| Chemical Biology and Drug Design |
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08:30 | | Keynote Presentation Approaches to Drugging Nucleotide Ca2+- Mobilizing Second Messenger Pathways Barry Potter, Professor, University of Bath, United Kingdom
Intracellular calcium stores can be mobilised in an agonist dependent and second messenger-mediated fashion by two nucleotides cyclic adenosine 5'-diphosphate ribose (cADPR) and nicotinic acid adenine 2'-dinucleotide phosphate (NAADP), unrelated to the well known myo-inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (IP3). Early synthetic strategies and potential for pharmacological intervention in such cell signalling pathways will be discussed. |
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09:30 | | Keynote Presentation Two Adventures in Chemical Biology - Palladium Medicated Cellular Chemistry and in vivo Imaging Mark Bradley, Professor of Therapeutic Innovation, Precision Healthcare University Research Institute, Queen Mary University of London, United Kingdom
My group has developed a truly heterogeneous Pd0-catalysts with the ability to enter cells in culture and mediate efficient bioorthogonal organometallic chemistry. |
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10:30 | Coffee Break and Networking in the Exhibition Hall |
11:15 | How to Make Yeast Tremble and Suffer Energy Loss: Yeast Models for Prion and Mitochondrial Diseases Marc Blondel, Professor, University of Brest, France
The aim of my group is to develop yeast-based models for various human diseases, including prion-based diseases, mitochondrial diseases and EBV-linked cancers. These models are then used for isolating candidate drugs for these diseases as well as new cellular pathways involved in these pathologies. |
| Chemical Cell Biology and Cancer |
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11:45 | Guiding Treatment Decisions in Cancer using Protein Biomarker Measurements: from Design to Utility Stephen Pennington, Professor, University College Dublin, Ireland
The application of a range of proteomics strategies has resulted in the discovery of very large numbers of potential new protein biomarkers but few have reached clinical utility for (a) understanding the molecular mechanisms of cancer pathogenesis, (b) identifying new therapeutic targets, or (c) implementing biomarker based personalised treatment. Some of the challenges faced in the protein biomarker development process and potential solutions will be described from our recent studies on prostate cancer. |
12:15 | Lunch and Networking in Exhibition Hall |
13:30 | Poster Viewing Session |
14:15 | Positioning and Repurposing of Targeted Anti-cancer Compounds Using Ex Vivo Drug Sensitivity Testing on Primary Cancer Cells Krister Wennerberg, Group Leader, Institute for Molecular Medicine Finland, Finland
This presentation will describe the strategy of positioning and repurposing oncology drugs as well as identifying resistance mechanisms and possible next line therapies using ex vivo drug sensitivity testing and molecular profiling of leukemic patient samples. |
| Enzyme Inhibition |
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14:45 | Chemical Probes to Study ADP-ribosylation - Potent and Selective Inhibitors of the Human ADP-ribosyltransferase ARTD3/PARP3 Mikael Elofsson, Professor/Associate Head, Umea University, Sweden
ADP-ribosylation plays a critical role in cell differentiation, proliferation, genome integrity and cell-survival but the exact molecular mechanisms remain elusive. We develop small molecule inhibitors that target individual members of human diphtheria toxin-like ADP-ribose transferase (ARTD) family. |
15:15 | Coffee Break and Networking in the Exhibition Hall |
15:45 | A Tankyrase Specific PARP Inhibitor Stefan Krauss, NCS Director, University of Oslo, Norway
Tankyrases 1 and 2 (TNKS1/2) are promising pharmacological biotargets with implications for developing novel anti-cancer therapeutics. Advances in developing specific tankyrase inhibitors will be presented, and their interactions with the catalytic domain of TNKS1 and TNKS2 will be discussed. |
16:15 | Using Chemical Proteomics to Reveal Drug Targets and Drug Selectivity, Drug Mechanism of Action and Resistance Formation Guillaume Medard, Group Leader, Technical University of Munich, Germany
This presentation gives examples for how mass spectrometry based chemical proteomics can aid at various stages in the drug discovery process including the identification of new drug targets, the selectivity of kinase inhibitors, the elucidation of the mechanism of action of drugs targeting HSP90 and identify mechanisms of resistance against targeted kinase inhibitors. |
16:45 | Close of Conference |