2002
SPRING MEETING
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will be held at MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY East Lansing, Michigan on Saturday, April 6.
Organizer: Dr. Tom Corner Assisted by faculty members and students of the Department of MICROBIOLOGY AND MOLECULAR GENETICS (MSU) |
The
Michigan ASM extends a special invitation to our colleagues in
CANADA
to join us for this one-day conference at Michigan
State University. |
About our Speakers . . .
Our ASM Foundation Speaker is DR. CLAIRE M. FRASER, Director and President of The Institute for Genomic Research. Dr. Fraser will address the topic: "Microbial Genome Sequencing". The completion of more than 20 microbial genome sequencing projects has provided a new starting point for understanding microbial biology, the interaction of pathogens and hosts, and the evolution of microbial species.
DR. CLAIRE FRASER is President and Director of The Institute for Genomic Research (TIGR) in Rockville, MD. She was formerly the Director of the Department of Microbial Genomics and Vice-President of Research at TIGR. TIGR is devoted to the sequencing and functional analysis of human, animal, plant, and microbial genomes to better understand the role that genes play in development, evolution, physiology and disease.
She earned her B.S. from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and her Ph.D. from State University of New York at Buffalo. Throughout much of her early career, Dr. Fraser's interests focused on the structure and function of G protein-coupled receptors. At TIGR, she was initially involved in studies to elucidate differences in gene expression in human tumors and matched normal tissues and in using a genomic-based approach to understand the molecular basis of tumor development. More recently, Dr. Fraser has been involved in whole genome sequence analysis of microbial genomes, leading the teams that sequenced the genomes of Mycoplasma genitalium, the smallest genome of any known free-living organism, the two spirochetes, Treponema pallidum and Borrelia burgdorferi, and two species of Chlamydia.
Dr. Fraser has over 130 publications
in leading scientific journals, is a reviewer for nine journals, has edited
two volumes in the Receptor Biochemistry and Methodology series
on neurotransmitter receptors, was previously an editor for the International
Encyclopedia of Pharmacology and Therapeutics, and is currently serving
on the Editorial Board of The Journal of Biological Chemistry and Comparative
and Microbial Genomics. She was selected as one of Maryland's
Top 100 Women in 1997 and was awarded the 1998 Computerworld Smithsonian
Award for Innovation in Information Technology and the 1999 IMAS Award
from The Institute for Mathematics and Advanced Supercomputing for outstanding
achievements in the field of algorithms and their computer implementation.
Dr. Richard Lenski,Hannah Professor, Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics at Michigan State University, will speak on: "DYNAMICS OF PHENOTYPIC AND GENOMIC EVOLUTION: A 20,000-GENERATION EXPERIMENT WITH ESCHERICHIA COLI".
DR. RICHARD LENSKI earned a BA from Oberlin College and his Ph.D. in 1982 from the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. He was an Associate Professor at University of California - Irvine before taking his current Hannah Professorship at MSU in 1991. Dr. Lenski is a Fellow of the American Academy of Microbiology and was a 1996 MacArthur Fellow. He has over 130 publications in a wide variety of prestigous journals, including PNAS, Nature, Evolution, Science, and Microbial Ecology.
From his web site, Rich tells
us: "I am interested in the ecological processes and genetic mechanisms
that cause evolutionary change. I study microorganisms in order to take
advantage of their rapid generations and large populations, which make
it feasible to test evolutionary hypotheses by direct
experimentation."
"In one project that has been
on-going for more than ten years, my students and I are
studying the adaptation and divergence
of bacterial populations, while they evolve in a
defined laboratory environment
for more than twenty-thousand generations. We seek to
understand the dynamics of these
evolutionary processes as well as the ecological,
physiological, and genetic changes
that are responsible for the substantial gains in fitness that
we observe."
"In other projects, we use bacteria
and the viruses and plasmids that infect them as model
systems for studying the ecology
and evolution of host-parasite interactions. Yet other
projects are concerned with the
spread of antibiotic resistance, the evolution of mutation
rates, the form and extent of
interactions among mutations, life in variable environments, and
costs and benefits of primitive
sociality in bacteria."
Dr. Thomas S. Whittam, Hannah Professor, Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics at Michigan State University and faculty member of the National Food Safety and Toxicology Center at MSU. Dr. Whittam will speak on "THE MOLECULAR EVOLUTION OF BACTERIAL PATHOGENS".
DR THOMAS
WHITTAM earned his BA from Franklin & Marshall College and his
Ph.D. in 1981 from the University of Arizona. From his web site, he tells
us about his research interests:
Genetics
of Bacterial Populations
Bacteria are a difficult and
challenging problem for population geneticists. The difficulty arises because
in nature bacteria reproduce asexually and recombine only occasionally
through mechanisms of gene transfer. As a consequence, different species
exhibit a range of population structures from clone mixtures to freely
recombining populations similar to biological species of higher organisms.
Often the amount of recombination in nature is intermediate - too much
for a purely phylogenetic approach
and too little to assume "random
assortment." One of my main research interests has been the study of the
genetic structure of natural populations of bacteria using molecular polymorphisms
and the development of statistical methods for assessing recombination.
Evolution
of pathogenic forms of E. coli
Although E. coli is normally
a harmless organism in the human gut, certain strains are pathogens that
have caused serious outbreaks of infectious disease. A major research effort
in my laboratory has been the study of the evolution of pathogenic forms
of E. coli associated with intestinal and extra-intestinal infections.
