Scientific Program

Conference Series Ltd invites all the participants across the globe to attend 5th International Conference on Integrative Biology London, UK.

Day 2 :

Conference Series Integrative Biology 2017 International Conference Keynote Speaker Tuan Vo-Dinh photo
Biography:

Tuan Vo-Dinh is a Professor of Biomedical Engineering, Professor of Chemistry, and Director of Fitzpatrick Institute for Photonics at Duke University. He completed his BS in Physics in 1970 at École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL) in Lausanne, Switzerland, and PhD in Physical Chemistry in 1975 at ETH (Swiss Federal Institute of Technology) in Zurich, Switzerland. His research activities involve “Nanophotonics, biophotonics, nano-biosensors, biochips, molecular spectroscopy, bioimaging for medical diagnostics and therapy (nano-theranostics), personalized medicine and global health”. He has received seven R&D 100 Awards for most technologically significant advance in research and development for his pioneering research and inventions of innovative technologies. He has received Gold Medal Award, Society for Applied Spectroscopy (1988); the Languedoc-Roussillon Award (France) (1989); the Scientist of the Year Award, ORNL (1992); the Thomas Jefferson Award, Martin Marietta Corporation (1992); two Awards for Excellence in Technology Transfer, Federal Laboratory Consortium (1995, 1986) etc. He has authored over 400 publications in peer-reviewed scientific journals.

Abstract:

There is a strong need to develop nanoprobes for cellular sensing and imaging, which allow selective and sensitive monitoring of bio-targets and molecular processes inside and outside cellular systems related to studies of plant bio-systems relevant to biofuel production. We develop a new class of nanoprobes called inverse molecular sentinels (iMS) for nucleic acid targets (e.g., mRNAs, microRNAs, siRNAs) that will enable imaging and study of cellular functions, both in plant and microbial species using surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) detection. The iMS nano-probe system is composed of three parts: A stem-loop nucleic acid probe labeled with a Raman reporter, which provides the source of the Raman signal; a plasmonic-active nanoparticle e.g. nanospheres or nano-stars and; an unlabeled capture placeholder strand. Upon exposure to the target sequences, the placeholder capture strand leaves the “open” stem-loop probe, allows the stem-loop to “close” and moves the Raman label onto the plasmonics-active metal surface; this yields a strong SERS signal. The multiplex capability of SERS is an important feature due to the narrow Raman bandwidths, which provides significant advantages over other methods. We demonstrate the multiplexing capability of the iMS technique to target RGA and PP2AA3 genes of plant cells. RGA gene belongs to a 5-gene DELLA family in Arabidopsis, which plays a critical role in controlling plant biomass. The results of this study demonstrate the feasibility of using the iMS nanoprobes for multiplex detection of important markers in bioenergy-relevant plant systems. The results obtained with the iMS sensing technology will be useful to understand and manipulate vegetative plant growth by identifying and ultimately modulating DELLA expression in specific cell types. Because DELLAs play a central role in regulating vegetative growth in flowering plants, our work will provide significant insights into novel ways to manipulate plant growth to increase biomass if renewable energy sources are for a sustainable and green future.

Keynote Forum

David Pastre

University of Evry, France

Keynote: Visualization and quantification of protein interactions along microtubules in mammalian cells

Time : 10:10-10:50

Conference Series Integrative Biology 2017 International Conference Keynote Speaker David Pastre photo
Biography:

David Pastre is currently the Head of the SABNP Laboratory (INSERM unit U1204) and Professor at the University of Evry. He after studying Physics and Optics at the University of Montpellier, has developed a set up to collect cathodoluminescence near field. During a Post-doctoral fellowship at the University of Virginia (2000-2001), he designed a method to observe living mammalian cells at high-resolution with a scanning ion conductance microscope. As a Teacher-Researcher at the University of Evry, he deciphered the mechanisms leading to DNA absorption on mica and studied the formation of DNA and RNA/protein complexes on mica by atomic force microscopy. He is currently investigating, at the cellular and molecular levels, the dynamics and structure of RNA/protein complexes involved in the control of protein expression and the mechanisms which regulate microtubule dynamics. He also continues to develop novel methods to explore cellular and molecular processes.

Abstract:

The functions of many proteins and their interplay remain elusive, which limits the developments of diagnostic and treatment of many human diseases. To address this issue, methods are currently developed to decipher protein interactions in cells. We recently developed a new technology to probe protein interactions (PPI) along microtubules in specifically engineered mammalian cells by fluorescence microscopy. A bait protein is brought to microtubules and the presence of putative molecular partners, attracted by the bait protein, is then detected on microtubules by fluorescence microscopy. Here, we present the advantages of this technology compared to other approaches and its latest developments. The domain of applications are broad spanning from discovery of new drugs that target protein or mRNA interactions, identifying molecular targets, exploring the consequences of mutations and the possible corrections of pathogenic consequences.

Keynote Forum

Ganapathi Sivakumar

University of Houston, USA

Keynote: Bio-manufacturing of gout medicine

Time : 11:10-11:50

Conference Series Integrative Biology 2017 International Conference Keynote Speaker Ganapathi Sivakumar photo
Biography:

Colchicine is one of the most important alkaloid-based antigout drugs with anticancer potential which is unique to Colchicaceae. Gloriosa superba L is a very successful commercial source of plant-based pharmaceutical colchicine. However, high colchicine production is challenging and the cultivation is labor-intensive, time consuming, and expensive. Indeed, there is no bio-manufacturing technology for the production of plant-based colchicine. A new biotechnological bio-rhizome engineering platform is emerging from G. superba. Author will discuss recent advances in bio-rhizome to bio-manufacture therapeutic colchicine.

