4

G4

C1,5

A2

G4

C3

B4

Hall

Session 13.00

Session 14.15

Hall

Session 13.00

Session 14.15

G3

C2,4

E2

G3

A5

E5

G4

B2

D2

G4

E4

B5

Wednesday, June 30

BP

Skynke som alltid är framme.

Session 14.15

A1

G2

Session 13.00

G2

BP

Monday, June 28

Hall

Posters Exhibition

Poster discussion sessions Sunday, June 27

Stålbalk, fri höjd 2,4m

G4

BP

The poster exhibition is placed in direct connection to the conference rooms and the exhibition area. All accepted poster abstracts have received their poster number in the notification email. Please mount your poster to the assigned poster board marked with your poster number. Poster mounting material for the poster boards will be provided in the exhibition area. You are asked to mount your poster on June 26 from 12.00. The posters will be on display throughout the conference. Make sure to remove all poster-mounting materials from the board after the Congress. The Congress staff will remove posters not taken down on time. However, the Congress Organisers cannot ensure any further responsibility for the material. Poster presenters are to be present at their poster board during assigned time slots, please see Detailed Programme.

Stålbalk, fri höjd 2,4m

Poster exhibition

Posters

A1 Ageing

A1.04

A1.06

A1.07

A1.09

A1.10

A1.12

A1.15

A1.18

A1.19

A1.24

YSF-51

A2 Molecular immunology

A2.05

A2.06

A2.12

A2.16

A2.17

A2.21

A2.34

A2.39

A2.42

A2.45

A2.50

A3 Metabolic diseases

A3.11

A3.22

A3.32

A3.63

A3.69

A3.71

A3.73

A3.81

B1.36

B4.71

B4.72

A4 Neurobiology

A4.12

A4.13

A4.20

A4.24

A4.25

A4.26

A4.29

A4.36

A4.37

A4.39

A4.41

A4.48

A5 Infectious diseases

A5.07

A5.17

A5.55

A5.57

A5.58

A5.66

A5.67

A5.74

A5.76

A5.79

A5.80

YSF-18

B1 Metabolic networks

B1.01

B1.09

B1.11

B1.17

B1.18

B1.19

B1.20

B1.24

B1.25

B1.26

B1.28

B1.33

B2 Signal transduction

B2.04

B2.05

B2.25

B2.30

B2.41

B2.46

B2.55

B2.71

B2.89

B2.93

B2.99

B2.111

B3 Global networks

A5.63

B2.32

B2.85

B2.86

B3.02

B3.03

B3.05

B3.07

B3.12

B3.13

YSF-20

B4 Gene regulation

B4.07

B4.19

B4.24

B4.32

B4.44

B4.49

B4.51

B4.54

B4.66

B4.69

D4.07

YSF-121

B5 Regulation of protein function

B5.19

B5.28

B5.32

B5.47

B5.50

B5.53

B5.60

B5.62

B5.79

YSF-37

YSF-50

YSF-73

C1,C5 Molecular machines and energy transduction

C1.01

C1.06

C1.07

C1.18

C1.20

C5.01

C5.04

YSF-05

YSF-42

YSF-75

YSF-77

YSF-116

C2,C4 Membrane transport Biological cycles

B2.51

B2.88

C4.13

C4.23

C4.27

C4.28

C4.34

YSF-62

YSF-79

YSF-83

YSF-86

YSF-122

C3 Extracellualr structures

C1.23

C3.03

C3.04

C3.05

C3.09

C3.13

C3.15

C3.17

C3.23

C3.25

YSF-43

YSF-76

D1,D3-D5 Cellular Compartments

C4.33

D1.01

D1.02

D1.09

D3.04

D3.06

D5.03

D5.07

YSF-04

YSF-13

YSF-14

YSF-80

D2 Mitochondria

D2.01

D2.07

D2.08

D2.12

D2.18

D2.21

D2.22

D2.24

YSF-22

YSF-39

YSF-71

YSF-125

E1 Synthetic biology

E1.01

E1.02

E1.06

E1.08

E1.11

E1.19

E1.20

E1.24

E1.29

YSF-74

YSF-89

E2 Molecualr recognition

B2.96

E2.01

E2.03

E2.04

E2.06

E2.11

E2.12

E2.14

E2.16

E2.19

E2.20

E2.25

E3 Design of macromolecules

E3.09

E3.11

E3.12

E3.14

E3.16

E3.18

E3.19

YSF-44

YSF-60

YSF-68

YSF-81

YSF-117

E4 Folding

E4.03

E4.11

E4.13

E4.18

E4.22

E4.23

E4.24

E4.25

E4.26

E4.27

E4.29

E5.08

E5 Catalytic mechanisms

E5.05

E5.15

E5.17

E5.20

E5.23

E5.24

E5.25

E5.28

E5.34

E5.36

E5.42

E5.50

Congress secretariat:

Congrex Sweden AB Box 5078, SE 402 22 Göteborg, Sweden

H

Coffee

Utbyggn. 2 ,8m högt

BP

(Förråd)

12

YSF-21

J

Poster discussion session titles

H1

Poster discussion session titles

E-mail: [email protected] Fax: +46 31 708 60 25

Congress secretariat:

Congrex Sweden AB Box 5078, SE 402 22 Göteborg, Sweden

n ptio

(Får ej blockeras)

Pers.ingång

Dessa dörrar är vanligtvis inte öppna!

e Rec

ongress Foyer

YSF-103

E-mail: [email protected] Fax: +46 31 708 60 25

13

June 26 – July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden

June 26 – July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden

June 26– July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden

June 26– July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden

FEBS2010 Congress programme outline Saturday, June 26

Sunday, June 27

Monday, June 28

Symposium A

08.30–11.00

Symposium A

Molecules in Health and Disease A1 – Ageing, Congress Hall Symposium B

Symposium C

Symposium D

Symposium C

Symposium D

Symposium E

Coffee Break

Coffee Break

Plenary Lecture EMBO Lecture, Congress Hall Uri Alon

12.30–13.00 13.00–15.30

Molecular Networks B4 – Gene regulation, Congress Hall Symposium C

Symposium D

Molecules at Work C4 – Membrane Transport, Hall G4 Symposium D

Cellular Compartments D3 – Endocytosis, Hall G2

Symposium E Biomolecular Design and Function E2 – Molecular Recognition, Hall J1

Molecules in Health and Disease A4 – Neurobiology, Hall G3 Symposium B

Molecules at Work C3 – Extracellular structures, Hall J1

Cellular Compartments D2 – Mitochondria, Hall G2

Biomolecular Design and Function E1 – Synthetic Biology, Hall J1

Registration 12.00–18.30

Symposium B

Symposium C

Wednesday, June 30 Symposium A

Molecular Networks B3 – Global Networks, Hall G3

Molecules at Work C2 – Biological Cycles, Hall G4

Cellular Compartments D1 – Secretory pathways, Hall G2

Symposium A Molecules in Health and Disease A3 – Metabolic Diseases, Congress Hall

Molecular Networks B2 – Signal Transduction, Hall G3

Molecules at Work C1 – Molecular Machines, Hall G4

11.30–12.30

08.30–11.00

Molecules in Health and Disease A2 – Molecular Immunology, Congress Hall Symposium B

Molecular Networks B1 – Metabolic networks, Hall G3

11.00–11.30

Tuesday, June 29

Cellular Compartments D4 – Nucleus, Hall G2

Symposium E

Symposium E

Thursday, July 1 Symposium A Molecules in Health and Disease A5 – Infectious Diseases, Congress Hall Symposium B Molecular Networks B5 – Regulation of protein function, Hall G3 Symposium C Molecules at Work C5 – Energy transduction, Hall G2 Symposium D Cellular Compartments D5 – Chloroplasts, Hall G4 Symposium E

Biomolecular Design and Function E3 – Design of Macromolecules, Hall G4

Biomolecular Design and Function E4 – Folding, Hall J1

Biomolecular Design and Function E5 – Catalytic Mechanisms, Hall J1

11.00–11.30

Coffee Break

Coffee Break

Coffee Break

Plenary Lecture IUBMB Lecture, Congress Hall Susan Lindquist

11.30–12.30

Plenary Lecture KREBS Medal Lecture, Congress Hall Harald Stenmark

Plenary Lecture DATTA Medal Lecture, Congress Hall Juleen Zierath

Plenary Lecture Nobel Laureate Lecture, Congress Hall Venki Ramakrishnan

Lunch Service, Hall H

Lunch Service, Hall H

12.30–13.00

Lunch Service, Hall H

Lunch Service, Hall H

Poster exhibition and discussions Hall H, G2, G3, G4

Poster exhibition and discussions Hall H, G3, G4

13.00–15.30

Poster exhibition and discussions Hall H, G2, G3, G4

Poster exhibition and discussions Hall H, G3, G4

Closing ceremony 12.30–13.00 Congress Hall

Speakers corner, C-Balkongen

Speakers corner, C-Balkongen

Speakers corner, C-Balkongen

Speakers corner, C-Balkongen

Tutorials and Events & Corporate Seminars NMR and Biology – In Interaction, Congress Hall

Tutorials and Events & Corporate Seminars Database taster (by the EBI), Halll G2

Activities by FEBS working groups Education, Hall J1 Practical Systems Biology

Activities by FEBS working groups Women in Science, Gender in Science, Hall J1

Activities by FEBS working groups Science and Society, Hall J1 Biofuels

Activities by FEBS working groups Education, Hall J1 Research, Teaching, Learning

FEBS Council meeting, Hall G4 continues July 2, (on invitation only)

Young Scientist Forum, Hall G2 Scientific Careers 13.30–15.00 Research-Oriented Education at High Schools, Hall J1 15.40–18.00 15.30–17.00

Opening speeches 16.30–17.00 Congress Hall

Technology Workshops (3 parallell sessions) • Protein expression, Hall G2 • Life cell imaging, Hall G3 • Bioinformatics, Hall G4

Technology Workshops (3 parallell sessions) • Proteomics technologies, Hall G3 • Metabolomics, Hall G2 • Dynamic modelling, Hall G4

15.30–17.00

Technology Workshops (3 parallell sessions) • Protein interactions, Hall G3 • Lipidomics, Hall G2 • Applying sequencing technologies, Hall G4

