http://webinar.sciencemag.org/webinar/archive/visualizing-cell-signaling
Wednesday, April 16, 2014
12:00 pm ET
06:23:55 Days Hrs Mins
During the webinar, viewers will:
- Learn about current state-of-the-art ion signaling methodologies
- Discover what recent advances have been made in technologies for tracking ion changes, particularly calcium signaling
- Hear how experts in the field are applying these new technologies in the lab today
- Have the opportunity to ask questions of the expert panel live!
Speaker Bios
Mark Hollywood, Ph.D.
Dundalk Institute of Technology
Dundalk, Ireland
Dundalk, Ireland
Dr.
Hollywood undertook his Ph.D. at Queens University in Belfast, Ireland
on the innervation of sheep mesenteric lymphatics. Following graduation
in 1994, he commenced postdoctoral training in the Smooth Muscle Group
and subsequently was offered a lecturer position in the Department of
Physiology in 1995 and a senior lecturer post in 2001. In 2005, Dr.
Hollywood together with his colleagues from the Smooth Muscle Group were
recruited by Dundalk Institute of Technology to set up the Smooth
Muscle Research Centre in Ireland, where he is currently a principal
investigator. Dr. Hollywood’s research interests are focused on (1)
developing novel ion channel modulators to treat overactive bladder and
(2) examining the mechanisms underlying spontaneous activity in urethral
pacemaker cells and how they modulate the bulk smooth muscle. His
laboratory is currently developing a combined patch clamp/confocal
microscopy system that will allow simultaneous imaging of whole-cell
Ca2+ at frame rates in excess of 200 frames per second using
back-illuminated EMCCD cameras, and enable correlation of this data to
the resultant electrical activity observed in isolated urethral
pacemaker cells.
C. Peter Bengtson, Ph.D.
University of Heidelberg
Heidelberg, Germany
Heidelberg, Germany
Dr.
Bengtson has a Ph.D. in neurophysiology from the Department of
Physiology and Pharmacology at the University of Queensland, Australia.
He specializes in both patch clamp electrophysiology and wide-field
microscopy from neurons in brain slices or dissociated cultures. He is
currently a senior postdoctoral fellow in the Department of Neurobiology
in the Interdisciplinary Center for Neuroscience (IZN) at Heidelberg
University where he has worked for over a decade in the laboratory of
Professor Hilmar Bading, primarily investigating the calcium signals and
molecular mechanisms mediating long-term plasticity and memory.
Colin Coates, Ph.D.
Andor Technology
Belfast, Ireland
Belfast, Ireland
Dr.
Coates holds a first-class degree in chemistry, with a postgraduate
degree and postdoctoral research training from Queen’s University
Belfast in Ireland, focusing primarily on time-resolved laser
spectroscopic analysis of photophysical mechanisms. Dr. Coates also has
experience in leading an industrial research and development team that
was involved in developing novel DNA microarray technologies. Dr. Coates
maintains overall product management responsibility for Andor's
research and OEM camera/spectrograph business, encompassing imaging,
spectroscopy, time-resolved, and X-ray product/market segments.
Moderator: Sean Sanders, Ph.D.
Science/AAAS
Washington, DC
Washington, DC
Dr.
Sanders did his undergraduate training at the University of Cape Town,
South Africa, and his Ph.D. at the University of Cambridge, UK,
supported by the Wellcome Trust. Following postdoctoral training at the
National Institutes of Health and Georgetown University, Dr. Sanders
joined TranXenoGen, a startup biotechnology company in Massachusetts
working on avian transgenics. Pursuing his parallel passion for writing
and editing, Dr. Sanders joined BioTechniques as an editor, before
joining Science/AAAS in 2006. Currently Dr. Sanders is the Editor for Custom Publishing for the journal Science and Program Director for Outreach.
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