Archive for the ‘ISACS’ Category

Rahul Banerjee on attending an ISACS conference (video)

Find out why CrystEngComm Associate Editor Rahul Banerjee thinks his 24-hour flight from India to Toronto to attend an International Symposia on Advancing the Chemical Sciences (ISACS) conference was totally worth it!

Register for these upcoming ISACS conferences now and take advantage of early bird registration fees!

ISACS10

ISACS11

ISACS12 banner

To stay informed of the latest news and information on ISACS, sign up to receive exclusive ISACS e-alerts.

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UPDATE– Challenges in Chemical Biology (ISACS11)

ISACS11

Final Chance To Submit

The poster abstract deadline for Challenges in Chemical Biology (ISACS11) is almost upon us. Take advantage of this exceptional opportunity to showcase your work to a truly global audience and submit before Friday 10 May 2013.

Registration Now Open

We are delighted to announce that registration for this significant conference is now opensecure your space today and benefit from the early bird discount. There are also student rates and bursaries available.

For full details on Challenges in Chemical Biology (ISACS11), please visit the dedicated website.

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Challenges in Chemical Renewable Energy (ISACS12)– last chance to submit!

The oral abstract deadline for Challenges in Chemical Renewable Energy (ISACS12) is almost upon us.  Take advantage of this exceptional opportunity to showcase your work to a truly global audience and submit before Friday, 3rd May 2013.

Registration for this significant conference is now opensecure your space today and benefit from the early bird discount. Student rates and bursaries are also available.

For full details on Challenges Chemical Renewable Energy (ISACS12), please visit the dedicated website.

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Challenges in Chemical Renewable Energy (ISACS12)– Registration now open!

We are delighted to announce that registration for Challenges in Chemical Renewable Energy (ISACS12) is now open.

Guarantee your place at this significant conference today whilst benefiting from the following fantastic savings which are currently available:

  • Early bird discount – £50 saving on the standard fee
  • Student rate – available to undergraduates and postgraduates on a full time course
  • Bursaries – offered to students and younger members of the RSC in the early stages of their career

Registration is quick and simple via the online booking system, so act now to secure your space at one of the most exceptional events of 2013.


Find Out More

For the latest information on Challenges in Chemical Renewable Energy (ISACS12) or any of the conferences in the series, please sign up for the exclusive newsletter, follow ISACS on twitter or visit the dedicated webpage.

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Last chance to submit your poster abstract for Challenges in Organic Materials & Supramolecular Chemistry (ISACS10)

ISACS10

Final Chance To Submit

The poster abstract deadline for Challenges in Organic Materials & Supramolecular Chemistry (ISACS10) is almost upon us.  Take advantage of this exceptional opportunity to showcase your work to a truly global audience and submit before Friday 5 April 2013.

Registration Now Open

We are delighted to announce that registration for this significant conference is now opensecure your space now to benefit from the early bird discount. There are also student rates and bursaries available.

For full details on Challenges in Organic Materials & Supramolecular Chemistry (ISACS10), please visit the dedicated website.

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Last chance to speak at Challenges in Chemical Biology (ISACS11)

This is your last chance to submit an oral abstract for Challenges in Chemical Biology (ISACS11) which will be held on 23-26 July in Boston, USA.

Submit before the deadline of Friday 15 March 2013 to take advantage of this exceptional opportunity to showcase your work alongside researchers from across the globe.

For details of speakers and conferences themes, please visit the dedicated website.

 Confirmed invited speakers include:

  • Professor Ben Cravatt    
    The Scripps Research Institute, USA
  • Professor Carl Figdor
    Radboud University Nijmegen, The Netherlands
  • Professor Susan Lindquist            
    Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research, USA
  • Professor Tom Muir
    Princeton University, USA
  • Professor Udo Oppermann
    University of Oxford, UK
  • Professor Hidde Ploegh
    Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), USA
  • Professor Alanna Schepartz
    Yale University, USA
  • Professor Stuart Schreiber
    Broad Institute and Harvard University, USA
  • Professor Dirk Trauner  
    Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität (LMU), Germany 
  • Professor Ada Yonath HonFRSC
    Weizmann Institute, Israel
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Challenges in Chemical Biology (ISACS11) – Oral Abstract Deadline 15 March

This is your last chance to submit an oral abstract for Challenges in Chemical Biology (ISACS11) which will be held on 23-26 July in Boston, USA.

Act before the deadline of Friday 15 March 2013 to take advantage of this exceptional opportunity to showcase your work alongside researchers from across the globe.

For details of speakers and conferences themes, please visit the dedicated website.

 

 

Confirmed invited speakers include:

  • Professor Ben Cravatt    
    The Scripps Research Institute, USA
  • Professor Carl Figdor
    Radboud University Nijmegen, The Netherlands
  • Professor Susan Lindquist            
    Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research, USA
  • Professor Tom Muir
    Princeton University, USA
  • Professor Udo Oppermann
    University of Oxford, UK
  • Professor Hidde Ploegh
    Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), USA
  • Professor Alanna Schepartz
    Yale University, USA
  • Professor Stuart Schreiber
    Broad Institute and Harvard University, USA
  • Professor Dirk Trauner  
    Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität (LMU), Germany 
  • Professor Ada Yonath HonFRSC
    Weizmann Institute, Israel

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Speakers confirmed for ISACS 12: Challenges in Chemical Renewable Energy

Challenges in Chemical Renewable Energy (ISACS12)
3 – 6 September 2013, Cambridge, UK

Confirmed invited speakers at  include:

 Photovoltaics

  • Professor Sir Richard Friend
    University of Cambridge, UK
  • Professor Tobin J. Marks
    Northwestern University, USA