Technology Workshops (3 parallell sessions) • Protein structures, Hall G3 • Molecular imaging, Hall G2 • Network modelling, Hall G4

17.15–19.15

Nobel Laureate Lecture, Congress Hall Roger Tsien 17.00–18.00

Plenary Lectures Nobel Laureate Lecture, Congress Hall John Walker

Plenary Lectures Nobel Laureate Lecture, Congress Hall Elizabeth Blackburn

17.15–19.15

Plenary Lectures Award Lectures, Congress Hall Mercedes Munkonda, Hideo Iwai

Plenary Lecture Women in Science Award, Congress Hall Ingrid Grummt

Opening mixer 18.00–20.00, Hall H

Bücher Lecture, Congress Hall Svante Pääbo

Special event, Congress Hall Uri Alon (and his guitarr)

19.30–23.00

14

Evening events FEBS dinner, Blomstermåla, Särö (on invitation)

Congress secretariat:

Svedberg 2010 Lecture, Congress Hall Per Jemth 19.30–23.00

Congrex Sweden AB Box 5078, SE 402 22 Göteborg, Sweden

E-mail: [email protected] Fax: +46 31 708 60 25

Congress secretariat:

Evening events Midsummer party, Trädgårdsföreningen (sep. payment)

Congrex Sweden AB Box 5078, SE 402 22 Göteborg, Sweden

E-mail: [email protected] Fax: +46 31 708 60 25

15

June 26 – July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden June 26– July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden

Plenary lectures 35th FEBS Congress – Plenary speakers

for s d r a w A Annual

s t s i t n e i c s g n u o y €10,000 prizes

The FEBS Letters Award

The FEBS Journal Prize

is given to the author of the most outstanding research letter published in the previous calendar year. The awardee must be the corresponding author of the letter and be aged 40 years or younger at the time of manuscript acceptance.

is awarded to the graduate student or young post-doctoral research worker (no more than 3 years from the time of award of the PhD degree when the paper is submitted) who is the first author of a paper that is judged to be the best in FEBS Journal during the calendar year.

Details at:

Details at:

www.febsletters.org/content/youngscientist

www.febsjournal.org/young.asp

Plenary speaker

Lecture

Time

Hall

Title

Affiliation

Roger Tsien

Nobel Laureate Lecture

June 26 17.00

Congress hall

Breeding and building molecules to spy on cells and tumors

Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of California San Diego

Uri Alon

EMBO Lecture

June 27 11.30

Congress hall

Design principles of biological circuits

Department of Molecular Cell Biology, Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, Israel

John Walker

Nobel Laureate Lecture

June 27 17.15

Congress hall

The mechanism and regulation of F-ATPases

MRC Mitochondrial Biology Unit, Cambridge, UK

Svante Pääbo

Bücher Lecture

June 27 18.15

Congress hall

Analyses of pleistocene genomes

Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, Germany

Susan Lindquist

IUBMB Lecture

June 28 11.30

Congress hall

Protein folding and inheritance of environmentally acquired characteristics

Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research, MIT, Cambridge MA

Elizabeth Blackburn

Nobel Laureate Lecture

June 28 17.15

Congress hall

Telomeres and telomerases

Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics, University of California San Fransisco, San Fransisco, USA

Harald Stenmark

Krebs Medal Lecture

June 29 11.30

Congress hall

How a lipid mediates tumour suppression

Centre for Cancer Biomedicine, University of Oslo and Department of Biochemistry, Institute for Cancer Research, the Norwegian Radium Hospital, Montebello, Norway

Mercedes Munkonda

FEBS Journal Prize

June 29 17.15

Congress hall

A monoclonal antibody as the first specific inhibitor of human NTPDase3

Institute of Cardiology and Pneumology, Laval University, Québec, Canada

Hideo Iwai

FEBS Letters Award

June 29 17.45

Congress hall

Structural basis for the design of a new split intein suitable for site-specific chemical modification

Institute of Biotechnology, University of Helsinki, Finland

Per Jemth

Svedberg Lecture 2010

June 29 18.15

Congress hall

Allosteric pathways in protein domains: sequence versus topology

Department of Medical Biochemistry and Microbiology, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden

Juleen Zierath

Datta Medal Lecture

June 30 11.30

Congress hall

Gene/Environment influence on skeletal muscle insulin sensitivity in Type 2 Diabetic patients

Karolinska Institutet, Clinical Integrative Physiology, Stockholm, Sweden

Ingrid Grummt

FEBS/EMBO Women in Science Award Lecture

June 30 17.15

Congress hall

Wisely chosen paths: Regulation of ribosomal RNA synthesis

Division of Molecular Biology of the Cell II, German Cancer Research Center, DKFZZMBH Alliance, Heidelberg, Germany

Venki Ramakrishnan

Nobel Laureate Lecture

July 1 11.30

Congress hall

What we have learned from structures of the ribosome

Structural Studies Division, MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Cambridge, UK

Congress secretariat:

Congrex Sweden AB Box 5078, SE 402 22 Göteborg, Sweden

E-mail: [email protected] Fax: +46 31 708 60 25

17

June 26 – July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden

June 26 – July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden

June 26– July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden

June 26– July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden

35th FEBS Congress – FEBS2010 – Detailed Programme

35th FEBS Congress – FEBS2010 – Detailed Programme

16.30–20.00 Congress Hall

D – Cellular Compartments. D1 – Secretory pathways

08.30–11.00 Hall G2

Saturday, June 26, 2010

Chairperson: Per Sunnerhagen (Göteborg)

Opening 35th FEBS Congress

08.30

Gunnar von Heijne

The ‘molecular code’ for membrane protein insertion into the ER – I150

Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics, The Arrhenius Laboratories for Natural Sciences, Stockholm University, Stockholm, Sweden

09.00

Graham Warren

Golgi biogenesis in a protozoan parasite – I154

Max F. Perutz Laboratories, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria

09.30

Anne Spang

Identification of the switch in early-to-late endosome transition – I132

Biozentrum, University of Basel, Basel, Switzerland

10.00

Peter Novick

Phosphatidylinositol 4-phosphate controls both membrane recruitment and a regulatory switch of the Rab GEF, Sec2p – I88

Department of Cell Biology, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, USA

10.30

Ida van der Klei

Peroxisome inheritance in yeast: the involvement of multifunctional proteins – I145

Molecular Cell Biology, University of Groningen, Kluyver Centre for Genomics of Industrial Fermentation, Haren, The Netherlands

08.30–11.00 Hall J1

E – Biomolecular Design and Function. E1 – Synthetic Biology

Chairperson: Stefan Hohmann (Göteborg) 16.30

Stefan Hohmann

Opening speech

Chairman, FEBS2010 Organising Committee, Göteborg

Winnie Eskild

Opening speech

Co-chair, FEBS2010 Organising Committee, Olso

Emmanuel G. Fragoulis

Opening speech

FEBS Chairman of the Executive Committee, Athens

Israel Pecht

Opening speech

FEBS Secretary General, Rehovot

Nobel Laureate Lecture

17.00

Chairperson: Gunnar von Heijne (Stockholm) 17.00 18.00

Roger Tsien Hall H, Foyer

Breeding and building molecules to spy on cells and tumors – I142

Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of California San Diego

Opening Mixer

Chairperson: Marcus Krantz (Göteborg)

Sunday, June 27, 2010 08.30–11.00 Congress Hall

A – Molecules in Health and Disease. A1 – Ageing Chairperson: Marija Cvijovic (Göteborg)

08.30

Thomas Nyström

Unequal inheritance of protein damage during yeast cytokinesis – I89

Department of Cell and Molecular Biology, University of Gothenburg, Göteborg, Sweden

09.00

Nils-Göran Larsson

Regulation of mtDNA expression in disease and ageing – I70

Max Planck Institute for Biology of Ageing, Köln, Germany

09.30

Gro Amdam

Dual insulin signaling in fat tissue linking food choice and aging in honey bees – I02

University of Life Sciences, As, Norway and School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona, USA

10.00

Tom Kirkwood

Systems biology of ageing and longevity – I63

Ageing Research Laboratories, Institute for Ageing and Health, Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK

10.30

Cynthia McMurray

Mechanisms of Age-related instability in the brain: the role of oxidation – I79

Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, Berkeley, California, USA

08.30–11.00 Hall G3

B – Molecular Networks. B1 – Metabolic networks

08.30

Owe Orwar

Controlling the rates of biochemical reactions and signaling networks by shape-and-volume changes – I92

Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering, Chalmers University of Technology, Göteborg, Sweden

09.00

Ülo Langel

Applications of cell-penetrating peptides in oligonucleotide delivery – I68

Department of Neurochemistry, Stockholm University, Stockholm, Sweden

09.30

Joerg Stelling

Computational engineering of synthetic genetic circuits – I135

Department of Biosystems Science and Engineering, ETH Zürich, Basel, Switzerland

10.00

Sven Panke

From understanding to designing enzymatic networks – I96

Institute of Process Engineering, ETH Zürich, Zürich, Switzerland

10.30

Ralf Wagner

Synthetic Biology: Genes, genomes, applications – I151

Institute of Medical Microbiology and Hygiene, University of Regensburg, Regensburg, Germany

11.00–11.30

Coffee Break

11.30–12.30 Congress Hall

EMBO Lecture Chairperson: Israel Pecht (Rehovot)

11.30

Uri Alon

Design principles of biological circuits – I01

Chairperson: Martin Lidell (Göteborg) 08.30

Uwe Sauer

Transcriptional control of metabolic fluxes and computational identification of the governing principles – I117

Institute of Molecular Systems Biology, ETH Zürich, Zürich, Switzerland

12.30–13.00 Hall H

Lunch service

09.00

Bernhard Palsson

The meta-structure of the E. coli genome and its genome-scale transcriptional regulatory network – I95

Department of Bioengineering, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, California, USA

13.00–15.30 Hall H

Poster exhibition

09.30

Jens Nielsen

Metabolism of filamentous fungi at the genome level – I86

Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering – Systems Biology, Chalmers University of Technology, Göteborg, Sweden