Abstract:

Ganapathy Sivakumar is currently an Assistant Professor in Department of Engineering and Technology at University of Houston, USA. He completed his PhD and Post-doctoral degree in the areas of Biotechnology, Molecular Chemistry, Bio-process Engineering. He has experience in Industrial Biotechnology. He has over 40 publications. He is also Editorial Board Member of several journals. He serves as an expert of grant proposals as well as numerous scientific journals. His laboratory focuses on metabolic and bioprocess engineering of colchicine pathway and developing potential anticancer medicine.

  • Integrative Biology

Session Introduction

Robin Ketteler

University College London, UK

Title: Autophagy protease ATG4B as a drug target in cancer

Time : 11:50-12:15

Speaker
Biography:

Robin Ketteler has studied biochemistry at the Free University Berlin and completed his PhD in 2002 at the Max-Planck Institute for Immunobiology in Freiburg, Germany. He completed his postdoctoral studies from Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston and since 2009 is group leader at University College London. He is the the manager of the Translational Research Resource Center, a high-content screening facility at UCL.     
 

Abstract:

Autophagy is a catabolic process that encloses cytoplasmic content in a double membrane vescicle, the autophagosome, and degrades it through fusion with the lysosome. The modulation of autophagy has been implicated in multiple diseases including pathogen infection, neuro-degenerative disorders and cancer. Although the main components of the autophagy machinery have been identified by yeast genetics and in mammalian cells, the identification of entry points for drug targeting in this pathway has proven challenging. Recent findings suggest that autophagy protease ATG4B and proteins that regulate ATG4B activity are potential drug targets in cancer. In order to study the regulation of ATG4B, we took advantage of our recently developed assay to measure ATG4B activity in cells by assessing the amount of secreted luciferase in cells expressing the reporter Actin-LC3-DeltaNluciferase. We used this assay to identify small molecule inhibitors of ATG4B that may have therapeutic potential in breast cancer. Further, we used kinase and phosphatase siRNA and cDNA libraries and identified genes that enhance or suppress cellular ATG4B activity. We identified an inhibitory phosphorylation of ATG4B at the forming autophagosome that allows the spatio-temporal control of autophagosome maturation. Finally, we provide preliminary data using CRISPR-Cas9 genome editing to study the function of ATG4 isoforms in mammalian cells. Overall, our results shed light on the complex regulation of ATG4B in cells and will inform therapeutic strategies targeting this protein.

Speaker
Biography:

Anthony Uren completed his PhD at the Walter and Eliza Hall Institute, followed by postdoctoral positions at Genentech and at the Netherlands Cancer Institute. He is currently a principal investigator at the MRC London Institute of Medical Sciences at Imperial College.

Abstract:

Determining whether recurrent but rare cancer mutations are bona fide driver mutations remains a bottleneck in cancer research. Here we present the most comprehensive analysis of retrovirus driven lymphomagenesis produced to date, sequencing 700,000 mutations from >500 malignancies collected at time points throughout tumor development. This enabled identification of positively selected events, and the first demonstration of negative selection of mutations that may be deleterious to tumor development (e.g. Smyd3) indicating novel avenues for therapy. Customized sequencing and bioinformatics methodologies were developed to quantify subclonal mutations in both premalignant and malignant tissue, greatly expanding the statistical power for identifying driver mutations and yielding a high-resolution, genome wide map of the selective forces surrounding cancer gene loci. Screening two BCL2 transgenic models confirms known drivers of human B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphoma, and implicates novel candidates including modifiers of immunosurveillance such as co-stimulatory molecules (Cd86, Icosl, PD-1) and MHC loci. Correlating mutations with genotypic and phenotypic features also gives robust identification of known cancer genes independently of local variance in mutation density. An online resource http://mulv.lms.mrc.ac.uk allows customized queries of the entire dataset.

Speaker
Biography:

Mireille Claessens obtained her PhD training in the laboratories of Physical Chemistry and Colloid Scieces and Plant Physiology at Wageningen University, the Netherlands. After receiving her PhD degree in 2003 she did postdoctoral studies at the Technical University of Munich where she investigated the physical properties of cytoskeletal networks. In 2008 she joined the Nanobiophysics group at the University of Twente, the Netherlands as an assistant professor, in 2013 she became chair of the Nanobiophysics group-group.

Abstract:

The formation of α-synuclein (aS) amyloid aggregates, called Lewy bodies (LBs), is a hallmark of Parkinson’s disease (PD). The role of LBs in PD is however still unclear; they have been associated with both neuroprotection and toxicity. In an attempt to resolve this contradiction, we studied the aggregation of aS in cell model systems and in the test tube. 

We induced the formation of aS inclusions, using three different methods in SH-SY5Y cells and rat-derived primary neuronal cells. Using confocal and STED microscopy we observed method dependent differences in aS inclusion morphology, location and function. The aggregation of aS in functionally different compartments correlates with the toxicity of the induction method measured in viability assays. The most cytotoxic treatment largely correlates with the formation of proteasome associated juxta-nuclear inclusions. Cytosolic deposits formed by less toxic methods are not associated with the proteasome and are more prevalent.

The formation of inclusions is however not necessarily an active process governed by the cells biochemical machinery. In the test tube, we observed that, under physiological salt conditions aS spontaneously self-assembles into micrometer-sized suprafibrillar aggregates (SFAs) that are reminiscent of LBs. The assembly of these SFA is very sensitive to physicochemical conditions such as ionic strength. This sensitivity leads to the formation of anisotropic SFAs in vitro and may also be the cause of the anisotropy observed in their in vivo counterparts. The onset of disease may trigger changes in the physicochemical conditions within the cell which are reflected in the architecture of LBs.

