91社区

Neurodegeneration Lecture & Alumni Careers Highlighted the 11th Annual NeuroFrontiers Workshop on April 23

BIO346 Molecular Neuroscience students role-play world famous neuroscientists at the 11th annual NeuroFrontiers workshop.
April 08, 2011

A Rosalind Franklin Medical School professor and six 91社区 alumni joined the students of the BIO346 Molecular Neuroscience course as these students role-played world famous neuroscientists at a unique annual scientific research conference on April 23 at 91社区 from 8 am - 5 pm in Johnson Science Center Room 200. The public was invited.

What is NeuroFrontiers?

Now in its 11th year, this unique public conference is sponsored by the Biology Department and the Neuroscience Program. It is the non-traditional final exam in the course BIO346 Molecular Neuroscience taken by biology, neuroscience and psychology majors their junior or senior year.  On the first day of class, each student was assigned to role-play a world leader in a subfield of neuroscience. Through the course of the semester, the student researched, read, and synthesized the major papers published by the scientist over his/her scientific career to deeply understand how scientific knowledge accrues over time and how an individual scientist can make important biomedical contributions.  In this process, each student typically read 30-40 articles published over a span 2-3 decades.

During the workshop, each role-playing student becomes the scientist and presents a professional 30-minute seminar on the career length contributions to neuroscience. The student also authors a review article on this topic that is published in the in-house annual NeuroFrontiers journal, now its eleventh edition.

To make this conference as real as possible, a noted Chicago area neuroscientist is invited to participate in the entire workshop, present his/her own research as the workshop鈥檚 Keynote Address, and to facilitate scientific dialogue between each role-playing student as they critically integrate individual scientist seminars into the broader context of understanding the complex relationship between brain, mind and behavior and the current challenges and the future of biomedicine.

Over 120 students have participated in this workshop since 1998, with more than 100 of them headed for or already pursuing careers in biomedicine.

The Eleventh NeuroFrontiers Workshop, April 23, 8 am - 5 pm

KEYNOTE LECTURE
- 4:30 PM
, Assistant Professor of Cell Biology and Anatomy at Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and Science, will deliver the Keynote Address on the topic 鈥淐orrection of RNA Splicing Defects in Neurodegenerative Diseases鈥.

Dr. Hastings received her B.A. in biology from St. Olaf College and her PhD from Marquette University.  She did her postdoctoral training as an American Cancer Society fellow at the Cold Spring Harbor Labs. In 2010, she received the Board of Trustees Award at Rosalind Franklin, awarded to a junior faculty member for excellence in research. She is an expert in the field of RNA-based neurological diseases and has published more than a dozen articles on this topic in journals that include Nucleic Acids Research, Journal of Biological Chemistry, Nature Structural and Molecular Biology and Plos One.

Dr. Hastings has actively engaged in mentoring several 91社区 biology and neuroscience majors as LFC-RFUMS summer research fellows, including mentoring senior thesis projects. These students are Paige Keasler 鈥10, Daniella Brutman 鈥12, and Ashley Reich 鈥13.


ALUMNI CAREER PANEL -11:00 AM

Six biology, psychology and neuroscience alumni will lead a carer panel entitled 鈥Neuroscience Alumni, Alumni in Neuroscience鈥. They are:
Dr. Michele McNeeley-Beekman 鈥03, Chief Resident, Rush University Medical Center
Ms. Silvia Skripkauskas 鈥04, Clinical Data Manager, Northwestern University
Ms. Jennifer Riddle 鈥07, Senior Research Associate, Covance Inc. 
Ms. Stephanie Valtierra 鈥08, PhD student in Neuroscience, Northwestern University
Mr. Brian Kinsman 鈥09  Research Technologist, University of Chicago
Mr. Derek Atchley 鈥10, Research Technician/2011 PhD student, Wayne State University