13.00–15.30

Poster discussions

10.00

Matej Oresic

Reconstruction and multi-scale modeling of lipid networks – I91

VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland, Espoo, Finland

10.30

Fredrik Bäckhed

Global transcriptional regulation of the gut microbiota and its impact on host physiology – I06

Wallenberg Laboratory, University of Gothenburg, Göteborg, Sweden

08.30–11.00 Hall G4

Chairperson: Erik Boye (Oslo) 08.30

Mikael O´Donnell

The E. coli replisome and use of clamps to bypass replication barriers – I90

Laboratory of DNA Replication, The Rockefeller University, New York, USA

09.00

Dale Wigley

How do helicases know which way to walk? – I155

Lincoln's Inn Fields and Clare Hall Laboratories, London Reseach Institute, Cancer Research London, UK

09.30

Elmar Schiebel

Separation of centrosomes during the cell cycle – I120

Zentrum für Molekulare Biologie der Universität Heidelberg (ZMBH), Heidelberg, Germany

10.00

Måns Ehrenberg

Lessons from the pH-sensitivity of the rate of peptidyl transfer from P-site to A-site tRNA on the translating ribosome – I32

Department of Cell and Molecular Biology, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden

10.30

Yossi Yarden

Feedback control of receptor tyrosine kinases: Multiple defects in cancer – I157

Department of Biological Regulation, the Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, Israel

18

Congress secretariat:

Congrex Sweden AB Box 5078, SE 402 22 Göteborg, Sweden

E-mail: [email protected] Fax: +46 31 708 60 25

(Topics; B2, C2, C4, D2, E2)

13.00

G2

Chair: Marija Cvijovic

A1 Ageing: A1.04, A1.06, A1.07, A1.09, A1.10, A1.12, A1.15, A1.18, A1.19, A1.24, YSF-51

13.00

G3

Chair: Martin Lidell

B1 Metabolic networks: B1.01, B1.09, B1.11, B1.17, B1.18, B1.19, B1.20, B1.24, B1.25, B1.26, B1.28, B1.33

13.00

G4

Chair: Jan Rydström

C1,C5 Molecular machines and energy transduction: C1.01, C1.06, C1.07, C1.18, C1.20, C5.01, C5.04, YSF-05, YSF-42,YSF-75, YSF-77, YSF-116

14.15

G2

Chair: Per Sunnerhagen

D1,D3-D5 Cellular Compartments: C4.33, D1.01, D1.02, D1.09, D3.04, D3.06, D5.03, D5.07, YSF-04, YSF-13,YSF-14, YSF-80, YSF-103

14.15

G3

Chair: Marcus Krantz

E1 Synthetic biology: E1.01, E1.02, E1.06, E1.08, E1.11, E1.19, E1.20, E1.24, E1.29, YSF-74, YSF-89

14.15

G4

Chair: Jens Lagerstedt

A2 Molecular immunology: A2.05, A2.06, A2.12, A2.16, A2.17, A2.21, A2.34, A2.39, A2.42, A2.45, A2.50, YSF-21

C – Molecules at Work. C1 – Molecular Machines

Congress secretariat:

Congrex Sweden AB Box 5078, SE 402 22 Göteborg, Sweden

Department of Molecular Cell Biology, Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, Israel

E-mail: [email protected] Fax: +46 31 708 60 25

19

June 26 – July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden

June 26 – July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden

June 26– July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden

June 26– July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden

35th FEBS Congress – FEBS2010 – Detailed Programme

35th FEBS Congress – FEBS2010 – Detailed Programme

13.00–15.30 C-Balkongen

Speakers corner

13.00

Thomas Nyström, Uwe Sauer, Mikael O’Donnell, Gunnar von Heijne, Owe Orwar, Uri Alon

Chairperson: Ulrich Brandt (Frankfurt am Main)

13.30

Nils-Göran Larsson, Bernhard Palsson, Dale Wigley, Graham Warren, Ülo Langel

Svante Pääbo

14.00

Gro Amdam, Jens Nielsen, Elmar Schiebel, Anne Spang, Joerg Stelling

14.30

Tom Kirkwood, Matej Oresic, Måns Ehrenberg, Peter Novick, Sven Panke

15.00

Cynthia McMurray, Fredrik Bäckhed, Yossi Yarden, Ida van der Klei, Ralf Wagner

13.00–15.30 Hall J1

Biofuels are more than fuels – by the FEBS Science and Society Committee

18.15–19.15 Congress Hall

19.30–23.00 Blomstermåla, Särö

Bücher Lecture Analyses of pleistocene genomes – I94

Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, Germany

FEBS Dinner Chairpersons: Israel Pecht (Rehovot) and Emmanuel Fragoulis (Athens) On invitation only

Chairperson: Giorgio Semenza (Zürich) 13.00

Bärbel Friedrich

Nature’s way to exploit dihydrogen as an alternative fuel – I39

Institute of Biology/Microbiology, Humboldt University, Berlin, Germany

Monday, June 28, 2010

13.45

Fraser Armstrong

A chemist’s view of the challenges for biohydrogen – I04

Department of Chemistry, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK

08.30–11.00 Congress Hall

14.30

Uri Pick

Accumulation of triglycerides in green algae:? a potential for biodiesel – I100

Department of Biological Chemistry, Weizmann Institute of Sciences, Rehovot, Israel

08.30

Anna M Blom

Relationships between structure and functions of a major complement inhibitor C4b-binding protein – I14

Department of Laboratory Medicine, Lund University, University Hospital, Malmö,Sweden

09.00

Inga-lill Mårtensson

The pre-B cell receptor checkpoint – I77

Developmental Immunology, The Babraham Institute, Cambridge, UK and Department of Rheumatology and Inflammation Research, University of Gothenburg, Göteborg, Sweden

09.30

Matthias Merkenschlager

Disentangling canonical cohesin functions in chromosome maintenance from non-canonical functions in gene regulation and genome organisation – I80

MRC Clinical Sciences Centre, Imperial College London, London, UK

10.00

Maria Rescigno

EMBO Young Investigator Lecture: TLR4 mediated skin carcinogenesis is dependent on immune and radioresistant cells – I111

Department of Experimental Oncology, European Institute of Oncology, Milan, Italy

10.30

Pärt Peterson

Autoimmune Regulator: molecular mechanisms of central immune tolerance – I98

Department of Molecular Pathology, Institute of General and Molecular Pathology, Institute of Molecular and Cell Biology, University of Tartu, Tartu, Estonia

08.30–11.00 Hall G3

B – Molecular Networks. B2 – Signal Transduction

14.50

Samuel C. Zeeman

Understanding starch? biosynthesis in plants: the potential Institute of Plant Sciences, ETH Zürich, Zürich, Switzerland to improve raw materials for biofuel ?production – I159

15.10

Marc van Montagu

A brief discussion on EtOH production – I146

15.30–17.00 Hall G2

Technology Workshop – Protein Expression

A – Molecules in Health and Disease. A2 – Molecular Immunology Chairpersons: Gunnar Hansson (Göteborg)

Institute of Plant Biotechnology for Developing Countries, University of Ghent, Ghent, Belgium

Chairpersons: Karin Lindkvist (Göteborg) and Sophia Hober (Stockholm) 15.30

Sophia Hober

Progress in production and purification of proteins – I56

Department of Proteomics, Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden

16.15

Dikatein Rivka

TISU, a common transcription and translation element specific to mRNAs with extremely short 5’UTR – B4.51

Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, Israel

16.30

David Vikström

Overexpressing ‘difficult proteins’ in Escherichia coli – B5.67

CBR-Center for Biomembrane Research, Stockholm University, Stockholm, Sweden

16.45

Annie Barrand-Frelet

Lactococcus lactis, an alternative system for functional expression of peripheral and intrinsic plant membrane proteins – C4.07

Laboratoire de Physiologie Cellulaire Vegetale, CNRS, UJF, INRA, CEA, iRTSV, Grenoble, CEA Saclay/iBiTec-S/SB2SM/ LSOD, Gif sur Yvette, France

15.30–17.00 Hall G3

Technology Workshop – Life cell imaging Chairpersons: Mattias Goksör (Göteborg) and Thomas Huser (Davis)

Chairperson: Stefan Hohmann (Göteborg) 08.30

Jen Sheen

Differential innate immune signalling via Ca2+ sensor protein kinases in plants – I127

Department of Molecular Biology, Massachusetts General Hospital and Department of Genetics, Harvard Medical School, Boston, USA

09.00

Kjetil Taskén

Spatiotemporal control of cyclic AMP signaling processes – I139

The Biotechnology Centre of Oslo and Centre for Molecular Medicine Norway, Nordic EMBL Partnership, University of Oslo, Blindern, Norway

15.30

Thomas Huser

Imaging HIV transfer between T cells with optical superresolution – I59

NSF Center for Biophotonics Science and Technology, University of California, Davis, Sacramento, USA

16.00

Johan Elf

Probing intracellular kinetics at the level of single molecules – I34

Department of Cell and Molecular Biology, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden

09.30

John D Scott

Cell Signaling in Space and Time – I125

Department of Pharmacology, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, USA

16.30

Elin Esbjörner

Multiparametric fluorescence microscopy imaging of amyloid beta allows for direct observations of protein misfolding in vitro and in cells – A4.39

University of Cambridge, Chemistry, Cambridge, UK

10.00

Ivan Dikic

Ubiquitin-mediated regulation of NF-KappaB activation and autophagy – I29

Institute of Biochemistry II and Cluster of Excellence Frankfurt, Goethe University School of Medicine, Frankfurt (Main), Germany

16.45

Pyotr Tyurin-Kuzmin

Hydrogen peroxide generated during the RTKs signaling produces and acts locally confined – B2.98

Moscow State University, Faculty of Basic Medicine, Moscow, Russian Federation

10.30

Phil Cohen

The interplay between phosphorylation and ubiquitination in regulating the innate immune system – I23

MRC Protein Phosphorylation Unit, University of Dundee, Dundee, UK

15.30–17.00 Hall G4

Technology Workshop – Bioinformatics

08.30–11.00 Hall G4

C – Molecules at Work. C2 – Biological Cycles Chairperson: Matteo Barberis (Berlin)