Biography:

Kristina Djinovic Carugo has completed her PhD at the age of 29 years from Ljubljana University and postdoctoral studies from University of Pavia and EMBL-Heidelberg. She is the head of the  Department of Structural and Computational Biology at the University of Vienna, and director of Laura Bassi Center for Optimised Structural Studies. The main area of her research is structural biology of actin based cystoskeleton with focus on striated muscle Z-disk. She uses an integrative structural biology approach, combining high resolution studies with complementary lower resolution biophysical and biochemical approaches. He has published more than 100 papers in international peer reviewed journals and is serving as a member of scientific advisory boards of repute.

Abstract:

The sarcomere is the minimal contractile unit in the cardiac and skeletal muscle, where actin and myosin filaments slide past each other to generate tension. This molecular machinery is supported by a subset of highly organised cytoskeletal proteins that fulfil architectural, mechanical and signalling functions, including the giant proteins titin, obscurin and nebulin as well as the cross-linking proteins α-actinin and myomesin.

The cross-linking of actin and myosin at the boundaries of their filamentous structures is essential for the muscle integrity and function. In the Z-disks – the lateral boundaries of the sarcomere machinery – the protein α-actinin-2 cross-links antiparallel actin filaments from adjacent sarcomeres, and additionally serves as a binding platform for a number of other Z-disk proteins. In striated muscle cells, the Z-disk represents a highly organized three-dimensional assembly containing a large directory of proteins orchestrated in a multi-protein complex centered on its major component α-actinin, with still poorly understood hierarchy and three-dimensional interaction map. On the way to elucidate the molecular structural architecture of the Z-disk, the hierarchy of its assembly and structure-function relationships, we are studying binary and higher order sub-complexes of α-actinin using biophysical, structural and cell biological approaches.

Here we will present recent data on interaction of muscle α-actinin and filamin C with an adaptor proteins ZASP, myotilin and FATZ-1, forming a fuzzy complex with the latter, and discuss findings in view of muscle Z-disk architecture and assembly.

Biography:

Clifford Lingwood completed his PhD at the University of London in1974, and postdoctoral studies at the Universities of Washington and Toronto.  He has been a full professor at the University of Toronto since 1997 and is a senior scientist within the Molecular Medicine program, Research Institute, Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto Dr Lingwood’s research program concerns the biochemistry, chemistry, metabolism and function of glycosphingolipids with a view to the therapy of diseases in which they are involved.  He has published more than 200 papers in reputed journals.

Abstract:

Glycosphingolipids (GSLs) and cholesterol accumulate in membrane lipid rafts and play a central role in these foci of signal transduction. However within the GSL/cholesterol complex, an H-bond network is formed which alters the conformation of the GSL carbohydrate from a membrane perpendicular, to a membrane parallel format. This latter GSL conformation is largely unavailable for exogenous ligand binding-“invisible GSLs”.

Due to the increased cholesterol levels typical of cancer cells, we studied the prevalence of cholesterol-masked GSLs in human primary tumour biopsies (prostate, neuroblastoma, colon, breast, testicular, pheochromocytoma, ovarian and ganglioneuroma). We found that such ‘invisible’ GSLs were widely present in these tumour serial cryosections, e.g SSEA1, SSEA3, SSEA4, globoH and Gb3. We propose that such masking can prevent immunosurveillance of tumour–associated GSL antigens and thereby compromise natural tumour immunity to block progression. Moreover, anti GSL Mabs in development or clinical use for treating cancer (F77 for prostate and Unituxin-antiGD2 for pediatric neuroblastoma) were highly subject to such masking, and prior tumour cholesterol extraction with b-methylcyclodextrin, resulted in a remarkable increase in antiGSL tumour staining. This suggests that tumour cholesterol depletion would increase the antineoplastic activity of these therapeutic Mabs.

We also found that the order in which the binding ligands were added was of major significance. Prior Gb3 binding promoted ligand-cholesterol binding and vice versa. This provides the means for amplification and/or diversification of GSL-dependent signal transduction and thus is the first example of a native cell based membrane “transistor”.

  • Integrative Biology
Location: Waterfront 1

Chair

Bernard S Lopez

Institut Gustave Roussy, France

Speaker
Biography:

Bernard Lopez has completed his PhD at the age of 27 years from University of Lyon I and postdoctoral studies from Curie Institute (Paris), followed by a sabbatical from and Brandeis university (Waltham, Ms, USA). He is first class research director at CNRS (French state organisation for basic research). He has published more than 70 papers in reputed journals and has been serving as a scientific advisor of many organizations.

Abstract:

Replication stress is an endogenous stress that can be at the origin of senescence or tumour initiation. Replication stress can generates mitosis defects including anaphases bridges, expression of common fragile sites, extra-centrosomes and multipolar segregations. All these troubles generate uneven chromosome segregation and aneuploidy. This suggests that DNA damages arising from replication should reach mitosis. To test this hypothesis wen checked the accumulation of foci of RPA, which recognize single-stranded DNA, in cells in late G2, following a low or endogenous replication stress. Cells treated with low doses of hydroxyurea (HU, 10 µM) or untreated cells defective for homologous recombination (HR); which plays a pivotal role in the resumption of arrested replication forks, both experience an increase in the number of RPA foci, in late G2 phase. These foci do not colocalise with progressing replication forks completing replication, and thus should correspond to spontaneous replication fork arrest. ChIP-seq analysis with RPA antibodies in G2 phase, reveals two types of enrichment efficiency. Highly enriched sequences (more than 400) do not contained fragile sites and correspond to early replicating sequences. Interestingly many of these sequences correspond to transcription starting sites (TSS), revealing thus the conflict between replication and transcription. Among the genes involved a set of 10 genes involved in DNA damage response and cell cycle checkpoint have been selected and specific chromatin-IP experiment confirmed the binding of RPA after HU. Therefore promoters of genes controlling genome stability are hot spots of endogenous/low replication stress favouring damaged cells to escape to cell surveillance. Therefore should amplify genome instability.

