The Microbial Sciences Initiative (MSI) at Harvard is an interdisciplinary science program aimed at a comprehensive understanding of the richest biological reservoir of the planet, the microbial world. On Saturday, April 17, 2010 MSI will host the 7th Annual Microbial Sciences Symposium, free and open to all. Eight prominent microbial scientists haling from a wide variety of disciplines are invited to talk about their research:
Ruth Ley - The human gut microbiome and obesity-related diseases
Michael Gilmore - Multidrug resistant enterococci: Evolution of leading hospital pathogens from commensals
Susan Golden - A circadian checkpoint on cell division in cyanobacteria
Christopher Marx - Microbial evolution and mobile genetic elements: adaptation and exchange
David Rudner - Cell-cell signaling through regulated proteolysis
Joanna Aizenberg - Bacteria in nanoforests
Susan Lindquist - Protein folding and environmental stress redraw the relationship between genotype and phenotype
Rob Knight - Diversity of the human microbiome across spatial and temporal scales
April 17, 2010
Radcliffe Gym - Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Studies
Harvard University
Cambridge, MA
Ruth Ley - The human gut microbiome and obesity-related diseases
Michael Gilmore - Multidrug resistant enterococci: Evolution of leading hospital pathogens from commensals
Susan Golden - A circadian checkpoint on cell division in cyanobacteria
Christopher Marx - Microbial evolution and mobile genetic elements: adaptation and exchange
David Rudner - Cell-cell signaling through regulated proteolysis
Joanna Aizenberg - Bacteria in nanoforests
Susan Lindquist - Protein folding and environmental stress redraw the relationship between genotype and phenotype
Rob Knight - Diversity of the human microbiome across spatial and temporal scales
April 17, 2010
Radcliffe Gym - Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Studies
Harvard University
Cambridge, MA
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