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Currently viewing: 15-19 September | 2008 | Villars-sur-Ollon| Switzerland

Programme


Download programme (word.doc)


Monday 15th | Tuesday 16th | Wednesday 17th | Thursday 18th

Monday 15th September

14:00-18:00     Arrival and registration

18:00-19:30     Opening reception and dinner

Session 1:  Opening session

Chair:  Jerry Shay

19:30 – 19:55   Susan Smith (The Skirball Institute, USA)
Sister telomere cohesion is essential for telomere integrity and genome stability

19:55 – 20:10   Jerome Dejardin (Harvard Medical School, USA)

PICh reveals the protein composition of human telomeres in immortal cell lines

20:10 – 20:35   Yuji Chikashige (Kansai Research Inst, Japan)

Inner nuclear membrane proteins required for the chromosomal bouquet arrangement in Schizosaccharomyces pombe

20:35 – 20:50   Helder Ferreira (FMI, Switzerland)
A role for telomerase and Mps3 in telomere anchoring in budding yeast

20:50 – 21:15   Steve Artandi (Stanford Univ, USA)

A new human telomerase holoenzyme component required for telomere synthesis in vivo.

                     

Tuesday 16th September

 

Session 2:  Telomere replication and length regulation

Chair: Duncan Baird

 

9.00 – 9.25     Lea Harrington (Wellcome Trust Center Edinburgh, UK)
The Effects Of Telomerase Loss In An In Vitro Generated Tumor Cell Model

9.25 – 9.50      Vincent Geli (Univ. of Marseille, France)

  Recruitment of telomeric proteins to the leading and lagging telomeres

9.50 – 10.05   Timothy Humphrey (Univ. of Oxford, France)
  Suppressing chromosome healing in fission yeast

10.05 – 10.20 Hani Ebrahimi (University of Aberdeen, UK)

Release of yeast telomeres from the nuclear periphery is triggered by replication and maintained by suppression of Ku80 anchoring

 

Coffee Break

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10.50 – 11.15 Joachim Lingner (ISREC, Switzerland)

TERRA:  lessons from budding yeast and human cells

11.15 – 11.30 Antonin Morillon (CGM-CNRS, France)

Cryptic subtelomeric Y’ ncRNAs and telomere stability in budding yeast

11.30 – 11.45  Dudy Tzfati (The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel)

A functional three-way junction element is conserved in telomerase RNAs from budding yeasts and vertebrates

11.45 – 12.00  Kathy Friedman (Vanderbilt University, USA)

Regions of S. Cerevisae Est1p that medicate its multiple roles in telomerase assembly.

12.00– 12.25   Jerry Shay (UT Southwestern, USA)

Genome-wide Human shRNA Screening to Dissect Pathways Involved in Telomerase Action

 

12.45               Lunch

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Session 3:  Chromatin structure and telomere structure

Chair: Claus Azzalin

 

16.00 – 16.25  Raymund Wellinger (Univ of Sherbrooke, Canada)

A histone modification cascade involved in the passage through S-phase of cells with damaged DNA.

16.25 – 16.40  Alison Bertuch (Baylor College of Medicine, USA)

Ku must load onto the telomeric end in order to mediate its telomeric functions

16.40 – 16.55  Ed Louis (University of Nottingham, UK)

Genome Instability Associated with ALT in Yeast

16.55 – 17.10  Paula Martinez (CNIO Madrid, Spain)

Telomere rejuvenation by reprogramming

 

Coffee Break

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17.40 – 18.05  Jan Karlseder (Salk Inst, USA)

C. elegans as a model for telomere length regulation in cancer

18.05 – 18.20  Yikang Rong (National Cancer Institute, USA)

Loss of the histone variant H2A.Z restores capping to “checkpoint defective” telomeres in Drosophila

18.20 – 18.35  Toru Nakamura (University of Illinois at Chicago, USA)

Cell Cycle-regulated Dynamics of Fission Yeast Telomere Proteins

18.35 – 19.00  Daniela Rhodes (Cambridge, UK)

Telomerase recruitment by the ciliate telomere end-binding protein TEBPb    facilitates G quadruplex DNA unfolding

19.15    Dinner

20.30 Poster Session I

 

Wednesday 17th September
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Session 4:  Consequences of telomere dysfunction

Chair:  Susan Bailey

 

09.00 – 09.25  Dorothy Shippen (Texas A&M Univ, USA)

Arabidopsis encodes two TERs with distinct functions in telomere maintenance.

09.25 – 09.50  Eric Gilson (Ecole Normal Superior, France)

TRF2 couples the 5’-exonuclease activity of Apollo to telomere replication

09.50 – 10.15  Roger Reddel (Children’s Med, Sydney, Australia)

Induction of Alternative lengthening of Telomeres (alt) – Associated pml bodies by P53/P21 – mediated senescence.

10.15 – 10.30  Chantal Autexier (McGill University, Canada)

Sensitization of Cancer cells to Chemotherapeutic drugs by expression of a mutant telomerase RNA.