Nabieh Ayoub

Technion ‐ Israel Institute of Technology, Israel

Title: NELF‐E is recruited to DNA double‐strand break sites to promote transcriptional repression and repair

Time : 12:15-12:40

Speaker
Biography:

Nabieh Ayoub began his scientific career at the Hebrew University (1989-1993) where he received a BSc in Biology. He has done his Master’s degree with distinction in Genetics (1994-1996) studying chromosome X inactivation. Supported by the Levy Eshkool Fellowship from the Israeli Ministry of Science, he pursued his PhD in the study of heterochromatic gene regulation under the supervision of Professor Amikam Cohen at Hadassah Medical School, the Hebrew University (1997-2002). He is an Assistant Professor at the Israel Institute of Technology – Technion. In 2016, he was prompted to the degree of Associate Professor with tenure.

Abstract:

Double-strand breaks (DSBs) trigger rapid and transient transcription pause to prevent collisions between repair and transcription machineries at damage sites. Little is known about the mechanisms that ensure transcription block after DNA damage. Here we reveal a novel role of the negative elongation factor, NELF, in blocking transcription activity nearby DSBs. We show that NELF-E and NELF-A are rapidly recruited to DSB sites. Furthermore, NELF-E recruitment and its repressive activity are both required for switching off transcription at DSBs. Remarkably, using I-Sce-I endonuclease and CRISPR-Cas9 systems, we observed that NELF-E is preferentially recruited, in a PARP1-dependent manner, to DSBs induced upstream transcriptionally active rather than inactive genes. Moreover, the presence of RNA polymerase II is a prerequisite for the preferential recruitment of NELF-E to DNA breakage sites. Additionally, we demonstrate that NELF-E is required for intact repair of DSBs. Altogether, our data identified NELF complex as a new component in the DNA damage response.

Peleg Hasson

Technion ‐ Israel Institute of Technology, Israel

Title: Localized LoxL3-dependent fibronectin oxidation regulates myofiber stretch and integrin-mediated adhesion

Time : 12:40-13:05

Speaker
Biography:

Peleg Hasson has completed his PhD at the age of 33 years from the Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel University and continued his postdoctoral studies at the MRC-National Institute of Medical Research, London. He has started his own lab at the Technion's Rappaport Faculty of Medicine in 2010.

Abstract:

For muscles to function, myofibers have to stretch and anchor at the myotendinous junction (MTJ), a region rich in extracellular matrix (ECM). Integrin signaling is required for MTJ formation, and mutations affecting the cascade lead to muscular dystrophies in mice and humans. Underlying mechanisms for integrin activation at the MTJ and ECM modifications regulating its signaling are unclear. We show that lysyl oxidase-like 3 (LoxL3) is a key regulator of integrin signaling that ensures localized control of the cascade. In LoxL3 mutants, myofibers anchor prematurely or overshoot to adjacent somites, and are loose and lack tension. We find that LoxL3 complexes with and directly oxidizes Fibronectin (FN), an ECM scaffold protein and integrin ligand enriched at the MTJ. We identify a mechanism whereby localized LoxL3 secretion from myofiber termini oxidizes FN, promoting FN polymerization thus priming it for integrin activation at the tips of myofibers and ensuring correct positioning and anchoring of myofibers along the MTJ.

Tommer Ravid

The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel

Title: Mapping the landscape of a eukaryotic degronome

Time : 14:00-14:25

Speaker
Biography:

Professor Ravid has completed his PhD from Tel Avi University in 2001 and postdoctoral studies from University of California, Davis, School of Medicine and fom Yale University, School of Medicine. He is faculty member at the Department of Biological Chemisty, Faculty of Life Sciences, the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, since 2007. His Lab research focuses  on the mechanisms underlying protein quality control and degradation by the ubiquitin-proteasome system, using the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae as a model organism.

Abstract:

The ubiquitin-proteasome system (UPS) for protein degradation has been under intensive study, and yet, we have only partial understanding of mechanisms by which proteins are selected to be targeted for proteolysis. One of the obstacles in studying these recognition pathways is the limited repertoire of known degradation signals (degrons). To better understand what determines the susceptibility of intracellular proteins to degradation by the UPS, we developed an unbiased method for large-scale identification of eukaryotic degrons. Using a reporter-based high-throughput competition assay, followed by deep sequencing, we measured a degradation potency index for thousands of native polypeptides in a single experiment. We further used this method to identify protein quality control (PQC)-specific and compartment-specific degrons. Our method provides an unprecedented insight into the yeast degrome, and it can readily be modified to study protein degradation signals and pathways in other organisms and in various settings.

Biography:

Yangyang Yu is professor at center for diabetes, obesity and metabolism in department of physiology, Shenzhen University Health Science Center, Shenzhen, Guangdong province, China.

