Monday, 7 December 201508:00 | Coffee and Registration | 08:45 | Welcome and Introduction Andrew Nicholls, Director & Secretary, Metabolic Profiling Forum, United Kingdom Jules Griffin, Director, Metabolic Profiling Forum University of Cambridge, United Kingdom Roy Goodacre, Professor of Biological Chemistry, University of Manchester, United Kingdom
| 09:00 | | 10:00 | Coffee and Networking in Exhibition Hall | | Session 1: Enhancing Analytical Approaches in Metabolomics | | Session Chair: Andrew Nicholls, Director & Secretary, Metabolic Profiling Forum, United Kingdom |
| | 10:30 | Towards Reliable Mass Spectrometry Methods for Metabolomics Research Alan Race, Research Scientist, National Physical Laboratory, United Kingdom
We present results from studies probing the performance of MALDI, DESI, PADI and LESA for a range of analytes. Metrology investigations into sampling mechanisms, optimum ion source configurations and technique fundamentals will be discussed. | 11:00 | Label-free Raman Imaging of Living Mammalian Cells - A Valuable New Tool for Investigating Complex Cellular Systems Katherine Hollywood, Research Associate, Manchester University, United Kingdom
A current area of research that is gaining increasing interest is the field of single cell analysis. Raman microspectroscopy provides a novel, label-free and non-invasive approach for the analysis of cellular perturbations within single cells in real-time. | 11:30 | A Novel Lipid Screening Platform Allowing a Complete Solution for Lipidomics Research Baljit Ubhi, Lead Staff Scientist, Metabolomics & Lipidomics Applications, AB Sciex, United Kingdom
A Novel Lipid Screening Platform Allowing a Complete Solution for Lipidomics Research | 12:00 | Lunch and Networking in Exhibition Hall | 12:45 | Free Workshop Metabolomics - From Data to Knowledge , | | Session 2: Modelling and Data Analysis | | Session Chair: Kenneth Haug, Project Manager and Software Engineer, European Bioinformatics Institute (EMBL-EBI), European Molecular Biology Laboratory, United Kingdom |
| | 13:30 | MetExplore Fabien Jourdan, Research Scientist, INRA-MetaboHub, France
This talk will present MetExplore, a freely available web server making possible the analysis and visual inspection of genome scale metabolic networks. Graph based methods to extract sub-networks based on metabolic profiles will also be reviewed in this presentation. | 14:00 | | Keynote Presentation Statistical Methods for Biomarker Discovery Etienne Thevenot, Research Scientist, CEA, France
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| 14:30 | Data-driven, Non-targeted Metabolomic Approaches Using High Resolution Mass Spectrometry and Advanced Machine Learning Algorithms Manfred Beckmann, Research Fellow, University of Wales Aberystwyth, United Kingdom
Non-targeted metabolomics is combined with advanced machine learning algorithms and high performance computing clusters, to elucidate metabolic changes in a range of biological systems. Discriminatory features are elucidated with chromatography and tandem mass spectrometry (MSn), without the need for extensive targeted studies. | 15:00 | Coffee and Networking in Exhibition Hall | | Session 3: Standardising Approaches in Metabolomics | | Session Chair: Reza Salek, , University of Cambridge, United Kingdom |
| | 15:30 | Translating Big Data from HR Imaging MS Data into Molecular Knowledge Theodore Alexandrov, Team Leader, EMBL Heidelberg, Germany
Imaging Mass Spectrometry promises to localize hundreds metabolites in tissue sections with a cellular resolution. We will present our pipeline for molecular annotation of millions of imaging MS signals and how we can control our newly-developed False Discovery Rate. | 16:00 | Using High Resolution Mass Spectrometry (HRMS) Approaches to Fight Food Fraud: Don’t Get Stung by Your Manuka Honey! Joanne Connolly, Omics Business Development, Waters, United Kingdom