 

Coffee Break

 

11:00 – 11.25  Stephane Marcand (CEA Fontenay, France)

Use of a conditional centromere to stabilize and select individual telomere-telomere fusions in yeast cells defective for NHEJ-inhibition at telomeres

11.25 – 11.40  Sandy Chang (MD Anderson Cancer Center, USA)

Role of MRE11 in Dysfunctional Telomere – initiated DNA damage response and repair.

11.40 – 11.55  Miguel Godinho Ferreira (Instituto Gulbenkian de Ciancia, Portugal)

Telomeres prevent checkpoints in spite of ongoing DNA repair

11.55   - 12.20 Peter Lansdorp (Terry Fox Laboratories, Canada)

Inborn hypomorhic TERT mutations predispose for hematological malignancies

 a

12.30               Lunch

 

Session 5:  Processing of DNA double strand breaks and/or telomeres

Chair: Carolyn Price

 

19.30 – 19.55  Rodney Rothstein (Columbia Univ, USA)

Differential processing of endonuclease-mediated and IR- induced DSBs

19.55 – 20:20  Kurt Runge (Cleveland Clinic, USA)

Differential Recruitment of the ATM-family Kinases Tel1p and Mec1p to Telomeres

20:20 – 20.35  Maria Eugenia Gallego (Univ Blaise Pascal, France)

Absence of Xpf/Ercc1 dramatically potentiates chromosome instability in Arabidopsis tert mutants.

20.35 – 20.50  Michael Lisby (University of Copenhagen, Denmark)

Sumoylation and chromosome end structure determines the DNA damage response to short telomeres

 

Coffee Break

           

21.15 – 21.30  Alain Nicolas (Institut Curie, France)

Destabilization of the G-quadruplex forming human minisatellite CEB1 in the absence of Pif1 in S. cerevisiae

21.30 – 21.45  Karel Riha (Austrian Academy of Sciences, Austria)

Processing of Arabidopsis telomeres by exonuclease 1

21.45 – 22.10  Martin Kupiec (Tel Aviv Univ, Israel)

Telomere Length control in Yeast: Vertical and Horizontal Views

  a

Thursday 18th September

 

Session 6:  Telomere proteins and protein modifications

Chair: Jurg Heierhorst

           

09.00 – 09.25  Ming Lei (Univ of Michigan, USA)

Structural mechanism of TRF1 ubiquitination by SCFFBX4

09.25 – 09.40  Grazia Raffa (University of Rome La Sapienza, Italy)

Terminin, a Drosophila protein complex with analogies to human shelterin

09.40 – 09:55  Zhou Songyang (Baylor College of Medicine, USA)

Mechanisms of telomere maintenance by mammalian telomeric proteins

09:55 – 10:20   David Lydall (Univ of Newcastle, UK)

  Modulating the response to uncapped telomeres

 

Coffee Break

10.50 – 11:15  Fuyuki Ishikawa (Kyoto Univ, Japan)

  Shelterin complex in fission yeast

11:15 – 11.40  Peter Baumann (Stowers Inst., USA)

Telomerase Biogenesis and Regulation

11.40 – 11.55  Vitaliy Kuznetsov (Cancer Research UK)

Pot1 phosphorylation regulates DNA damage checkpoint inactivation at telomeres

11.55 – 12:20  Carolyn Price (Univ of Cincinnatti, USA)

Novel Tetrahymena proteins that protect telomeres and participate in telomere replication or new telomere synthesis.

 

12.30                              Lunch

14.00               Poster Session II

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Session 7:  DNA damage response and telomeres

Chair: Lea Harrington

 

16.00 – 16.25  Jiri Lukas (Univ of Copenhagen, Denmark)

Spatio-temporal organization of signaling and repair factors on damaged chromosomes

16.25 – 16.50  Evi Soutoglou (NIH, USA)

Activation of the Cellular DNA damage response in the absence of DNA lesions

16.50 – 17.05  Manuel Stucki (University of Zurich, Switzerland)

Mechanism of DNA damage-induced MDC1 dimerization

17.05 – 17.20  Stephen Meyn (Hospital for Sick Children, Canada)

The Fanconi anemia pathway plays a critical role in regulating telomeric recombination in ALT-immortalized human cells

17.20 – 17.35Irena Draskovic (Institut Curie, France)

  ALT-associated PML bodies are telomere bouquets for recombination       

                       

Coffee Break

 

18.05 – 18.30  Ted Weinert (Univ of Arizona, USA)

How Faulty Template-Switching Generates Gross Chromosomal Rearrangements

18.30 – 18.45Tammy Morrish (John Hopkins University, USA)

Short Telomeres Initiate Telomere Recombination in Primary and Tumor Cells

18.45 – 19.10 Art Lustig (Tulane Univ, USA)

Telomeres and the DNA Damage Response

19.10 – 19.35 Titia de Lange (Rockefeller Univ, USA)

53BP1 promotes NHEJ of telomeres by increasing chromatin mobility

 

20.00               Closing banquet

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