Abstract:

Toll-like receptors (TLRs) expressed on mast cells are essential for effective host defense against a wide variety of pathogens. Previous studies have demonstrated that TLR2 agonists Pam3CSK4 and PGN both stimulated IL-8 release in human mast cells. To determine the molecular basis for this phenomenon, we utilized a human mast cell line LAD2 cells. We found that only release of IL-8 stimulated by Pam3CSK4 was TLR2-mediated, which was confirmed by specific TLR2 shRNA. Heterotrimeric G proteins have been previously implicated in TLRs signaling in macrophages and monocytes. In the current study, we showed that PamCSK4 induced the activation of MAPKs, NF-κB, PI3K-Akt and Ca2+-calcineurin-NFAT signaling cascades in LAD2 cells. Go proteins were required for the activation of MAPKs and NF-κB in TLR2 stimulated LAD2 cells. Therefore, genetic depletion of Gαo proteins also leaded to reduction of IL-8 release in LAD2 cells. Taken together, the data presented here suggest that TLR2 activation in human mast cells promotes the release of inflammatory mediators via distinct signaling pathways that partially depends on Go protein action.

Speaker
Biography:

Rinat Arbel-Goren completed her PhD in 2002 in Life Sciences at the Department of Molecular Biology of the Cell, Weizmann Institute of Science Rehovot, Israel, under Prof. Y. Zick. From 2002-2005, she carried out a Postdoc in the Department of Immunology, under Prof Y. Reisner. Since 2006 she is a Staff Scientist in the Department of Physics of Complex Systems, Weizmann Institute of Science, in the lab of Prof. J. Stavans. In addition to the above, her current research topics include:Effects of post-transcriptional regulation by small-RNAs on phenotypic variability; Effects of phenotypic variability during development in cyanobacteria.

Abstract:

During horizontal gene transfer processes, imported exogenous DNA sequences integrate at unique sites in the host bacterial genome, driving genetic diversity. One example is viral infection, which is known to allow the acquisition of pathogenic traits.After entering an Escherichia coli cell, the ∼5x104-long bacteriophage λ DNA must locate a unique site among ∼5x106 possible sites on the bacterial genome, with high efficiency and within physiological times, to integrate and establish lysogeny. What are the mechanisms that allow it to do it?We followed the targeting process in individual live E. coli cells in real-time, by marking fluorescently both the phage DNA after entry into the host, and a chromosomal sequence near the integration site. Surprisingly, we found that λ DNA does not carry out an active search. Instead, it remains confined near its entry point into the cell following infection, preferentially at the poles, where it undergoes limited diffusion. The encounter between the 15 bp-long target sequence on the chromosome and the recombination site on the viral genome is facilitated by thedirected motion of bacterial DNA generated during chromosome replication and segregation.A different mechanism of target location is observed during conjugation betweenB. subtilis cells:  integrating conjugating elements imported from donor cells carry out anomalous diffusion within host cellsin their search for their target insertion sites, which move concomitantly, driven by replication of the host genome. These finding demonstrate that there are different solutions to the target location problemduring horizontal gene transfer processes.

Peter Waziri

University of Putra, Malaysia

Title: The potential use of clausenidin in the treatment of liver cancer

Time : 15:15-15:40

Speaker
Biography:

Peter Waziri completed his MSc at University of Nottingham in 2013. He is currently a PhD student in Medicinal Chemistry at University of Putra, Malaysia. In the last two years, he worked on “The isolation of bioactive components in plants for use in cancer therapy”.

Abstract:

Liver cancer is a leading cause of death in the world with an increasing burden in Asia and sub-Saharan Africa. The therapeutic options for liver cancers are inadequate and survival after diagnosis is very low. This situation actually creates the need for studies on natural products that can complement and provide suitable alternatives to the current therapeutic measures. In the current study, we used clausenidin isolated from Clausena excavata Burm. f. to treat liver cancer (hepG2) cells. The plant is a shrub used in Asian folk medicine to treat cancer patients locally but there is little or no scientific evidence supporting its therapeutic use. We evaluated the cytotoxicity of clausenidin as well as its effect on reactive oxygen species production in hepG2 cells. In addition, we carried out an ultra-structural investigation of the clausenidin-treated cells to identify potential mechanisms through which clausenidin induce cell death in hepG2 cells. Our results reveal that clausenidin induces cytotoxic effects in hepG2 cells in a dose dependent manner with significant increase in the production of reactive oxygen species. Cell death was found to have occurred via apoptotic and non-apoptotic routes as revealed by the results of DNA fragmentation analysis and transmission electron microscopy respectively. The present study lends credence to the use of Clausena excavata to treat cancer patients in Asia and demonstrates the potential of clausenidin in the biotherapy of liver cancer.

Jun Yao

Tsinghua University School of Life Sciences, China

Title: iPSC-based research of bipolar mania

Time : 15:40-16:00

Speaker
Biography:

Jun Yao completed his PhD at Pennsylvania State University, Department of Biology, USA in 2007. He is a Principal Investigator of School of Life Sciences at Tsinghua University, China. In recent years, he has published more than 10 papers in reputed journals.

Abstract:

Bipolar disorder (BD) is a complex neuropsychiatric disorder that is characterized by intermittent episodes of mania and depression; without treatment, 15% of patients commit suicide. Hence, BD has been ranked by the WHO as a top disorder of morbidity and lost productivity. Previous neuropathological studies have revealed a series of alterations in the brains of BD patients or animal models, such as reduced glial cell number in the patient prefrontal cortex, up-regulated activities of the PKA/PKC pathways, and changes in neurotransmission. However, the roles and causation of these changes in BD have been too complex to exactly determine the pathology of the disease. Furthermore, while some patients show remarkable improvement with lithium treatment, for yet unknown reasons, other patients are refractory to lithium treatment. Therefore, developing an accurate and powerful biological model for BD has been a challenge. The introduction of induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC) technology has provided a new approach. Here, we developed a human BD iPSC model and investigated the cellular phenotypes of hippocampal dentate gyrus-like neurons derived from patient iPSCs. Guided by RNA-seq expression profiling, we detected mitochondrial abnormalities in young BD neurons using mitochondrial assays and, using both patch clamp recording and somatic Ca2+ imaging, we observed hyperactive action potential (AP) firing. This hyperexcitability phenotype of young BD neurons was selectively reversed by lithium treatment only in neurons derived from the patients who also responded to lithium treatment. Therefore, hyperexcitability is one early endophenotype of BD, and our BD iPSC model may be useful for the development of new therapies and drugs aimed at clinical treatment of this disease.

