QCBio Research Seminar: Friedrich Simmel, Department of Bioscience, School of Natural Sciences, TU Munich, Germany

Boyer 159 611 Charles E. Young Dr. E., Los Angeles, CA, United States

TITLE: "Electric actuation of DNA-based molecular machines.” ABSTRACT: A wide range of machine-like molecular assemblies have been generated over the past years. Most of them have been driven (or controlled) by DNA hybridization, utilization of buffer changes, or using chemical modifications such as photoswitches. A more recently explored strategy is the use of electrical fields for the manipulation of DNA devices, which enables fast […]

QCBio/Center for Biological Physics: Gregoire Altan-Bonnet, Principal Investigator – Immunodynamics group Laboratory of Integrative Cancer Immunology NCI, NIH, Bethesda MD

Boyer Hall 130

TITLE: “Stochasticity in cancer immunotherapies: identifying the T cell subset that sparks tumor eradication” ABSTRACT: We use an ex vivo model of tumor eradication to dissect the fundamental variability of clinical outcomes in cancer immunotherapies. We demonstrate that there exists an inherent stochastic variability in immune responses, based on the low abundance of hyper-responsive naïve T cells (so-called […]

QCBio Research Seminar: Gregoire Altan-Bonnet, Principal Investigator – Immunodynamics group Laboratory of Integrative Cancer Immunology NCI, NIH, Bethesda MD

Boyer 159

TITLE: "Stochasticity in cancer immunotherapies: identifying the T cell subset that sparks tumor eradication" ABSTRACT: We use an ex vivo model of tumor eradication to dissect the fundamental variability of clinical outcomes in cancer immunotherapies. We demonstrate that there exists an inherent stochastic variability in immune responses, based on the low abundance of hyper-responsive naïve T cells (so-called Spark T cells) and feedback regulations […]

QCBio Research Seminar: Daniel Ha (Yang), Postdoc, Dept. Integrative Biology and Physiology

ZOOM CA, United States

TITLE: "“Cross-tissue multiomics studies reveal gutbrain interactions mediating the effect of Akkermansia muciniphila in counteracting fructose-induced obesity” ABSTRACT: The gut bacterium Akkermansia muciniphila (A. muciniphila) has been implicated in anti-obesity effects, but a systems level understanding of the molecular mechanisms is lacking. We carried out multiomics studies to investigate the molecular cascades mediating the anti-obesity effect of A. muciniphila in a fructoseinduced obesity mouse model. […]