FULL PROGRAM

REGISTRATION: Johnson Bridge: 7:30 AM, Coffee, Juice, Bagels

INTRODUCTION: 7:50 AM, Keith Solvang 鈥11 and Anna Naditz 鈥12, Workshop Chairs

Session I: Regeneration Frontiers, 8:00 am 鈥 9:30 am

1. Dr. Stephen Strittmatter, HHMI/Yale University, 鈥淐NS Neuroregeneration: A NOGO Zone鈥, role-played by Ms. Madhavi Senagolage 鈥12

2. Dr. Fred Gage, The Salk Institute, 鈥淣eurogenesis: Rethinking and Regrowing the Brain鈥, role-played by Mr. Pete Sullivan 鈥12

Session II: Cognitive Frontiers, 9:30 am 鈥 10:30 am

3. Dr. Ursula Bellugi, The Salk Institute, 鈥淲illiams Syndrome: The Benefits & Costs of Microdeletions鈥, role-played by Ms. Mira Trebilcock 鈥12

4. Dr. Stephen Warren, Emory University, 鈥淔ragile X: FMRP Loss, Dendritic Dysfunction & Mental Retardation鈥, role-played by Ms. Laura Lepping 鈥12

Session III: Sensory Frontiers, 10:30 am 鈥 11:00 am

5. Dr. Charles Zuker, HHMI/Columbia University, 鈥淭asty Genes: Diverse Receptors Mediate Distinct Modalities鈥, role-played by Mr. Menzi Mhlanga 鈥11

Session IV: Diverse Careers: Neuroscience Alumni, Alumni in Neuroscience, 11:00 am 鈥 12:00 Noon

Dr. Michele McNeeley-Beekman 鈥03, Chief Resident, Rush University Medical Center
Ms. Silvia Skripkauskas 鈥04, Clinical Data Manager, Northwestern University
Ms. Jennifer Riddle 鈥07, Senior Research Associate, Covance Inc. 
Ms. Stephanie Valtierra 鈥08, PhD student in Neuroscience, Northwestern University
Mr. Brian Kinsman 鈥09  Research Technologist, University of Chicago
Mr. Derek Atchley 鈥10, Research Technician/2011 PhD student, Wayne State University

STUDENT/SPEAKER LUNCH: 12:15 noon - 1:30 pm, The Commons Cafeteria 鈥

Session V: RNA Frontiers, 1:30 鈥 2:00 pm

6. Dr. Gideon Dreyfuss, University of Pennsylvania, 鈥The Splicing Mayhem and Motor Degeneration of SMA鈥, role-played by Ms. Daniella Brutman 鈥12     

Session IV: Neurodegeneration Frontiers, 2:00 鈥 4:00 pm

7. Dr. Huda Zoghbi, Baylor College of Medicine/HHMI, 鈥Unique Keys to SCA and Rett: Balancing Localization vs. Expression鈥, role-played by Ms. Saajidha Rizvydeeen 鈥12

8. Dr. Don Cleveland, UC San Diego, 鈥ALS: Complex Toxicity of Misfolded Neurofilaments & Mutant SOD1鈥, role-played by Mr. Pascal Accoh 鈥12

9. Dr. Stanley Prusiner, UC San Francisco, 鈥淒ogma breaking Prion Protein Propagates Misfolding Madness鈥, role-played by Mr. Paulius Kuprys 鈥12

10. Dr. Susan Lindquist, Whitehead Institute/MIT/HHMI. 鈥Protein Folding Mysteries: Fostering Evolution or Promoting Disease?鈥 role-played by Ms. Kayla Ahlstrand 鈥12

RECEPTION: 4:00 PM, Johnson Bridge, Johnson Science Building

CLOSING PLENARY LECTURE 4:30-5:30

CORRECTION OF THE RNA SPLICING DEFECTS IN NEURODEGENERATIVE DISEASES, by Dr. Michelle Hastings, Assistant Professor, Department of Cell Biology & Anatomy, Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine & Science


News Contact

Dr. Shubhik DebBurman
Associate Professor of Biology
Chair, Neuroscience Program

email: debburman@lfc.edu