Eleonora Braga

Institute of General Pathology and Pathophysiology, Russia

Title: Tumor suppressor miRNAs: Hypermethylation and novel potential targets in breast cancer
Speaker
Biography:

Braga E.A. has completed her PhD at the age of 28 at Lomonosov Moscow State University, Bioorganic Chemistry Department. She has taken a part in Russian Human Genome Project and HUGO. She was an Invited Principle Investigator at Karolinska Institute (Stockholm, Sweden, 1999-2000). She completed her full Dr. of Biology Sc. at Engelhardt Institute of Molecular Biology in 2007. She is a head of Laboratory of Pathogenomics and Transcriptomics at Institute of General Pathology and Pathophysiology, Moscow, Russia. She has published more than 70 papers in reputed Journals.

Abstract:

Epigenetic mechanisms including DNA methylation and interaction between miRNAs and mRNAs are the most dynamic mechanisms of genes deregulation in cancer. The aim of this study was to identify novel miRNAs, involved in down-regulation of some cancer-associated genes, and could be down-regulated itself by DNA methylation, in breast cancer (BC). We analyzed expression and methylation profiles of 20 tumor-suppressor miRNAs and 15 cancer-associated genes, which interactions were predicted by algorithms of miRWalk 2.0 database. Representative set of 58 paired (tumor/normal) BC samples; methylation-specific PCR, qPCR and the IBM SPSS Statistics Base 20 software package were used. We first observed hypermethylation of MIR-127, -132, -1258, -193a, and hypomethylation of MIR-191. Using qPCR, we established a strong correlation between promoter methylation and expression levels of 12 miRNA genes, confirming the functional importance of altered methylation patterns. The significant negative correlations were revealed between expression level alterations for the following pairs: CCND1 – miR-212-3p, -34a-5p, -34c-3p; BCL2 – miR-24-2-5p, -212-3p, -124-3p; BCL6 – miR-34a-5p, -24-2-5p. The results of transfection of MCF7 cell line with miR-124-3p duplex strengthened hypothesis on direct or indirect interaction of this miRNA with BCL2 mRNA. Thus, systemic role of hypermethylation in deregulation of miRNAs and its targets was shown, and novel potential interactions of 5 miRNAs with CCND1, BCL2, and BCL6, being involved in cell cycle regulation, apoptosis, EMT and metastasis, were suggested, that could be useful as missing chains in signaling pathways and potential targets in complex BC therapy. This work was financially supported by the Russian Science Foundation grant 14-15-00654.

  • Bioscience
Location:

Session Introduction

Sakae Tsuda

National Institute of Advanced Science and Technology, Japan

Title: A new type I antifreeze protein BpAFP undergoes oligomerization to bind to whole surface of an ice crystal

Time : 14:00-14:25

Speaker
Biography:

Sakae Tsuda has completed his PhD at Hokkaido University, Japan and Post-doctoral studies at University of Alberta (Canada). He did his research on Biomolecular NMR, which gave him the skills of biochemistry, biophysics and structural biology. He is a Chief Senior Researcher of National Institute of Advanced Science and Technology (AIST), Japan. His current research target is the antifreeze proteins, which have originally been explored from Japanese organisms in the last 15 years.

Abstract:

The general ice crystal is a polycrystalline state composed of numerous single ice nuclei, which undergo crystal growth and are combined together to form a larger ice block below 0°C. Antifreeze protein (AFP) has an ability to bind to a set of waters constructing an ice surface, and disturbs formation of the polycrystalline ice, since the AFP-adsorbed ice surfaces are inhibited their growth and integration. A hyperactive species of AFP that can bind to any set of the waters of the ice is extremely powerful in such function, compared with general AFPs that only bind to specific ice surfaces. Here, we discovered a new 40-residue antifreeze protein (AFP) from a right eye flounder barfin plaice (BpAFP), which uniquely showed two manners of ice binding at different concentrations. The BpAFP bound to prism and pyramidal surfaces of an ice crystal to shape it into hexagonal trapezohedron at the concentrations below 0.01 mg/mL, while underwent further binding to whole ice crystal surface including the basal planes at the concentrations above 0.01 mg/mL. In the latter, the ice crystal became smaller and lost their facets in keeping with the concentration, and finally changed into a tiny lemon-shaped morphology, as similarly observed for the known hyperactive AFPs. The basal plane binding further caused the bursting ice crystal growth normal to the c-axis, for which it detected 3.2°C of high thermal hysteresis activity. The BpAFP is an alanine-richest isoform of type I AFP composed of three tandem repeats of the 11-residue consensus sequence TX10 (where X is mostly alanine), which presumably constructs the monomeric -helical structure so as to encompass an extremely continuous alanine-assembled surface. These remarkable properties distinguish BpAFP from all the known macromolecules, thereby offering an epoch to advance our understanding of ice-protein interaction.