Solar Fuels

  • Professor Daniel G. Nocera
    MIT (Massachusetts Institute of Technology), USA
  • Professor Harry B. Gray
    Caltech (California Institute of Technology), USA
  • Professor Dr Holger Dau
    Freie Universität Berlin, Germany
  • Professor Emily A. Carter
    Princeton University, USA

New battery materials

  • Professor Jean-Marie Tarascon
    University of Picardie Jules Verne, France
  • Professor Yang Shao-Horn
    MIT (Massachusetts Institute of Technology), USA
  • Professor Peter G. Bruce
    University of St Andrews, UK

Fuel cells

  • Professor Sossina M. Haile
    Caltech (California Institute of Technology), USA
  • Professor Fraser A. Armstrong
    University of Oxford, UK
  • Professor Ib Chorkendorff
    Technical University of Denmark

Molecular catalysis including bioinspired

  • Professor Shunichi Fukuzumi
    Osaka University, Japan
  • Professor Licheng Sun
    KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden
  • Professor Matthias Beller
    Leibniz-Institut für Katalyse, Germany

ISACS 12 is now open for oral abstract submissions – submit your abstract for this exciting conference.

For more information visit the ISACS 12 website.Oral abstract deadline 3 May 2013
Poster abstract deadline 21 June 2013
Early bird registration deadline 12 July 2013

Important Deadlines:

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Protein power: An interview with Tom Muir

One of my highlights from Challenges in Organic Chemistry and Chemical Biology (ISACS7) was Tom Muir’s talk on protein ligation. His work is truly inspiring so I caught up with him to find out how a boy from bonnie Scotland became a world leader in protein engineering.

Here is an excerpt from that interview; the full interview is published in Chemistry World.

Protein Power

Tom Muir, professor of chemistry and molecular biology, Princeton University, US, is an expert in protein engineering and its application to studying cellular signalling networks. His lab has developed a suite of chemistry-driven tools for studying the structure and function of proteins in the test tube and in live cells. In addition, his laboratory employs cutting edge methods in protein engineering (computational protein design and directed evolution), structural biology (NMR spectroscopy and x-ray crystallograghy) and cell biology (imaging).

Tom Muir is Chemical Sciences new Associate Editor for Chemical Biology. Find out more >

What led you to a career in science? Were you interested in science from an early age?

I would be lying if I said I was deeply passionate about it when I was in high school, but I could always do it and it was the path of least resistance into university. It was when I got to university that I first realised that I was lucky enough to have chosen a major that I really liked. I made some great friends and we collectively discovered the subject together. I loved the logic of chemistry. 

You studied for your undergraduate degree and PhD in Edinburgh. How did you find the move to the US? What do you think are the main differences between practising science in the US and the UK? 

I knew within weeks of arriving in the US that I was never coming back. I loved it! I moved to Southern California and, as someone coming from the west of Scotland, I found it quite agreeable. I was at The Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla when I was a post doc and the sense of anything’s possible in science there was pervasive and infectious; the penny truly dropped in terms of what it means to be a research scientist. The ‘can do’ attitude that I experienced knocked me out. Sitting on the beach didn’t hurt either!

You started out as an organic chemist, but your work now combines chemistry with biochemistry and cell biology. How did you make the transition into this interdisciplinary research area?  

The move to chemical biology wasn’t part of a grand plan. I have always felt like I am on a boat being blown in different directions on a lake. Mainly, I’ve been very lucky in the people that I have interacted with, both mentors and collaborators.

I have to thank particularly my PhD supervisor at Edinburgh, Bob Ramage, who is an amazing organic chemist and whose approach to the subject was rigorous and forward looking. He appreciated just how much more chemistry had to offer biologists, molecular biologists specifically, and he set up the post doc position for me in San Diego. I worked with Stephen Kent, who was also an amazing mentor, and I was fortunate to be in his lab during a critical period in the development of modern protein chemistry. As I learned more about biology, I absolutely bought into the importance of chemistry in solving much more complicated biological problems.

Then I moved to Rockefeller as an assistant professor. Rockefeller has many amazing biologists, probably unequalled. I had the opportunity to talk to all these luminaries and they introduced me to problems that I hadn’t even thought about. They once again highlighted the huge role that chemistry has to play, opening new doors for me.

Your research revolves around proteins and how they work. What is it about this particular type of biomolecule that fascinates you?

I am staggered by how byzantine they are. They are incredibly complicated machines. It is almost like peeling back layers of an onion: you think you understand one layer and you peel it back and there is a whole other layer of complexity underneath. With each layer, you get closer and closer to physics. It always amazes me how complicated their regulation is, how many different ways they can be controlled and how many different types of chemistry they have evolved to catalyse reactions and to recognise other types of biological molecules. But I’ve always thought of them as big organic molecules and therefore it seems natural to me that organic chemists should be studying them.

Have you never found their complexity daunting? 

I always find it daunting, but I think tackling daunting tasks is exactly what academics should be doing. It is easier, because it is safe, to work on problems that are in a sense crumbs off the big table. But chemists should have a chip on this table, we should be working on problems that make us throw our hands in the air and shout ‘I’ll never figure this out!’ We have to try. At some point, everything was daunting until someone figured it out. I am not saying that I am going to be the one to figure out say epigenetics, but if nobody tries, it will forever remain a mystery. Yes, I feel daunted but that inspires, rather than scares, me.

Read more in Chemistry World >

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Join Chemical Science at Challenges in Nanoscience (ISACS9)

 

Don’t miss your chance to be part of the 9th conference in the International Symposia on Advancing the Chemical Sciences (ISACS) series  – Challenges in Nanoscience (ISACS9).

Deadlines are fast approaching, so be sure to showcase your work by submitting a poster and take advantage of the reduced early bird registration rate before Friday 6 July 2012

For further details on this significant event, please visit the dedicated webpage.

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