Understanding, deconvoluting and identifying the biochemical profile of a food sample of interest can help provide manufacturers and regulators with key information in the fight against fraud. The identification of a MS derived biochemical “fingerprint” is an important tool to understanding the ultimate question of “What is normal?” This presentation will describe the analytical and data processing workflows for evaluating a pilot study of different unifloral honeys. | 16:30 | Building Comprehensive Statistical Workflows for the Large-scale Analysis of Human Cohorts: Application to the Study of Urine Metabolome Physiological Variations with Age, Body Mass Index and Gender Etienne Thevenot, Research Scientist, CEA, France
Robust and comprehensive statistical workflows are critical for the analysis of large-scale cohorts by LC-HRMS. Here we present the combination of uni- and multivariate strategies to the study of physiological variations of the urine metabolome. | 17:00 | Poster Session A (Drinks will be served) |
Tuesday, 8 December 201508:00 | Coffee and Registration | | Session 4: Applying Metabolomics to Nutritional Support | | Session Chair: Albert Koulman, Senior Scientist, Medical Research Council Human Nutrition Research, United Kingdom |
| | 09:00 | Fat, Sugar and Metabolomics – Understanding How Diabetes Arises at the Population Level Jules Griffin, Director, Metabolic Profiling Forum University of Cambridge, United Kingdom
In this presentation I will describe how metabolomics and lipidomics are being applied to large cohorts in conjunction with genome wide association studies to better define genes associated with type 2 diabetes and understanding the underlying mechanisms. | 09:30 | Metabolic Perturbations Triggered by Western Diet under Impaired Fatty Acid Oxidation: Getting Clues from Metabolomics Studies in PPAR-alpha Null Mice Manuel Pazos, Postdoc, University of Córdoba, Spain
The present research evaluates for the first time by metabolomics the metabolic outcomes of Western diet on the animal model of impaired fatty acid oxidation PPAR-alpha null mice. | 10:00 | Urine Metabolomic Profiling to Identify Biomarkers of a Flavonoid-rich and Flavonoid-poor Fruits and Vegetables Diet in Adults Maria Ulaszewska, Post-doc Researcher, Fondazione Edmund Mach, Italy
The present study aims to investigate the dose dependent effects of consuming diets enriched in flavonoid-rich and flavonoid-poor fruits and vegetables on the urine metabolome of adults who had a = 1.5 fold increased risk of cardiovascular diseases (CVD). | 10:30 | Coffee and Networking in Exhibition Hall | | Session 5: New Developments in Plant Metabolomics | | Session Chair: Roy Goodacre, Professor of Biological Chemistry, University of Manchester, United Kingdom |
| | 11:00 | | 11:30 | Identification of Biosynthetic Function of Genes in Plants and their Consequences in Insects – A Metabolite Profiling Approach Driven by Automatic Compound Identification Heiko Neuweger, Dr, Bruker Daltonik GmbH, Germany
An efficient software based work-flow for metabolite profile screening and automatic compound identification is presented for the discovery of gene-mediated glycosylation in the HGL-DTG biosynthetic pathway in tobacco and their consequences in the herbivore M. sexta. | 12:00 | Chemotyping in the Field: The Application of High Resolution Metabolomics to Study the Miscanthus Metabolome Thomas Wilson, Student, Aberystwyth University, United Kingdom
High resolution mass spectrometry fingerprinting methods have been used to explore the metabolome of the bio-energy grass Miscanthus, in order to maximise the understanding of the plant metabolome and add value with a bio-refining chain.