Speaker
Biography:

Marta Leonor Marulanda is a Biologist with a PhD degree in Agricultural Sciences from Universidad Agraria de La Habana (Cuba), with over 25 years of experience as main Researcher in Plant Biotechnology and 20 years of experience as Professor of Biotechnology- and biology-related courses at undergraduate and graduate levels at different universities in Colombia’s Coffee Belt. She is an Author and Co-author of more than 20 articles published in national and international journals. Currently, she is responsible for seven research projects conducted under different collaborative agreements, mainly with the Colombian Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development.

Abstract:

In Colombia, the Andean blackberry (Rubus glaucus Benth) is one of the products with the greatest development potential in the Colombian Andes. It has a share of 0.7% in cultivated area and 0.4% in national production of permanent crops; its annual growth rate is 8.8% in production and 7.8% in area. Anthracnose caused by several species of Colletotrichum fungi is considered a major Andean blackberry pathogen (Rubus glaucus) in Colombia. Plants with fungal tolerance are promising material for growers to avoid pest control through fungicides, which are also detrimental to the environment. By using RNA-seq in R. glaucus tolerant and susceptible accessions to Colletotrichum a large number of differentially expressed genes (DEGs) in tolerant R. glaucus material were identified. A total of 44,660 genes were up-regulated in R. glaucus tolerant material challenged with Colletotrichum when compared to susceptible material also inoculated with the fungus. The largest numbers of identified up-regulated genes were classified as having catalytic and binding activities. In addition over 2,000 SNPs and 4,799 SSR markers that are potential candidates to distinguish between tolerant and susceptible material were also determined. In order to have significant advances in the characterization and selection processes, SSR and SNP markers were evaluated.

Oara Neumann

Rice University Applied Physics, USA

Title: Enhancing T1 MRI contrast using gadolinium(III) in a multilayer nanoparticle

Time : 14:50-15:15

Speaker
Biography:

Oara Neumann completed her MS at Weizmann Institute of Science, Israel; PhD at Rice University and; Post-doctoral studies at Rice University. She is a Scientist in Naomi Halas Group at Rice University. She has published more than 25 papers in reputed journals

Abstract:

Multifunctional plasmonic nanostructures have enormous potential in the treatment of solid tumors; however, tracking particles with drug cargo and triggering the release of the cargo in mapped tumors is still impossible. To overcome this challenge, we have developed an MRI active nanostructure called Gd-nanomatryoshka (Gd-NM). This new structure is composed of a 50 nm Au core surrounded by a Gd(III)-DOTA chelate doped SiO2 inner-shell and an outer Au shell. The experimental results demonstrates an enhanced T1 relaxation (r1~24 mM-1 s-1 at 4.7 T) compared to the clinical Gd(III)-DOTA chelating agents (r1~4 mM-1 s-1). This multifunctional nanosystem increases MRI sensitivity by concentrating Gd(III) ions into the Gd-NMs, reduces the potential toxicity of Gd(III) ions by preventing their release in vivo through the outer Au shell protection, and the terminal gold layer surface can then be functionalized to increase cellular uptake, circulation time, or thermal drug-release properties.

Svetlana A Limborska

Institute of Molecular Genetics, Russia

Title: Pharmacogenomics of peptide drugs

Time : 15:15-15:40

Speaker
Biography:

Svetlana A Limborska completed her Graduation in Biology department at Moscow State University in 1969. She completed her PhD in Molecular Biology and; Doctor of Science in Genetics. She is a Professor of Genetics at Institute of Molecular Genetics, Russian Academy of Sciences. Since 1983, she has been a Chair of Human Molecular Genetics Department of the same institute. She has got Russia State Prize award in 1996. She has published more than 300 papers in reputed journals and has been serving as an Editorial Board Member of Russian Journal of Genetics, Molecular Genetics, Microbiology and Virology, Medical Genetics, and Proceedings of Latvian Academy of Sciences.

Abstract:

The application of pharmacogenomics approaches has become an integral part in the drug development. This report will demonstrate the notable examples of using pharmacogenomics to clarify the mechanism of action of compounds based on natural regulatory peptides. Genome-wide transcriptome analysis was employed to search gene expression alterations under Semax and Selank impact. Semax has neuroprotective and nootropic effects without hormone action. Semax used for the treatment of cerebral ischemia, stroke, traumatic brain injuries, Parkinson’s, Alzheimer’s and other diseases. The study of Semax action on the transcriptome of rat brain cells under experimental ischemia conditions has identified large-scale changes in gene expression, including genes, which provide functioning of immune and vascular systems. Selank has anti-anxiety effect, normalizes the emotional state, and also has antiviral activity. Selank used in neurology, pediatrics and for the treatment of viral diseases. We revealed the change in mRNA level of many genes in the rat hippocampus after Selank administration including genes involved in neurotransmission. The transcriptome analysis of mouse spleen cells after Selank treatment revealed many genes changing their expression including genes of immune system. Thus, the transcriptome analysis showed important influence of regulatory peptide drugs on cellular metabolism that may determine their positive effect on the treatment of the relevant diseases.

Juan Cevallos-Cevallos

Centro de Investigaciones Biotecnologicas del Ecuador, Ecuador

Title: Combined metagenomics and meta-metabolomics analyses for cacao fermentation characterization

Time : 15:40- 16:05

Biography:

Juan Cevallos-Cevallos completed his PhD in Food Science at University of Florida where he also carried out Post-doctoral studies in Food and Plant Microbiology. He is the Head of Microbiology and Plant Pathology laboratory at ESPOL University. He is a Scientist with more than 25 papers in reputed peer-reviewed journals and has been serving as an Editorial Board Member of important journals.