Chairpersons: Tore Samuelsson (Göteborg) and Alex Bateman (Hinxton) 15.30

Alex Bateman

The billion protein question – I09

Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, Wellcome Trust Genome Campus, Hinxton, UK

16.15

Olga Kalinina

Predicting novel protein-small molecule interactions via a network of 3D structures – E2.18

University of Heidelberg, Exzellenzcluster CellNetworks, Heidelberg, Germany

16.30

Massimo Sandal

The tube model in Gromacs: A platform for the study of protein folding and aggregation – E4.18

University of Cambridge, Department of Chemistry, Cambridge, UK

16.45

Laura Guasch

Three-dimensional quantitative structure-activity relationships (3D-QSAR) study of PPAR? partial agonists – A3.37

17.15–18.15 Congress Hall

Nobel Laureate Lecture

08.30

Michael Brunner

Molecular mechanism of photo-adaptation and light entrainment of the circadian clock of Neurospora crassa – I20

Biochemistry Center, Heidelberg University, Heidelberg, Germany

09.00

Paloma Mas

EMBO Young Investigator Lecture: A functional role for protein kinase CK2 in the Arabidopsis circadian system – I78

Centre for Research in Agricultural Genomics (CRAG); Consortium CSIC-IRTA-UAB , Barcelona, Spain

09.30

Hiroki Ueda

Systems biology of mammalian circadian clocks – I143

Laboratory of Biomolecular Informatics, RIKEN Center, Kobe, Japan

10.00

Aziz Sancar

Circadian clock control of the cellular response to DNA damage – I115

Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics, UNC School of Medicine, Chapel Hill, USA

10.30

Arp Schnittger

EMBO Young Investigator Lecture: Cell cycle control during growth and reproduction – I121

Institut de Biologie Moléculaire des Plantes du CNRS, IBMP-CNRS – UPR2357, Université de Strasbourg, France.

Chairperson: Jan Rydström (Göteborg) John Walker

20

The mechanism and regulation of F-ATPases – I153

Congress secretariat:

MRC Mitochondrial Biology Unit, Cambridge, UK

Congrex Sweden AB Box 5078, SE 402 22 Göteborg, Sweden

E-mail: [email protected] Fax: +46 31 708 60 25

Congress secretariat:

Congrex Sweden AB Box 5078, SE 402 22 Göteborg, Sweden

E-mail: [email protected] Fax: +46 31 708 60 25

21

June 26 – July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden

June 26 – July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden

June 26– July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden

June 26– July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden

35th FEBS Congress – FEBS2010 – Detailed Programme 08.30–11.00 Hall G2

35th FEBS Congress – FEBS2010 – Detailed Programme

D – Cellular Compartments. D2 – Mitochondria

13.00–15.30 Hall J1

Chairperson: Elzbieta Glaser (Stockholm) 08.30

Nikolaus Pfanner

Institute of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, ZBMZ, University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany

13.00

Miguel Castanho

Context, motivation and timeliness of the theme

Department of Biophysics, School of Medicine, Lisbon, Portugal

13.10

Ana Sebastião

Research in undergraduate medical education – I126

Institute of Neurosciences and Pharmacology, School of Medicine, Lisbon, Portugal

13.30

Jane Saffell

Research in the early stages of scientific curricula – I113

Department of Life Sciences, Imperial College, London, UK

13.50

Jorge Guimarães

Nation-wide program for undergradute research: The long Brazilian experience

President of CAPES, Brazil

14.10

Susan Hamilton

The Advanced Study program in science: Exposing motivated and interested students to the research culture of the University of Queensland – I164

President, Academic Board, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia

14.30

Moderator: Jason Perret

Panel discussion with the speakers

Laboratoire de Chimie Biologique et de la Nutrition, Faculté de Médecine, Université Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium, Laboratoire de Chimie Biologique et de la Nutrition (L.C.B.N.), Faculté de Médecine, Université Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium

13.30–15.00 Hall G2

Scientific Careers – by the FEBS Young Scientists Forum

Johannes Herrmann

What mitochondria learned from their bacterial ancestors: Oxidation-driven protein folding – I54

Department of Cell Biology, University of Kaiserslautern, Kaiserslautern, Germany

09.30

Paulo Bernardi

Pathophysiology of the mitochondrial permeability transition – I12

Department of Biomedical Sciences, University of Padova, and Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche Center, Padova, Italy for the Study of Biomembranes, Padova, Italy

10.00

Maria Falkenberg

Mechanisms of initiation of DNA replication in human mitochondria – I37

Department of Medical Biochemistry and Cell Biology, University of Gothenburg, P.O. Box 440, SE-405 30 Gothenburg, Sweden

10.30

Luca Scorrano

EMBO Young Investigator Lecture: Size matters: mitochondria elongate to support survival of starving cells – I124

Venetian Institute of Molecular Medicine, Padova, Italy

E – Biomolecular Design and Function. E2 – Molecular Recognition Chairperson: Richard Neutze (Göteborg)

08.30

Chairpersons: Miguel Castanho (Lisbon) and Gül Güner-Akdogan (Izmir)

The mitochondrial machinery for import and assembly of proteins – I99

09.00

08.30–11.00 Hall J1

The Researching, Teaching and Learning Triangle at Universities: Unite or Divide? – by the FEBS Education Committee

Ute Krengel

Hypothesis: Molecular basis of cholera blood group dependence and implications for a world characterized by climate change – I66

Department of Chemistry, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway

Chairperson: Daniela Corda (Napoli)

09.00

Attila Remenyi

Protein-protein interactions in MAP kinase mediated signaling networks – I110

Department of Biochemistry, Eotvos Lorand University, Budapest, Hungary

09.30

Gebhard Schertler

Structure of Active and Inactive G Protein Coupled Receptors: Implications for Signaling and Pharmacology Structure of Active and Inactive G Protein Coupled Receptors: Implications for Signaling and Pharmacology – I119

MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Cambridge, UK

10.00

Irmi Sinning

SIMIBI class NTP binding proteins in co- and posttranslational targeting – I129

Biochemistry Center, Heidelberg University, Heidelberg, Germany

10.30

Karin Dahlman-Wright

Molecular characterization of estrogen receptor signaling in breast cancer cells – I26

Department of Biosciences and Nutrition, Karolinska Institutet, Huddinge, Sweden

11.00–11.30

Coffee Break

11.30–12.30 Congress Hall

IUBMB Lecture Chairperson: Stathis Gonos (Athens)

11.30

Susan Lindquist

12.30–13.00 Hall H

Lunch service

13.00–15.30 Hall H

Poster exhibition

13.00–15.30

Poster discussions

Protein folding and inheritance of environmentally acquired characteristics – I73

Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research, MIT, Cambridge MA

(Topics; A3, A4, B3, B4, C3, E3)

Karl Kuchler

The FEBS Programme – Opportunities for Training & Education of Young Scientists in Molecular Biosciences

Max F. Perutz Laboratories, Medical University Vienna, Vienna, Austria

Eeva Moilanen

Career in Drug Research – Opportunities and Challenges

Department of Pharmacology, University of Tampere, Tampere, Finland

Alan Craig

“People” programme; Marie Curie actions

European Commission, DG Education and Culture (EAC), Brussels, Belgium

Moderator: Daniela Corda General discussion 15.30–17.00 Hall G3

National Research Council, Napoli, Italy

Technology Workshop – Proteomics Technologies Chairpersons: Gunnar Hansson (Göteborg) and Paola Picotti (Zürich)

15.30

Chunaram Choudhary

High resolution quantitative mass spectrometry for analysis of proteomes and PTMs – I22

Department of Proteomics, The NNF Center for Protein Research, University of Copenhagen, Denmark

16.00

Paola Picotti

Quantitative targeted proteomics for the analysis of cellular networks – I101

Institute of Molecular Systems Biology, ETH Zürich, Zürich, Switzerland

16.30

Katarina Alenäs

Heat inactivation of tissue samples to stabilize proteins, peptides and their modifications – A4.40

Denator AB, Göteborg, Sweden

16.45

Daniel Auerbach

An integrated experimental workflow to increase throughput and data robustness for analysis of mammalian protein interaction networks – B2.32

Dualsystems Biotech AG, Schlieren, Switzerland

15.30–17.00 Hall G2

Technology Workshop – Metabolomics Chairpersons: Jens Nielsen (Göteborg) and Nicola Zamboni (Zürich)

13.00

G3

Chair: Bengt Persson

C2,C4 Membrane transport Biological cycles: B2.51, B2.88, C4.13, C4.23, C4.27, C4.28, C4.34, YSF-62, YSF-79, YSF-83, YSF-86, YSF-122

13.00

G4

Chair: Stefan Hohmann

B2 Signal transduction: B2.04, B2.05, B2.25, B2.30, B2.41, B2.46, B2.55, B2.71, B2.89, B2.93, B2.99, B2.111

14.15

G3

Chair: Richard Neutze

E2 Molecular recognition: B2.96, E2.01, E2.03, E2.04, E2.06, E2.11, E2.12, E2.14, E2.16, E2.19, E2.20, E2.25

14.15

G4

Chair: Elzbieta Glaser

D2 Mitochondria: D2.01, D2.07, D2.08, D2.12, D2.18, D2.21, D2.22, D2.24, YSF-22, YSF-39, YSF-71, YSF-125

13.00–15.30 C-Balkongen

Speakers corner

13.00

Anna M Blom, Jen Sheen, Michael Brunner, Nikolaus Pfanner, Ute Krengel, Susan Lindquist

13.30

Inga-lill Mårtensson, Kjetil Taskén, Paloma Mas, Johannes Herrmann, Attila Remenyi

14.00

Matthias Merkenschlager, John D Scott, Hiroki Ueda, Paulo Bernardi, Gebhard Schertler

14.30

Maria Rescigno, Ivan Dikic, Aziz Sancar, Maria Falkenberg, Irmi Sinning

15.00

Pärt Peterson, Phil Cohen, Arp Schnittger, Luca Scorrano, Karin Dahlman-Wright

22

Congress secretariat:

Congrex Sweden AB Box 5078, SE 402 22 Göteborg, Sweden

15.30

Nicola Zamboni

A pragmatic update on cellular metabolomics – I158

Institute of Molecular Systems Biology, ETH Zürich, Zürich, Switzerland

16.15

Erna Knutsdottir

Comparison of lipid and fatty acids composition of basolateral membrane from rat (Rattus norvegicus) and Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) intestinal enterocytes: The question of homeoviscous adaptation – C4.15

Science Institute, University of Iceland, Department of Biochemistry, Reykjavik, Iceland

16.30

Kuk-Ki Hong

Metabolome analysis of yeast strains with improved galactose uptake

Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering – Systems Biology, Chalmers University of Technology, Göteborg, Sweden

16.45

Pramote Chumnanpuen

Dynamic footprinting for phenotypic profiling of yeast

Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering – Systems Biology, Chalmers University of Technology, Göteborg, Sweden

15.30–17.00 Hall G4

Technology Workshop – Dynamic Modelling Chairpersons: Marija Cvijovic (Göteborg) and Ursula Kummer (Heidelberg)

E-mail: [email protected] Fax: +46 31 708 60 25

15.30

Ursula Kummer

Assessing the importance of individual players in biochemical networks in a global way – I67

Bioinformatics and Computational Biochemistry Group, EML Research, Heidelberg, Germany

16.15

Matteo Barberis

Sic1 plays a role in timing and oscillatory behaviour of B-type cyclins in yeast – B5.14

Theoretical Biophysics, Humboldt University Berlin, Berlin, Germany

Congress secretariat:

Congrex Sweden AB Box 5078, SE 402 22 Göteborg, Sweden

E-mail: [email protected] Fax: +46 31 708 60 25

23

June 26 – July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden

June 26 – July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden

June 26– July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden

June 26– July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden

35th FEBS Congress – FEBS2010 – Detailed Programme

35th FEBS Congress – FEBS2010 – Detailed Programme C – Molecules at Work. C3 – Extracellular structures

16.30

Elena Papaleo

Identification of a molecular switch regulated by phosphorylation in E2 ubiquitin-conjugating enzymes – B5.53

University of Milano-Bicocca, Milano, Italy

08.30–11.00 Hall J1

16.45

Ana Kitanovic

Computer controlled automated assay for comprehensive studies of S.cerevisiae growth kinetic in response to extracellular conditions – C2.03

Institute for Pharmacy and Molecular Biotechnology, University of Heidelberg, Heidelberg, Germany

08.30

Jean-Paul Latge

Cell wall and extracellular matrix in the human opportunistic fungus Aspergillus fumigatus – I71

Pasteur Institute, Paris, France

0900

Taina Pihlajaniemi

15.40–18.00 Hall J1

Research-Oriented Education at High Schools – by the FEBS Education Committee

The homologous collagens XV and XVIII have distinct physiological roles – I102

Department of Medical Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of Oulu, Oulu, Finland

09.30

Johanna Ivaska

EMBO Young Investigator Lecture: Regulation of epithelial cell migration, invasion and EMT – I60

Turku Centre for Biotechnology, Turku, Findland

10.00

Nikos Karamanos

Implication of extracellular matrix in growth and metastatic potential of human breast cancer cells to bone: the role of zoledronate – I62

Department of Chemistry, University of Patras, Greece

10.30

Liliana Schaefer

Biglycan signaling: Toll-like receptors, the NLRP3inflammasome and beyond – I118

Institut für Allgemeine Pharmakologie und Toxikologie, Universitätsklinikum, Frankfurt, Germany

08.30–11.00 Hall G2

D – Cellular Compartments. D3 – Endocytosis

Chairperson: Anna Blom (Lund)

Chairpersons: Jane Saffell (London) Gül Güner-Akdogan (Izmir) 15.40

Jane Saffell

Introduction

15.50

Gül Güner-Akdogan

Coordinating Research Project competitions between High School students in the Izmir region

16.00

Various speakers

Short Presentations from the science teachers

16.20

Small group discussions

17.20

Various speakers

Report to the whole group and whole group discussion

17.50

Jane Saffell and Gül Güner-Akdogan

Conclusions

17.15–18.15 Congress Hall

Chairperson: Jens Lagerstedt (Lund)

Elizabeth Blackburn

Telomeres and telomerases – I13

Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics, University of California San Fransisco, San Fransisco, USA

Special event Uri Alon (and his guitarr)

18.30–19.30 Hall J1

Peter Deen

Exocytosis, endocytosis and lysosomal targeting of the Aquaporin-2 water channel: an interplay of phosphorylation and ubiquitination – I28

Department of Physiology, Radboud University of Nijmegen Medical Center, Nijmegen, Netherlands

09.00

David J Owen

Cargo recognition by the AP2 endocytic adaptor complex – I93

Cambridge Institute for Medical Research, Department of Clinical Biochemistry, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK

09.30

Kirsten Sandvig

Protein toxins from plants and bacteria: Probes for intracellular transport and tools in medicine – I116

Centre for Cancer Biomedicine, Faculty Division Norwegian Radium Hospital, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway

10.00

Giorgio Scita

The endocytic networks in the control of the plasticity of tumor cell migration – I123

Department of Medicine, Surgery and Dentistry of the University of Milan, Milan, Italy

10.30

Anna Elisabetta Salcini

PI3KC2alpha, a class II PI3K, is required for dynaminindependent internalization pathways – I114

Biotech Research and Innovation Centre, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark

08.30–11.00 Hall G4

E – Biomolecular Design and Function. E3 – Design of Macromolecules

Nobel Laureate Lecture Chairperson: Erik Boye (Oslo)

18.15–18.45 Congress Hall

08.30

Importance of Emotional and Subjective Sides of Science Department of Molecular Cell Biology, Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, Israel

Annual proceedings of the Swedish Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Chairperson: Stefan Hohmann

Chairperson: Karin Lindkvist (Göteborg)

Tuesday, June 29, 2010 08.30–11.00 Congress Hall

A – Molecules in Health and Disease. A3 – Metabolic Diseases Chairperson: Sven-Olof Olofsson (Göteborg)

08.30

Antonio Vidal-Puig

An allostatic control of membrane lipid composition in obeisty by SREBP1 – I149

Institute of Metabolic Science-Metabolic Research Laboratories and Department of Clinical Biochemistry, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK

09.00

Göran Hansson

Immune regulation of lipid metabolism and atherosclerosis

Center for Molecular Medicine, Karolinska University Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden.

09.30

Sven Enerbäck

Human Brown Adipose Tissue – I35

Department of Biomedicine, University of Gothenburg, Göteborg, Sweden

10.00

Dominique Langin

Metabolism and inflammation in human adipose tissue – I69

Inserm, Rangueil Institute of Molecular Medicine, Obesity Research Laboratory, Toulouse, France

10.30

Ulf Eriksson

Vascular endothelial growth factor B controls endothelial fatty acid uptake

Department of Medical Biochemistry and Biophysics, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden

08.30–11.00 Hall G3

B – Molecular Networks. B3 – Global networks

08.30

Birte Höcker

Protein design from fold fragments – I57

Max Planck Institute for Developmental Biology, Tübingen, Germany

09.00

Stefan Ståhl

Affibody molecules: Engineered proteins for therapeutic, diagnostic and biotechnological applications – I134

Division of Molecular Biotechnology, Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden

09.30

Edvard Bayer

Designer cellulosomes: Synthetic multi-enzyme macromolecular complexes – I11

Department of Biological Chemistry, The Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, Israel

10.00

Christina Smolke

Engineering RNA controllers for programming cellular behavior – I131

Department of Bioengineering, Stanford University, Stanford, USA

10.30

Tanja Kortemme

Molecular Design – from proteins to networks, coupling computation and experiment – I65

California Institute for Quantitative Biosciences, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, USA

11.00–11.30

Coffee Break

11.30–12.30 Congress Hall

Krebs Medal Lecture Chairperson: Giorgio Semenza (Zürich)

11.30

Harald Stenmark

How a lipid mediates tumour suppression – I136

Chairperson: Jens Nielsen (Göteborg) 08.30

Charlie Boone

The genetic landscape of a cell – I17

Banting and Best Department of Medical Research, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada

12.30–13.00 Hall H

Lunch service

09.00

Marc Vidal

Interactome networks and human disease – I148

Center for Cancer Systems Biology (CCSB) and Department of Cancer Biology, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Harvard Medical School, Boston, USA

13.00–15.30 Hall H

Poster exhibition

09.30

Giulio Superti-Fuga

Molecular networks in Leukemia and Innate immunity – I138

Center for Molecular Medicine of the Austrian Academy of Sciences, Vienna, Austria

10.00

Ben Lehner

Perturbing genes and predicting the outcome – I72

EMBL-CRG Systems Biology Unit, Centre for Genomic Regulation, UPF, Barcelona, Spain

10.30

Dirk Bumann

Salmonella metabolism during infection – I10

Infection Biology, Biozentrum, University of Basel, Basel, Switzerland

24

Congress secretariat:

Congrex Sweden AB Box 5078, SE 402 22 Göteborg, Sweden

E-mail: [email protected] Fax: +46 31 708 60 25

Congress secretariat:

Congrex Sweden AB Box 5078, SE 402 22 Göteborg, Sweden

Centre for Cancer Biomedicine, University of Oslo and Department of Biochemistry, Institute for Cancer Research, the Norwegian Radium Hospital, Montebello, Norway

(Topics; A5, B5, E4, E5, YSF)

E-mail: [email protected] Fax: +46 31 708 60 25

25

June 26 – July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden

June 26 – July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden

June 26– July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden

June 26– July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden

35th FEBS Congress – FEBS2010 – Detailed Programme

35th FEBS Congress – FEBS2010 – Detailed Programme Poster discussions

13.00–15.30 13.00

G2

Technology Workshop – Applying Sequencing Technologies

15.30–17.00 Hall G4

Chair: Sven-Olof Olofsson

A3 Metabolic diseases: A3.11, A3.22, A3.32, A3.63, A3.69, A3.71, A3.73, A3.81, B1.36, B4.71, B4.72

Chairpersons: Per Elias (Göteborg) and Joakim Lundeberg (Stockholm)

13.00

G3

Chair: Jens Nielsen

B3 Global networks: A5.63, B2.32, B2.85, B2.86, B3.02, B3.03, B3.05, B3.07, B3.12, B3.13, YSF-20

