The Geisel School of Medicine Events Calendar
The Geisel School of Medicine Events - ( Subscribe )
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Discovery Science Seminar Series
Monday, April 29, 2024
12:00pm - 1:00pm
Kellogg 200
“Super-sized cells and not-so-silent codons in organ development”
Don Fox, PhD
Professor of Pharmacology & Cancer Biology
Co-Director of the Regeneration Center
Duke University
Host: Jamie Moseley, PhD
Any questions please email Jenni.Hinsley@dartmouth.edu or Amy.L.Potter@dartmouth.edu.
Monday, April 29, 2024
12:00pm - 1:00pm
Kellogg 200
“Super-sized cells and not-so-silent codons in organ development”
Don Fox, PhD
Professor of Pharmacology & Cancer Biology
Co-Director of the Regeneration Center
Duke University
Host: Jamie Moseley, PhD
Any questions please email Jenni.Hinsley@dartmouth.edu or Amy.L.Potter@dartmouth.edu.
Graduate Program in Biochemistry & Cell Biology
Ph.D. Thesis Presentation
Muhammad Abubakar Khan
Friday May 3, 2024
10:00 AM ET
In-Person: Chilcott Auditorium
"Understanding the non-canonical regulation of SREBP in Aspergillus fumigatus"
Research Advisors: Dean Madden, PhD
If you would like to receive the link and password for this Zoom meeting, please email Jenni.Hinsley@dartmouth.edu
Ph.D. Thesis Presentation
Muhammad Abubakar Khan
Friday May 3, 2024
10:00 AM ET
In-Person: Chilcott Auditorium
"Understanding the non-canonical regulation of SREBP in Aspergillus fumigatus"
Research Advisors: Dean Madden, PhD
If you would like to receive the link and password for this Zoom meeting, please email Jenni.Hinsley@dartmouth.edu
The Department of Biomedical Data Science at Geisel invites you to attend a special seminar with Peter Szabo, PhD, Assistant Professor of Microbiology and Immunology, Columbia University Irving Medical Center, on Monday, April 29 from 12:15-1:15pm at DHMC, Auditorium H (or via Zoom).
Talk title: “Transcriptional programs of tissue immunity across the human lifespan”
Host: Rob Frost, PhD
Location: In-person at DHMC, Auditorium H or via Zoom (no registration required)
Please see link below for more details.
Zoom meeting ID: 503 779 5102
Zoom passcode: 6501974
URL: https://dartmouth.zoom.us/j/5037795102
Phone (if needed for audio only, or to join by phone only): 669-900-6833
Presentation Summary
The majority of immune cells throughout the human body are localized in lymphoid and mucosal tissues. For a greater understanding of immune cell compartmentalization and function in tissues, collaborations with organ procurement networks facilitate the study of physiologically healthy tissues from human organ donors. The talk will focus on two studies utilizing these unique tissue resources in conjunction with systems immunology approaches to dissect the transcriptional states of tissue immune cells and how they evolve over age. The first study will discuss the differences in transcriptional programming between infant and adult tissue T cells, while the second study will focus on tissue-directed signatures of immune cell aging in a large multimodal tissue immune cell atlas.
Biography
Dr. Peter Szabo received his PhD in Microbiology and Immunology from Western University in Ontario, Canada and trained with Dr. Donna Farber in human immunology at the Columbia University Irving Medical Center in New York as a postdoctoral fellow. He is currently an Assistant Professor in the Department of Microbiology & Immunology at the Columbia University Medical Center and a member of the Human Tissue Immunity and Disease Initiative in collaboration with the laboratory of Dr. Farber. His research interests include using single cell technologies to dissect pathways for the development and function of resident immune cells in human tissues.
Talk title: “Transcriptional programs of tissue immunity across the human lifespan”
Host: Rob Frost, PhD
Location: In-person at DHMC, Auditorium H or via Zoom (no registration required)
Please see link below for more details.
Zoom meeting ID: 503 779 5102
Zoom passcode: 6501974
URL: https://dartmouth.zoom.us/j/5037795102
Phone (if needed for audio only, or to join by phone only): 669-900-6833
Presentation Summary
The majority of immune cells throughout the human body are localized in lymphoid and mucosal tissues. For a greater understanding of immune cell compartmentalization and function in tissues, collaborations with organ procurement networks facilitate the study of physiologically healthy tissues from human organ donors. The talk will focus on two studies utilizing these unique tissue resources in conjunction with systems immunology approaches to dissect the transcriptional states of tissue immune cells and how they evolve over age. The first study will discuss the differences in transcriptional programming between infant and adult tissue T cells, while the second study will focus on tissue-directed signatures of immune cell aging in a large multimodal tissue immune cell atlas.
Biography
Dr. Peter Szabo received his PhD in Microbiology and Immunology from Western University in Ontario, Canada and trained with Dr. Donna Farber in human immunology at the Columbia University Irving Medical Center in New York as a postdoctoral fellow. He is currently an Assistant Professor in the Department of Microbiology & Immunology at the Columbia University Medical Center and a member of the Human Tissue Immunity and Disease Initiative in collaboration with the laboratory of Dr. Farber. His research interests include using single cell technologies to dissect pathways for the development and function of resident immune cells in human tissues.
Dartmouth Healthcare Foundations' Eric Eichler ’57 Foundations in Medicine & Humanities Seminar
Journaling the Pandemic: What 25,000+ Journal Entries Can Tell Us about the COVID-19 Pandemic – and Ourselves with guest speakers: Sarah Willen, PhD, MPH and Katherine A. Mason, PhD.
In this conversation, medical anthropologists Sarah Willen (University of Connecticut) and Katherine Mason (Brown University) will introduce the Pandemic Journaling Project (PJP), a combined journaling platform and research study they co-created to provide ordinary people around the world a chance to chronicle their pandemic experiences using words, audio, and images. Since 2020, over 1,800 people have participated in PJP, creating over 27,000 individual journal entries. Not only does PJP provide a powerful window onto the disparate impact of COVID around the globe, but its logic of “archival activism” and method of “grassroots collaborative ethnography” show how innovative, public-facing research strategies can create new opportunities for reflection, dialogue, and therapeutic innovation.
Join Dartmouth’s Professor Elizabeth Carpenter-Song and Dr. Manish K. Mishra in conversation with our guest speakers.
Advanced registration required: dartgo.org/e57may24
Journaling the Pandemic: What 25,000+ Journal Entries Can Tell Us about the COVID-19 Pandemic – and Ourselves with guest speakers: Sarah Willen, PhD, MPH and Katherine A. Mason, PhD.
In this conversation, medical anthropologists Sarah Willen (University of Connecticut) and Katherine Mason (Brown University) will introduce the Pandemic Journaling Project (PJP), a combined journaling platform and research study they co-created to provide ordinary people around the world a chance to chronicle their pandemic experiences using words, audio, and images. Since 2020, over 1,800 people have participated in PJP, creating over 27,000 individual journal entries. Not only does PJP provide a powerful window onto the disparate impact of COVID around the globe, but its logic of “archival activism” and method of “grassroots collaborative ethnography” show how innovative, public-facing research strategies can create new opportunities for reflection, dialogue, and therapeutic innovation.
Join Dartmouth’s Professor Elizabeth Carpenter-Song and Dr. Manish K. Mishra in conversation with our guest speakers.
Advanced registration required: dartgo.org/e57may24