Abstract:

Cacao is the raw material of chocolate—one of the most consumed food worldwide and the spontaneous fermentation of cacao is a critical step in the making of chocolate. Despite the importance of cacao fermentation, no combined metagenomic and meta-metabolomics characterization of this process can be found in the literature. Cacao samples form three farms in Ecuador—the top fine-flavor cacao producer in the world—was taken after 0, 24, 48, 72, and 120 hours of fermentation. Culture-dependent microbial characterization, amplicon-based illumina sequencing, and GC-MS metabolite profiling were carried out on each sample. Productions of aroma compounds were then related to specific microorganisms through inoculation into sterile cacao beans. A total of 586 different microbial species were detected by NGS but only 42 were isolated. Correlation with metabolomics data showed that important aroma compounds were produced at each sampling time including ethanol by yeasts, 2, 3 butanediol by Lactobacillus nagelii; benzeneethanol by Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Acetobacter pasteurianus, Acetobacter ghanensis, and Lactobacillus nagelii; acetic acid by Acetobacter pasteurianus and Acetobacter ghanensis; benzaldehyde and phenylvinylacetylene by Bacillus subtilis. Interestingly, various microorganisms were related to the comsumption of important volatile compounds including benzaldehyde, acetophenone, and acetaldehyde by Lactobacillus nagelii, Acetobacter syzygii, and Acetobacter pasteurianus among others. The amount of each aroma compound was enhanced five folds or more by direct inoculation of the fermenting beans. Results show evidence of the importance of combined metagenomics and meta-metabolomics for characterizing the spontaneous fermentation of foods.

Speaker
Biography:

Maria Gabriela Mariduena-Zavala is an Agricultural Engineer from Ecuador with a Master's degree in Biotechnology. She has been involved in Agricultural Research and carried out various studies in the Phytopathology Department at Espol University in Guayaquil, Ecuador. Her research has been directed towards the use of omics tools for the characterization of pathogenic fungi from the main crops in Ecuador. Among her studies, the morphological and genetic characterizations of Moniliophthora species from cocoa crops in Ecuador as well as the investigation of metabolomics profiles of isolates resistant to fungicides including Mycosphaerella fijiensis and Phytophthora infestans are noteworthy. Her current studies focus on “The use of metabolomics and metagenomics techniques for understanding of the behavior of fungal communities”.

Abstract:

Potato production is continuously being threatened by Phytophthora infestans, the most important potato pathogen worldwide. Applications of phenylamide fungicides including metalaxyl have been used to control this pathogen, causing the development of fungicide resistance in P. infestans. Despite the importance of the disease, no metabolomics-based characterization of fungicide resistance development in P. infestans has been reported. Isolates of P. infestans were obtained from the most important potato production areas in Ecuador. The resistance of Phytophthora infestans isolates to metalaxyl was evaluated in vitro and the GC-MS metabolite profile of all isolates was assessed at 0, 0.5 and 100 mg/L of metalaxyl. All metabolites were mapped to potential pathways using KEGG pathway mapping with Pseudocercospora fijiensis as the model organism. Only 30% of the isolates tested were sensitive to the low doses of metalaxyl and a total of 49 metabolites were differentially expressed in resistant isolates growing in the presence of the fungicide. Metabolites such as hexadecanoic and octadecanoic acids; glucose, fructose, proline, valine, butanedioic and propionic acids were overexpressed in resistant isolates. Potential resistance-related metabolic pathways were mostly involved in the regulation of the pathogen’s membrane fluidity and included the fatty acid biosynthesis as well as the glycerophospholipid metabolism pathways. No metalaxyl residues were found in resistant isolates, suggesting that the fungicide was not able to penetrate the membranes.

Speaker
Biography:

Natalia Bakhtina has been a PhD candidate in the Department of Microsystems Engineering of the University of Freiburg, Germany under the supervision of Jan G. Korvink since 2012. The outcome of her investigations has resulted in several publications in journals with quality control. She was awarded by the very prestigious Outstanding Student Paper Award at IEEE MEMS conference in 2015 (Estoril, Portugal) and SPIE3D Printing Best Paper Award at SPIE Photonics West in 2016 (San Francisco, USA).

Abstract:

The combination of light-sensitive non-conductive photoresist, as a host network, with an ionic liquid brings superior advantages in terms of material characteristics [1−4]. Compatibility with the advanced two-photon (2-PP) nanolithography yields the opportunity to produce high-resolution (down to 150 nm) conductive structures in a single-step process and opens up a variety of potential applications. For example, real-time monitoring the motility of small model organisms, such as Caenorhabditiselegans, remains a key challenge for in situ manipulation and stimulation. Tracking of this motile microorganisms provides an efficient method of investigating a variety of biological processes through the miniaturization and functional integration of bioanalytical devices. The approach to this challenge includes the integration of electrodes, fabricated by 2-PP nanolithography, into a microfluidic platform. Transparency and conductivity of the presented material in combination with highly standardized electrodes inside microfluidic channels provides a simple means of creating electrofluidic chips to flexibly control the movement of C. elegansin a sensitive and reproducible manner without blocking optical visibility. As a result, performance of numerous experiments, including electrochemical impedance spectroscopy and microscopy-based imaging, in parallel on the same chip with fewer reagents, improved sensitivity and increased resolution has become possible. This will most certainly bring about more precise quantitative and qualitative in vivo analyses for novel true 3D applications in the near future.

  1. Bakhtinaet al., patent DE 10 2014 016 802.6
  2. Bakhtinaet al., Proc. IEEE MEMS 2015, pp. 97 – 101
  3. Bakhtinaet al., Adv. Func. Mat. 2015, 25, 1683 – 1693
  4. Bakhtinaet al., Proc. SPIE Photonics West 2016, ID 9738-10, 1 – 10