13.00

G4

Chair: Gunnar Hansson

C3 Extracellualr structures: C1.23, C3.03, C3.04, C3.05, C3.09, C3.13, C3.15, C3.17, C3.23, C3.25, YSF-43, YSF-76

15.30

Joakim Lundeberg

Intense parallel sequencing and high sensitivity identification of mutations, transcriptomes and genomes – I75

Department of Biotechnology, Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden

16.00

Thomas Svensson

Strategies to handle massive DNA sequencing data

Science for Life Laboratory, KI Science Park, Stockholm, Sweden

16.25

Erik Kristiansson

Antibiotic-contaminated effluent promotes mobile resistance in environmental bacteria – A5.62

Department of Neuroscience and Physiology, University of Gothenbur, Göteborg, Sweden

14.15

G2

Chair: Karin Lindkvist

E3 Design of macromolecules: E3.09, E3.11, E3.12, E3.14, E3.16, E3.18, E3.19, YSF-44, YSF-60, YSF-68, YSF-81, YSF-117

16.35

Dalanya Mohammed

Comparative analysis of the Tn1546 element from newly isolated and identified vancomycin resistant staphylococcus aureus strain – A5.24

College of Science, Biology, University of Sulaimani, Sulaimani-Kurdistan, Iraq

14.15

G3

Chair: Andrew Ewing

A4 Neurobiology: A4.12, A4.13, A4.20, A4.24, A4.25, A4.26, A4.29, A4.36, A4.37, A4.39, A4.41, A4.48

16.45

Wanwipa Vongsangnak

14.15

G4

Chair: Claes Gustafsson

B4 Gene regulation: B4.07, B4.19, B4.24, B4.32, B4.44, B4.49, B4.51, B4.54, B4.66, B4.69, D4.07, YSF-121

Genome sequencing, annotation and analysis of Saccharomyces cerevisiae: from genotype to phenotype for industrial biotechnology applications – B1.28

Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering – Systems Biology, Chalmers University of Technology, Göteborg, Sweden

17.15–18.15 Congress Hall

FEBS Journal Prize and FEBS Letters Award Lectures

13.00–15.30 C-Balkongen

Speakers corner

13.00

Antonio Vidal-Puig, Charlie Boone, Jean-Paul Latge, Peter Deen, Birte Höcker, Harald Stenmark

13.30

Göran Hansson, Marc Vidal, Taina Pihlajaniemi , David J Owen, Stefan Ståhl

14.00

Sven Enerbäck, Giulio Superti-Fuga, Johanna Ivaska, Kirsten Sandvig, Edvard Bayer

14.30

Dominique Langin, Ben Lehner, Nikos Karamanos, Giorgio Scita, Christina Smolke

15.00

Ulf Eriksson, Dirk Bumann, Liliana Schaefer, Anna Elisabetta Salcini, Tanja Kortemme

13.00–15.30 Hall J1

Tutorial: Practical Systems Biology – by the FEBS Education Committee

Chairperson: Stefan Hohmann (Göteborg)

Chairpersons: Marcus Krantz (Göteborg) and Gül Güner-Akdogan (Izmir)

Per Jemth

13.00–15.30 Congress Hall

Chairpersons: Felix Wieland (Heidelberg) and Richard Perham (Cambridge UK)

18.15–18.45 Congress Hall

East-NMR Workshop: NMR in Biology – In Interaction

13.00

Lucia Bianci

The East NMR and the BioNMR initiatives

Centro Risonanze Magnetiche, University of Florence, Florence, Italy

13.45

Volker Dötsch

Cell free protein expression and membrane protein structure determination by NMR

Institute of Biophysical Chemistry, University of Frankfurt, Frankfurt, Germany

14.30

Jacob Anglister

TBA

Department of Structural Biology, Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, Israel

15.00

Göran Karlsson

Transient protein interaction and NMR

Swedish NMR Centre, University of Gothenburg, Göteborg Sweden

15.30–17.00 Hall G3

Technology Workshop – Protein Interaction

FEBS Journal Prize: A monoclonal antibody as the first specific inhibitor of human NTPDase3

Institute of Cardiology and Pneumology, Laval University, Québec, Canada

Hideo Iwai

FEBS Letters Award: Structural basis for the design of a new split intein suitable for site-specific chemical modification

Institute of Biotechnology, University of Helsinki, Finland

Svedberg Lecture 2010 Allosteric pathways in protein domains: sequence versus topology – I166

Department of Medical Biochemistry and Microbiology, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden

Social Dinner – Midsummer party

19.30–23.00 Trädgårds­ föreningen

Chairpersons: Lucia Bianci (Florence) and Göran Karlsson (Göteborg)

Mercedes Munkonda

Wednesday, June 30, 2010 A – Molecules in Health and Disease. A4 – Neurobiology

08.30–11.00 Hall G3

Chairperson: Winnie Eskild (Oslo) 08.30

Andrew Ewing

Quantitative electrochemical cytometry of nanometer transmitter vesicles – what fraction is released in exocytosis? – I165

Department of Chemistry, University of Gothenburg, Göteborg, Sweden

Chairpersons: Anders Blomberg (Göteborg) and Igor Stagljar (Toronto) 15.30

Igor Stagljar

Protein Networks Regulating Cell Signaling in Human Health and Disease – I133

Terrence Donnelly Centre for Cellular and Biomolecular Research, Department of Biochemistry and Department of Molecular Genetics, University of Toronto, Canada

09.00

Chris Dobson

Life on the Edge: The Generic Nature of Protein Misfolding Disorders – I30

Department of Chemistry, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK

09.30

Tõnis Timmusk

16.00

Matthias Gstaiger

Systematic analysis of dynamic signaling modules by quantitative mass spectrometry – I47

Institute for Molecular Systems Biology, ETH, Zürich, Switzerland

Molecular dissection of the calcium-regulated transcriptional activator TCF4/ITF2/E2-2 in neurons – I140

Department of Gene Technology, Tallinn University of Technology, Tallinn, Estonia

10.00

Jochen Schwenk

GABAB receptors are heteromultimers with a family of auxiliary subunits – A4.37

Institute of Physiology II, University of Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany

Mahmood AmiryMoghaddan

Aquaporin water channels in health and disease – I03

16.30

Center for Molecular Biology and Neuroscience and Department of Anatomy, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway

10.30

Laurent Groc

16.45

Sandra Orchard

The PSICQUIC interface — a portal into to the world of the interactome – B3.07

Proteomics Services Team, EMBL-EBI, Cambridge, UK

High-resolution imaging of neurotransmitter receptors: learning from a single molecule – I44

CNRS-UMR 5091 Physiologie Cellulaire de la Synapse, Institut François Magendie, Université Bordeaux, Bordeaux, France

15.30–17.00 Hall G2

Technology Workshop – Lipidomics

08.30–11.00 Congress Hall

B – Molecular Networks. B4 – Gene regulation Chairperson: Claes Gustafsson (Göteborg)

Chairpersons: Sven-Olof Olofsson (Göteborg) and Kim Ekroos ( Espoo) 15.30

Kim Ekroos

Lipidomics in health and disease – I33

ZORA Biosciences, Espoo, Finland

16.00

Ole Kristian GreinerTollersrud

Characterisation of two new enzymes involved in lysosomal phospholipid degradation – B1.11

Institute of Medical Biology, University of Tromsø, Tromsø, Norway

16.30

Massimo Aureli

Plasma membrane associated enzymes for sphingolipid structural changes and neuronal development – B1.07

Department of Medical Chemistry, University of Milan, Milan, Italy

16.45

Cristina Cianflone

Diacylglycerol kinase alpha regulates SDF1?-induced cell invasion by regulating atypical PKC and matrix metallo proteinases 9 – B2.17

Department of Clinical and Experimental Medicine, University of Piemonte Orientale Amedeo Avogadro, Novara, Italy

26

Congress secretariat:

Congrex Sweden AB Box 5078, SE 402 22 Göteborg, Sweden

E-mail: [email protected] Fax: +46 31 708 60 25

08.30

Francesc Posas

Control of gene expression by the Hog1 stress-activated protein kinase – I105

Departament of Experimental Health Sciences, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Parc de Recerca Biomèdica de Barcelona (PRBB), Barcelona, Spain, Departament de Ciències Experimentals i de la Salut, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Parc de Recerca Biomèdica de Barcelona

09.00

Henk G Stunnenberg

The transcriptional and epigenetic targets of the AML associated oncofusion proteins AML1-ETO and PMLRAR – I137

Department of Molecular Biology, Radboud University Nijmegen, Nijmegen, Netherlands

09.30

Richard Treisman

MAL: linking the actin cytoskeleton to transcriptional regulation – I141

Lincoln's Inn Fields and Clare Hall Laboratories, London Research Institute, Cancer Research, London, UK

Congress secretariat:

Congrex Sweden AB Box 5078, SE 402 22 Göteborg, Sweden

E-mail: [email protected] Fax: +46 31 708 60 25

27

June 26 – July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden

June 26 – July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden

June 26– July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden

June 26– July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden

35th FEBS Congress – FEBS2010 – Detailed Programme

35th FEBS Congress – FEBS2010 – Detailed Programme

10.00

Albertha J Walhout

Gene-centered regulatory networks – I152

University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester, USA

10.30

Kevin Verstrepen

Unstable tandem repeats in promoters confer transcriptional evolvability – I147

VIB Laboratory of Systems Biology, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Leuven, Belgium

08.30–11.00 Hall G4

C – Molecules at Work. C4 – Transmembrane transport Chairperson: Bengt Persson (Kalmar)

08.30

Poul Nissen

A revised model of the mechanism of P-type ATPase cation pumps – I87

Centre for Structural Biology, Department of Molecular Biology, University of Aarhus, Aarhus, Denmark

09.00

Carola Hunte

Towards structural und functional characterization of human sodium/proton antiporters

Institute of Membrane and Systems Biology, University of Leeds, Leeds, UK

09.30

Richard Neutze

Structural insights into eukaryotic aquaporin regulation – I84

Department of Chemistry, University of Gothenburg, Göteborg, Sweden

10.00

Bert Poolman

Substrate-binding proteins: A structural classification and the mechanism of peptide selection by the transport receptor OppA – I104

Groningen Biomolecular Sciences and Biotechnology Institute and Zernike Institute for Advanced Materials, Riksuniversiteit Groningen, Groningen, The Netherlands University of Groningen, Nijenborgh, Netherlands.