| 12:30 | Lunch and Networking in Exhibition Hall | 13:15 | Free Workshop Increased Throughput, Sensitivity and Confidence for Metabolomics Research Using a New Tribrid™ Orbitrap Mass Spectrometer Workshop , | | Session 6: Student / Postdoc | | Session Chair: Volker Behrends, Lecturer, Roehampton University, United Kingdom |
| | 14:00 | Differences of Metabolic Perturbations between Thai Jasmine Rice and its Brown Planthopper (BPH)-resistant Isogenic Lines During BPH Infestation using 1H NMR and GC-MS Approaches Umaporn Uawisetwathana, Student, Queen's University Belfast, United Kingdom
Differences of metabolic perturbations between Thai Jasmine rice and its BPH-resistant isogenic lines during BPH infestation were investigated using 1H NMR and GC-MS-based metabolomics. From metabolomic differences, the susceptible and resistant varieties seemed to employ different pathways to fight against BPH infestation. | 14:20 | Longitudinal Profiling of Amino Acids Metabolism with Respect to Markers for Disturbed Glucose and Insulin Homeostasis in Obese Children Christian Hellmuth, Post-Doc, Ludwig-Maximilians-University of Munich, Germany
HOMA, amino acids and acylcarnitines were analyzed longitudinal in obese children from the Obeldicks 1-year intervention cohort. This longitudinal study revealed a positive association between the aromatic AA tyrosine to IR, rather than BCAA. | 14:40 | Clinical Untargeted Metabolomics to Study the Effects of Glucocorticoids Administration and their Interaction with Insulin Riccardo Di Guida, PhD Student, University of Birmingham, United Kingdom
The role of glucocorticoids in human metabolism is still unclear. Two untargeted UPLC-MS metabolomics studies were performed on human serum in order to assess the effects of glucocorticoids administration and their interaction with insulin. | 15:00 | Coffee and Networking in Exhibition Hall | 15:30 | Finding Novel Enzymatic Activities Linked to Human Diseases using Bioinformatics and Untargeted Metabolite Profiling Charandeep Singh, PhD Student, Luxembourg Center for Systems Biomedicine, Luxembourg
I will present a combined bioinformatics and experimental pipeline to discover new enzymatic activities relevant to human diseases, with, as an illustration, our recent molecular identification of a conserved sugar phosphotransferase. | 15:50 | Tissue Metabonomic Study of Giant Cell Tumor of Bone Francisco Javier Martínez-López, Student, Instituto Politecnico Nacional, Mexico
The untargeted metabonomic study of Giant Cell Tumour in bone tissue shows differences between tumour tissues and healthy bone samples. The study performed by a 1H-NMR approach, the data submitted to multivariate statistics and enrichment-pathway analyses. | 16:10 | Predictive Ability of Blood Plasma Carnitines in Cardiovascular Diseases Zsuzsanna Ament, Investigator Scientist, MRC Human Nutrition Research, United Kingdom
We used machine learning and multivariate statistics to identify Carnitines which differentiated in the different patient groups. | 16:30 | Poster Session B (Drinks will be served) | 18:00 | Organised Walking Tour: The Eagle, Discovery of DNA, Turing and JJ Thompson | 19:00 | Conference Dinner, The Hall, Kings College, Cambridge |
Wednesday, 9 December 201508:00 | Coffee and Registration | | Session 7: Next Generation Metabolomics | | Session Chair: Dong-Hyun Kim, Assistant Professor in Analytical Bioscience, University of Nottingham, United Kingdom |
| | 09:00 | Enhancing Metabolomics: Shining Light on Metabolism Roy Goodacre, Professor of Biological Chemistry, University of Manchester, United Kingdom
Surface enhanced Raman scattering provides quantitative analyses and LC-SERS allows absolute quantification of target analytes at levels lower or comparable to LC-MS | 09:30 | Metabolomic Composition and Spatial Metabolite Distribution in the Human Lens Vadim Yanshole, Researcher, International Tomography Center, Russian Federation
Metabolomic profiles of normal and cataractous human lenses and spatial metabolite distribution are established inside the human lens with the use of high-frequency 1H NMR and high-resolution mass spectrometry with HPLC separation methods. | 10:00 | Mitochondrial Metabolomics: Identifying Early in-vivo Biochemical Markers of Mitochondrial Toxicity James R Armitage, Senior Scientist, GSK, United Kingdom