Through the analysis of molecular polymorphisms, we are testing evolutionary
hypotheses regarding the major genetic events leading to the origin of
new pathogens. We have elucidated the ancestry of a new type of food-borne
pathogen, Escherichia coli O157:H7, which causes hemorrhagic colitis.
In addition, we have investigated, in collaboration with microbiologists
from other countries, the global distribution of bacterial clones and the
dispersion of specific virulence genes in human populations and animal
reservoirs.
Experimental
evolution of pathogen virulence and host resistance
Recently developed evolutionary
theory shows that natural selection can favor intermediate levels of parasite
virulence depending on the relationship between transmissibility and the
parasiteís effect on host mortality. We are studying the evolution of virulence
experimentally using a microbial host-parasite system. The parasite is
Legionella pneumophila, the bacterium that causes Legionnaires disease.
In nature, Legionella invade and multiply intracellularly in amoeba and
other protozoan hosts. By
propagating hostñparasite genotypes
for hundreds of generations we are measuring the direction and rate of
evolution in virulence and changes in host resistance from the ancestral
(original) conditions.
DNA MICROARRAY WORKSHOP (facilitated by Dr. Paul Coussens,Associate Professor of Animal Science and Microbiology and Molecular Genetics). The workshop is limited to 30 participants AND IS NOW FULL AS OF MARCH 15.
The workshop will be conducted by members of Dr. Coussen’s Microarray Facility: Sue Sipkovsky, Steve Suchyta, and Jianbo Yao.
THE WORKSHOP IS NOW CLOSED (as of March 15).
TOUR OF THE BIOMEDICAL & PHYSICAL SCIENCES BUILDING.
For those who are not attending the DNA Microarray workshop, Dr. Jerry Dodgson has arranged for a tour of the new facility. This building houses the Departments of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, Physiology and Physics. DETAILS OF THE TOUR WILL BE ANNOUNCED AT THE MEETING. The tour will begin shortly after the last speaker in the afternoon. There will also be informal tours of the award-winning horticulture gardens just across the street from the meeting location.
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REGISTER - CLICK HERE Please preregister by April 1 for lunch count Location, Directions, Maps, and misc. Information Poster Abstracts Received to Date Poster Presentation Guidelines To contact Conference Organizer Corporate Partners Michigan ASM Branch Home Page |
7:45-9:00 AM Registration, Continental Breakfast, and corporate exhibit & poster set-up
9:00 AM Welcoming remarks (Dr.
Jerry Dodgson-Chair of the Department of Microbiology and Molecular
Genetics, Dr.Tom Corner-Conference Organizer, Professor Ralph Gorton-MIASM
President)
9:15 AM Dr. Claire Fraser, ASM Waksman Foundation Lecturer; questions for Dr. Fraser
10:15 AM Brief refreshment break
10:30 AM Dr. Rich Lenski; questions for Dr. Lenski
11:30 - 12:15 PM Visit Corporate Vendors and Student Posters; chat with speakers
12:15 PM - 1:15 PM Lunch and Business Meeting
1:15 - 2:15 PM Dr. Tom Whittam; questions for Dr. Whittam
2:15 - 2:30 PM wrap-Up and closing remarks.
2:30 + DNA ARRAY WORKSHOP and BIOMEDICAL FACILITIES TOUR
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MEETING LOCATION:
The meeting will be held in the new Biomedical
and Physical Sciences Center on the campus of MICHIGAN STATE
UNIVERSITY. This building is denoted as the "Biological Research Center"
on the current MSU map (at G15 1/2).
Click here
to view the campus map (then click on the center
panel and locate G 15.5)
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MAP OF LANSING / EAST LANSING AREA (main roads): Click here
PARKING: Parking locations (ramps and surface lots) are indicated on the MSU campus map. On Saturdays, several additional resident parking lots are open to visitors.
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POSTER PRESENTATION GUIDELINES
The Michigan ASM encourages students (both undergrads and graduate students), as well as faculty and other professional microbiologists, to present posters at our fall and spring meetings. Ideally a poster presentation would relate to the general theme of the conference, but that is not a criterion for submission. If you would like to present a poster of your research at this MI-ASM CONFERENCE, follow the guidelines below.
Students
who present a poster do not pay the conference registration fee
and
they also receive one year free membership in MI-ASM. STUDENT ENTRIES will be
judged by branch members and the winner of the "Best Student Poster" will
receive a framed certificate, a copy of Dr. Philipp Gerhardt's classic
text, and a free membership to the National ASM.
For further information, contact the conference campus organizer:
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Professor and Associate Chair Microbiology & Molecular Genetics 178 Giltner Hall Michigan State University East Lansing, MI 48824-1101 |
FAX: 517-355-8957 PHONE: 517-355-6471 EMAIL CONTACT IS PREFERED |
You
may also contact the officers of MI-ASM
at
the branch home page
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CORPORATE PARTNERS
We would like to thank all of our corporate partners for providing financial support for the Michigan ASM Branch.
The following companies will have exhibits and representatives at the April meeting:
Becton Dickinson [Ruth Stuart, Keli Fields]
Mager Scientific [Janet Stanciu]
Pall Life Sciences [Emily Berlin]
Dot Scientific [Greg Kessler]
BioMerieux/Vitek [Teresa Pontious
Viva Science Corp. [Jan Pettitt]
BioMerieux/Vitek and Dot Scientific
are cosponsoring the Continental Breakfast.
Please visit the corporate sponsor page
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