The Structural basis for ion conduction and gating in pentameric ligand-gated ion channels – I31

Biochemisches Institut, Universität Zürich, Zürich, Switzerland

13.00–15.30 G3, G4

Poster discussions

13.00

G3

Chair: Hans Wolf-Watz

A5 Infectious diseases: A5.07, A5.17, A5.55, A5.57, A5.58, A5.66, A5.67, A5.74, A5.76, A5.79, A5.80, YSF-18

13.00

G4

Chair: Per Elias

E4 Folding: E4.03, E4.11, E4.13, E4.18, E4.22, E4.23, E4.24, E4.25, E4.26, E4.27, E4.29, E5.08

14.15

G3

Chair: Bengt Mannervik

E5 Catalytic mechanisms: E5.05, E5.15, E5.17, E5.20, E5.23, E5.24, E5.25, E5.28, E5.34, E5.36, E5.42, E5.50

14.15

G4

Chair: Therese Jacobson

B5 Regulation of protein function: B5.19, B5.28, B5.32, B5.47, B5.50, B5.53, B5.60, B5.62, B5.79, YSF-37, YSF-50, YSF-73

13.00–15.30 C-Balkongen

Speakers corner

13.00

Andrew Ewing, Francesc Posas, Poul Nissen, Helle Ullrich, Sheena Radford, Juleen Zierath

13.00

Ralf Bartenschlager, Anne Simonsen, Ulrich Brandt, Egbert Boekema, Bengt Mannervik

13.30

Chris Dobson, Henk G Stunnenberg, Carola Hunte, Claudia Lukas, Lucia Banci

13.30

Wayne Hendrickson, Gerald W Hart, Shelagh Ferguson-Miller, Eva-Marie Aro, Donald Hilvert

10.30

Raimond Dutzler

14.00

Tõnis Timmusk, Richard Treisman, Richard Neutze, Dirk Görlich, Annalisa Pastore

08.30–11.00 Hall G2

D – Cellular Compartments. D4 – Nucleus

14.00

Hans Wolf-Watz, Ivan Mijakovic, So Iwata, Holger Dau, Manfred Reetz

Chairperson: Camilla Sjögren (Stockholm)

14.30

Mahmood Amiry-Moghaddan, Albertha J Walhout, Bert Poolman, Francois Fuks, Christian Griesinger

08.30

Helle Ullrich

Timing and spacing of ubiquitin-dependent DNA damage bypass – I144

Cancer Research UK London Research Institute, Clare Hall Laboratories, South Mimms, UK

14.30

Pascale Cossart, Davide Corona, Wolfram Saenger, Chris Bowler, Maria Joao Ramos

15.00

Laurent Groc, Kevin Verstrepen, Raimond Dutzler, Camilla Sjögren, Per Hammarström

09.00

Claudia Lukas

Real-time microscopy and high-content imaging as essential tools to dissect dynamics of the DNA damage response – I74

Center for Genotoxic, Danish Cancer Society, Copenhagen, Denmark

15.00

Shulamit Michaeli, Piet Gros, Peter Brzezinski, Ralph Bock, Isabelle Moura

09.30

Dirk Görlich

Transport through nuclear pore complexes – I42

Max Planck Institute for Biophysical Chemistry, Göttingen, Germany

13.00–14.30 Hall J1

Gender in Science – by the FEBS Working Group on Women in Science

10.00

Francois Fuks

EMBO Young Investigator Lecture: Mechanisms of DNA methylation in mammals – I40

Laboratory of Molecular Virology, Free University of Brussels, Brussels, Belgium

10.30

Camilla Sjögren

The SMC5/6 complex and replication-induced topological stress – I130

Department of Cell and Molecular Biology, Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, Sweden

08.30–11.00 Hall J1

E – Biomolecular Design and Function. E4 – Folding

Chairpersons: Ruth Paulssen (Tromsö) 13.00

Elizabeth Pollitzer

14.00

Reaching consensus on the gender dimension in science

Portia Ltd, London, UK

General discussion

13.00–15.30 Hall G2

Database Taster – organised by the European Bioinformatics Institute, EBI

13.00

Cath Brooksbank

Brief introduction to the EMBL-EBI’s data resources

Outreach and Training Team, EMBL-European Bioinformatics Institute, Hinxton, UK

Chairperson: Per Elias (Göteborg) 08.30

Sheena Radford

How well evolved is the folding code? – I106

Astbury Centre for Structural Molecular Biology, University of Leeds, Leeds, UK

13.15

Jennifer McDowall

Proteomics resources (UniProt, InterPro) – I163

External Services Team, EMBL-European Bioinformatics Institute, Hinxton, UK

09.00

Lucia Banci

Folding and redox processes in the mitochondria – I07

Magnetic Resonance Center and Department of Chemistry, FiorGen Foundation, University of Florence, Sesto Fiorentino, Italy

13.45

Adel Golovin

Protein structures (PDBe)

PDBe Team, EMBL-European Bioinformatics Institute, Hinxton, UK

14.15

Sandra Orchard

Interactions and pathways: IntAct and Reactome

09.30

Annalisa Pastore

Frataxin, not any longer a function orphan protein – I97

The National Institute for Medical Research, The Ridgeway, Mill Hill, London, UK

Proteomics Services Team, EMBL-European Bioinformatics Institute, Hinxton, UK

14.45

Janna Hastings

Small molecules (ChEBI and ChEMBLdb) – I162

10.00

Christian Griesinger

Folding and its redirection studied with NMR – I43

Max-Planck Institute for Biophysical Chemistry, Göttingen, Germany

Cheminformatics and Metabolomics Team, EMBL-European Bioinformatics Institute, Hinxton, UK

10.30

Per Hammarström

Svedberg Lecture 2009: The dynamic amyloid landscape – I49

IFM-Department of Chemistry, Linköping University, Linköping, Sweden

11.00–11.30

Coffee Break

11.30–12.30 Congress Hall

Datta Medal Lecture Juleen Zierath

12.30–13.00 Hall H

Lunch service

13.00–15.30 Hall H

Poster exhibition

28

15.30–17.00 Hall G3

Open discussion

Technology Workshop – Protein Structures Chairpersons: Richard Neutze (Göteborg) and Magnar Björås (Oslo)

Chairperson: Iain Mowbray (London) 11.30

15.15

Gene/Environment influence on skeletal muscle insulin sensitivity in Type 2 Diabetic patients – I160

Karolinska Institutet, Clinical Integrative Physiology, Stockholm, Sweden

15.30

Elspeth Garman

From hot to cool and more for less: New developments for structural biology – I41

Department of Biochemistry, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK

16.15

Denys Pogoryelov

On the rotary mechanism and ion binding specificity of F1Fo-ATP synthases – C5.01

Department of Structural Biology, Max Planck Institute of Biophysics, Frankfurt / M, Germany

16.30

Mark Currie

Dissect and build: Reconstructing the cellulosome using X-ray crystallography and small angle X-ray scattering – C1.23

Biochemistry, Queen's University Kingston, Canada

16.45

Ilona Nudelman

NMR structural studies of the human interferon-?2 complex with human Type I Interferon receptor – C3.03

Structural Biology,Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, Israel

(Topics; A1, A2, B1, C1, C5, D1, D3, D4, D5, E1)

Congress secretariat:

Congrex Sweden AB Box 5078, SE 402 22 Göteborg, Sweden

E-mail: [email protected] Fax: +46 31 708 60 25

Congress secretariat:

Congrex Sweden AB Box 5078, SE 402 22 Göteborg, Sweden

E-mail: [email protected] Fax: +46 31 708 60 25

29

June 26 – July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden

June 26 – July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden

June 26– July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden

June 26– July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden

35th FEBS Congress – FEBS2010 – Detailed Programme 15.30–17.00 Hall G2

35th FEBS Congress – FEBS2010 – Detailed Programme

Technology Workshop – Molecular Imaging

C – Molecules at Work. C5 – Energy Transduction

08.30–11.00 Hall G2

Chairperson: Hans Hebert (Stockholm)

Chairperson: Jan Rydström (Göteborg)

15.30

Hans Hebert

The tmRNA system for ribosome rescue: Single particle cryo electron microscopy, structural heterogeneity and difference map calculations – I52

Structural Biotechnology, Royal Institute of Technology, Huddinge Sweden

08.30

Ulrich Brandt

Structural and functional insights into mitochondrial complex I – I19

Cluster of Excellence Frankfurt Macromolecular Complexes, Centre for Membrane Proteomics, Johann Wolfgang Goethe-Universität, Frankfurt am Main, Germany

16.00

Roman A. Zubarev

Novel “tomography” mass spectrometry tissue imaging method – I161

Department of Medicinal Biochemistry and Biophysics, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden

09.00

Shelagh Ferguson-Miller

Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Michigan State University, East Lansing, USA

16.30

Dagmar Salber

Imaged by LA-ICP-MS: Metal accumulations after cerebral infarct in course of time – A4.27

Institute of Neurosciences and Medicine, Forschungszentrum Jülich, Jülich, Germany

Conformational changes seen in crystal structures of oxidized, reduced and mutant forms of cytochrome c oxidase: clues to coupling and gating mechanism? – I38

09.30

So Iwata

16.45

Jelena Markovic

The nuclear compartimentation of glutathione: effect on cell cycle progression and chromatin condensation – D4.08

Core Research Facility, University of Valencia, Valencia, Spain

Structure and mechanism of membrane transporters – I61

Division of Molecular Biosciences, Imperial College London, London, UK

10.00

Wolfram Saenger

Photosystem II at 2.9 Ã resolution – Quinones, lipids, channels and chloride ion – I112

Institute for Chemistry and Biochemistry/Crystallography, Freie Universitaet Berlin, , Berlin, Germany

10.30

Peter Brzezinski

Tuning the proton pumping stoichiometry in cytochrome c oxidase by single mutations – I21

Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics, The Arrhenius Laboratories for Natural Sciences, Stockholm University, Stockholm, Sweden