There are no easily accessible biomarkers to monitor compound-mediated effects on mitochondria in-vivo. A known mitochondrial toxin was employed to identify metabolites that change in advance or absence of a clinical effect to identify sensitive in-vivo indicators of mitochondrial function. | 10:30 | Coffee and Networking in Exhibition Hall | | Session 8: Advancing Biological Knowledge from Single Cells to Animals | | Session Chair: Andrew Southam, PostDoc Fellow, University of Birmingham, United Kingdom |
| | 11:00 | | Keynote Presentation Generating Molecular Hypotheses from Dynamic Metabolomics Data Uwe Sauer, Professor, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich (ETH), Switzerland
A key limitation in the omics world is our ability to generate specific hypotheses from large data sets. I will demonstrate approaches for microbial systems to identify novel molecular interactions. |
| 11:30 | Targeting Resistance to Proteasome Inhibitor Therapy: A Metabolomics Approach Celia Berkers, Assistant Professor, Utrecht University, Netherlands
Treatment with proteasome inhibitors is often hampered by the occurrence of resistance. Here, the metabolic mode of resistance to such drugs is elucidated using a metabolomics approach, revealing a potential role for nutrient starvation in the treatment of resistant tumours. | 12:00 | Metabolomics Platform to Elucidate the Impact of Dietary Fiber in the Human Gut Metabolome Determined in vivo and in an in vitro Colon Simulator Santosh Lamichhane, PhD Fellow, Aarhus University, Denmark
The aim of present study is to demonstrate the usefulness of metabolomics to elucidate the impact of dietary fiber on the gut metabolome. Examples from a human intervention and an in-vitro colon simulator study will be presented. | 12:30 | Lunch and Networking in Exhibition Hall | 13:15 | Free Workshop Removing the Data Processing Bottleneck: Move Efficiently from Data to Structure to Pathway with NEW Thermo Scientific™ Compound Discoverer™ 2.0 and mzCloud Workshop , | | Session 9: Clinical Developments in Metabolomics | | Session Chair: Andrew Nicholls, Director & Secretary, Metabolic Profiling Forum, United Kingdom |
| | 14:00 | | Keynote Presentation Succinate Toxicity in Reperfusion Injury Mike Murphy, Group Leader, Medical Research Council, United Kingdom
Succinate accumulates in ischaemia due to reversal of mitochondrial complex II. Then, upon reperfusion this succinate can drive reverse electron transport at complex I and thereby produce damaging ROS. |
| 14:30 | Lipidomics Associations of Phospholipids with Obesity and Insulin Resistance in Young Adults Sebastian Rauschert, PhD Student, Ludwig-Maximilians Universität, Germany
Mass spectrometry based metabolomics revealed polar lipids associated with obesity and different mechanisms for the development of insulin resistance depending on BMI status in 20 years old obese and non-obese subjects taking part at the Western Australian Pregnancy Cohort (Raine) Study. | 15:00 | Coffee and Networking in Exhibition Hall | 15:30 | A Non-targeted Metabolomics Analysis to Study Longitudinal Metabolic Changes Following a Burn Injury in Adults Warwick Dunn, Lecturer in Metabolomics, University of Birmingham, United Kingdom
A non-targeted UPLC-MS study of adult and elderly subjects following a burn trauma has been performed. The data show three distinct metabolic phases during the recovery period and identify targets for nutritional or therapeutic interventions to improve recovery and outcome. | 16:00 | | Plenary Presentation Metabolic and Signalling Changes in Cancer Determined through Lipidomics Michael Wakelam, Professor, Babraham Institute, United Kingdom
Analysis of lipid molecular species by LC-MS in cancer tissues and cell lines has defined pathways that change and has highlighted significant changes in acyl chain length and saturation that point to changes in membrane structure and highlight changes in enzyme activities that have the potential to be novel therapeutic targets. |
| 17:00 | Prizes and Meeting Close |
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