08.30–11.00 Hall G4

D – Cellular Compartments. D5 – Chloroplasts

15.30–17.00 Hall G4

Technology Workshop – Network Modelling Chairperson: Stefan Schuster (Jena)

15.30

Stefan Schuster

Predicting pathways in genome-scale metabolic networks – I122

Department of Bioinformatics, Friedrich-Schiller-University Jena, Jena, Germany

16.00

Brenda Andrews

A comprehensive genetic-interaction map of a eukaryotic kinome – B3.12

Banting and Best Department of Medical Research, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada

Yeast Protein-Protein Interaction annotation – B3.14

Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering – Systems Biology, Chalmers University of Technology, Göteborg, Sweden

16.30

16.45

17.15–18.15 Congress Hall

Marija Cvijovic

Carsten Kettner

Reporting and capturing uniform enzyme function data – B1.01

Chairperson: Peter Herrlich (Jena) Wisely chosen paths: Regulation of ribosomal RNA synthesis – I46

Egbert Boekema

Structure of chloroplast membrane organization using cryo-electron tomography – I16

Groningen Biomolecular Sciences and Biotechnology Institute, University of Groningen, Groningen, The Netherlands

09.00

Eva-Marie Aro

Electron transfer routes in photosynthetic membranes – Impact on biohydrogen production – I05

Plant Physiology and Molecular Biology, Department of Biochemistry and Food Chemistry, University of Turku, Turku, Finland

09.30

Holger Dau

On the role of protons and O2 partial pressure in water oxidation by photosystem II – I27

Fachbereich Physik, Freie Universität Berlin, Berlin, Germany

10.00

Chris Bowler

Genomics-enabled approaches for revealing the molecular secrets of marine diatoms – I18

Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), UMR8186, Ecole Normale Supérieure, Paris, France

10.30

Ralph Bock

Transgenic plastids as expression factories in biotechnology – I15

Max-Planck-Institut für Molekulare Pflanzenphysiologie, Potsdam-Golm, Germany

Beilstein-Institut, Frankfurt, Germany

FEBS/EMBO Women in Science Award Lecture Ingrid Grummt

Chairperson: Cecilia Hägerhäll (Lund) 08.30

Division of Molecular Biology of the Cell II, German Cancer Research Center, DKFZ-ZMBH Alliance, Heidelberg, Germany

0830–1100

E – Biomolecular Design and Function. E5 – Catalytic Mechanisms

Hall J1

Thursday, July 1, 2010 08.30–11.00 Congress Hall

Chairperson: Jaak Järv (Tartu)

A – Molecules in Health and Disease. A5 – Infectious Diseases Chairpersons: Viesturs Baumanis (Riga)

08.30

Ralf Bartenschlager

New Insights into Hepatitis C Virus Replication and Persistence – I08

Department of Molecular Virology, University of Heidelberg, Heidelberg, Germany

09.00

Wayne Hendrickson

Ligand recognition and plasticity in HIV envelope glycoprotein gp120 – I53

Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biophysics, Columbia University, New York, USA

09.30

Hans Wolf-Watz

Yersinia blocks innate immunity via the TypeIII secretion system; A possible drug target for novel therapy? I156

Department of Molecular Biology, Umeå University, Umeå, Sweden

10.00

Pascale Cossart

The bacterium Listeria monocytogenes: A brilliant cell biologist and an insidious biochemist – I25

Institut Pasteur, Paris, France

10.30

Shulamit Michaeli

Trans-splicing is a regulated and is master regulator of trypanosome gene expression – I81

The Mina and Everard Goodman Faculty of Life Sciences, and Advanced Materials and Nanotechnology Institute, Bar-Ilan University, Ramat-Gan, Israel

08.30–11.00 Hall G3

Bengt Mannervik

The quest for molecular quasi-species in ligand-activity space and its application to directed enzyme evolution – I76

Department of Biochemistry and Organic Chemistry, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden

09.00

Donald Hilvert

Teaching old enzymes new tricks – I55

Laboratory of Organic Chemistry, ETH Zürich, Zürich, Switzerland

09.30

Manfred Reetz

Methodology development in directed evolution – I109

Max-Planck-Institut für Kohlenforschung, Mülheim an der Ruhr, Germany

10.00

Maria Joao Ramos

Computational enzymatic catalysis – I108

Department of Chemistry, University of Porto, Porto, Portugal

10.30

Isabelle Moura

The two terminal enzymes of denitrification: Nitric and nitrous oxide reductase – I83

Departement of Chemistry, Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Caparica, Portugal

11.00–11.30

Coffee Break

11.30–12.30 Congress Hall

Nobel Laureate Lecture

B – Molecular Networks. B5 – Regulation of protein function

Chairperson: Winnie Eskild (Oslo)

Chairpersons: Therese Jacobson (Göteborg) 08.30

Anne Simonsen

Fighting disease by selective autophagy of aggregateprone proteins – I128

Dept. of Biochemistry, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway

09.00

Gerald W Hart

Extensive crosstalk between O-GlcNAcylation and phosphorylation: A new paradigm for cellular signaling? – I51

Department of Biological Chemistry,Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, USA

09.30

Ivan Mijakovic

Protein phosphorylation in bacteria – I82

MICALIS UMR 1319, AgroParisTech-INRA, Thiverval-Grignon, France

10.00

Davide F.V. Corona

Functional interaction between chromatin remodelers and non-coding RNA’s – I24

Department of Cell and Developmental Biology, University of Palermo, Palermo, Italy

10.30

Piet Gros

Mechanistic insights into complement activation and regulation – I45

Department of Chemistry, University of Utrecht, Utrecht, The Netherlands

30

08.30

Congress secretariat:

Congrex Sweden AB Box 5078, SE 402 22 Göteborg, Sweden

E-mail: [email protected] Fax: +46 31 708 60 25

11.30

Venki Ramakrishnan

12.30–13.00 Congress Hall

Closing Ceremony

14.00–17.00 Hall G4

FEBS Council Meeting

Congress secretariat:

Congrex Sweden AB Box 5078, SE 402 22 Göteborg, Sweden

What we have learned from structures of the ribosome – I107

E-mail: [email protected] Fax: +46 31 708 60 25

Structural Studies Division, MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Cambridge, UK

31

32 Congress secretariat: Congrex Sweden AB Box 5078, SE 402 22 Göteborg, Sweden Dessa dörrar är vanligtvis inte öppna!

R

E-mail: [email protected] Fax: +46 31 708 60 25 Congress secretariat: Congrex Sweden AB Box 5078, SE 402 22 Göteborg, Sweden E-mail: [email protected] Fax: +46 31 708 60 25

Illumina H01:20 4x2 Protein-Astra tech Zeneca Group H02:11 H01:14 2x5 2x5

R21 R22 R23

H05:04

H05:06 H05:12 H05:14

H05:18 H05:20 H05:22

H05:17 H05:19 H05:21

H06:24

J1

J

H06:11

H06:18 H06:22

H06:17 H06:21

H07:20

H07:18

First Floor

Coffee

ELSEVIER Science/AAAS EMBO Jackson ImmunoResearch Europe Ltd. Corning Life Sciences/VWR International Tocris Bioscience Springer GATC Biotech AB Novus Biologicals EMBL St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital ACS Publications The Biochemical Society

H05:14 H05:17 H05:18 H05:19 H05:20 H05:21 H05:22 H06:11 H06:17 H06:18 H06:21

Utbyggn. 2,8m högt

BP

Elsevier H05:06 3x2 LGC Standards H05:04 3x2

Science/ AAAS H05:12 4x3

Jackson H05:17 3x2 Corning Life/ VWR H05:18 3x2

260

EMBO H05:14 3x3

Tocris Bioscience Gatc Biotech H05:19 H05:21 3x2 3x2 Springer Novus Biologicals H05:20 H05:22 3x2 3x2

Wisepress Ltd. H06:24 6x1

LGC Standards AB

H05:12

PerkinElmer

Cayman Europe

H05:06

H07:20

Dualsystems Biotech AG

H05:04

RCS Publishing

Sigma-Aldrich

H04:30

Wisepress Bookshop

Wiley Blackwell

H04:24

European Commission-Marie Curie actions

Enzo Life Sciences AG

H04:21

H07:18

The Federation of European Biochemical Societies (FEBS)

H04:18

H06:24

AstraZeneca

H04:17

H06:22

Illumina

H04:15

Hybrigenics SA

G

H02:11

Proteintech Group

H01:19

370

G4

H01:20

Bio-Rad Laboratories

H01:14

FEBS 2010 H01:11

Enzo Life Sciences Sigma-Aldrich H04:17 H04:21 3x2 6x2 Wiley Blackwell H04:18 9x2

FEBS H04:15 4x4

G3

Posters Exhibitors at

220

G2

DualsystemsCayman Europe OU H04:30 Biotech H04:24 3x2 3x2

Hotel Gothia Towers

Conference Reception

Heaven 23

Level 23

H04:15

H04:18

H04:21

H04:24 H04:30

H04:17

FEBS 2010

Stage

Posters

H

n tratio

FEBS 2010

EMBL H06:11 3x3

St. Jude H06:17 3x2 ACS H06:18 3x2

Biochemical Society H06:21 3x2 RSC Publishing H06:22 3x2

Marie Curie Actions H07:18 2x1.5 PerkinElmer H07:20 2x3

June 26 – July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden

Bio-Rad H01:11 2x4

Hybrigenics H01:19 2x4

Estrad Restaurant & Function Room

1503

Congress Hall

H01:20 H01:14 H01:14 H02:11 H02:11

H01:11 H01:11

Regis

H01:19 H01:19

Congress Foyer

Speakers Corner

Entré 8

June 26– July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden

June 26 – July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden June 26– July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden

33

June 26 – July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden June 26– July 1, 2010 • Gothenburg, Sweden

Notes

34

Congress secretariat:

Congrex Sweden AB Box 5078, SE 402 22 Göteborg, Sweden

E-mail: [email protected] Fax: +46 31 708 60 25

DESIGN: N.FORM, COVERPHOTOS: © 2005 CLAES AXSTÅL, PRINT: Informtrycket, Göteborg, 2009.

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