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The Seventh q-bio Conference, Poster Session II
From Q-bio
Time
- August 9, 2013, 20:00 - 23:00
Posters
- B1 Svetlana Amirova, East Carolina University, Post-transcriptional feedback control of polyamine metabolism in yeast: an integrated modeling and experimental investigation
- B2 Christopher Boddington, University of Manchester, Decoding and propagating inflammatory cues via NF-κB signaling
- B3 Kevin Cahill, University of New Mexico, Models of Membrane Electrostatics
- B4 Brian Camley, University of California, San Diego, Periodic Migration Emerges from a Physical Model of Cells on Micropatterns
- B5 Ishanu Chattopadhay, Cornell University, De novo Inference of Stochastic Mechanisms
- B6 Yao-Li Chuang, University of New Mexico, Self-Organization and Pattern Formation in Mammary Gland Development
- B8 Rory Donovan, University of Pittsburgh, Efficient Stochastic Simulation of Chemical Kinetics Networks Using A Weighted Ensemble Of Trajectories
- B9 Jan Elias, UPMC, Laboratoire Jacques-Louis Lions, Activation and Regulation of p53 in Single Cells
- B10 Federico Elias-Wolff, Stockholm University, Curvature sensing of cardiolipin in a buckled membrane
- B12 Juan Gutierrez, University of Georgia, Systems Biology of Epidemiology: From Genes to Environment
- B13 Yuriko Harigaya, University of Colorado Boulder, Quantitative genomic analysis of translational control
- B14 Xiuxiu He, Georgia State University, Modeling Cell-ECM Interaction
- B16 Alexandra Jilkine, University of Arizona, Effects of De-differentiation on Waiting Time to Carcinogenesis in Stem Cell Driven Cancers
- B18 Bogdan Kazmierczak, Polish Academy of Sciences, Traveling wave like solutions to a singular model of kinase-receptor interaction on a sphere
- B19 David Klinke, West Virginia University, Interlocked control motifs regulate the adhesive pathway activity of beta-catenin
- B20 Santosh Koirala, University of Illinois, Nutrient-Responsive Bistable Switch Governs the Flagellar Regulon in Salmonella typhimurium
- B21 Krzysztof Lakomiec, Silesian University of Technology, Two models of DNA damage repair
- B22 Bruno Lannoo, University of Leuven and Université Lille 1, Generation of oscillating gene regulatory network modules
- B24 Tomasz Lipniacki, Institute of Fundamental Technological Research, Stochastic Transitions in a Bistable Reaction System on the Membrane
- B25 Narendra Maheshri, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cell-cycle dominates noisy gene expression
- B27 Lina Merchan, Emory University, Ising models of strongly coupled biological networks
- B28 Catherine Mills, University of Edinburgh, Predicting species diversity in ecosystems
- B29 Sayak Mukherjee, Ohio State University, Mono and Multivalent Ligation of BCR Exhibit Differential Dependence on Syk and Src kinases
- B30 Truong Nguyen, Rice University, Timing and variability of metabolic gene activation depend on the rate of environmental change
- B31 Patrick O'Neill, UMBC, Exact Chemical Potentials for Prokaryotic Transcription Factors
- B32 Vipul Periwal, National Institutes of Health, Quantitative Sequence Activity Models with a little help from quantum field theory
- B33 Gregory Peters, San Diego State University and University of California, San Diego, Using a Lung Cell Microfluidics Device to Study the Bacteriophage Adherence to Mucus (BAM) Model
- B34 Joshua Phillips, Los Alamos National Laboratory, An Experimentally Driven Multiscale Study of Bacterial Efflux Machinery
- B35 Julia Pian, Harvard University, Selection of a Ribozyme Capable of Exonuclease Activity
- B36 Remi Picone, Harvard University, Centrosome amplification and Signaling Transduction
- B37 Georg Rieckh, IST Austria, Information capacity in promoter models with multiple states
- B38 Xavier Robin, Technical University of Denmark, Genome-Scale Morphological Mapping of the Mechanisms Underlying Cell Invasion
- B39 Maria Sewicka, University of Leeds, Vascular receptor-ligand binding and signalling
- B40 Hannah Schmidt-Glenewinkel, Weizmann Institute of Science, External vs. Internal Control of Cell Growth and Division
- B41 Russell Schwartz, Carnegie Mellon University, Parameter Inference for Virus Capsid Assembly via Simulation-Based Data Fitting
- B42 Xinxian Shao, Emory University, Modeling single-variant bottlenecks in early stages of H. influenzae bacteremia
- B43 Marc Sherman, Washington University at St. Louis, Quantitatively Characterizing Genetic Behavior from Stochasticity in Gene Expression
- B44 David Shis, Rice University, A library of synthetic transcriptional AND gates built with split T7 RNA polymerase mutants
- B45 Petr Sulc, University of Oxford, Coarse-Grained Modelling of Nucleic Acids and DNA Hybridization
- B46 Yodai Takei, RIKEN Quantitative Biology Center, Identifying factors that control the fundamental noise limit of gene expression in Escherichia coli
- B47 Meagan Whaley, Rice University, Inferring Functional Human Language Pathways
- B48 Kristopher White, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, The Structural Basis for Redox-Dependent Conformational Switching in the InaD PDZ5 Domain
- B49 Zaikum Xu, University of Kansas, Optimizing the assembly of stacked rings
- B50 Ling Xu, Georgia State University, Numerical Study of Mucociliary Clearance in the Airway
- B51 Haicen Yue, University of California, San Diego, Role of Memory in the Dynamics of Ras Activation in Chemotaxing Cells
- B52 Jorge Zanudo, Pennsylvania State University, An Effective Network Reduction Approach to Find the Dynamical Repertoire of Discrete Dynamic Networks
- B53 Benjamin Zoller, EPFL, Switzerland, The kinetic structure of silent transcription intervals underlying transcriptional bursting in single mammalian gene promoters
- B54 William Holmes, TBA
- B55 Eric Deeds, Efficient simulation of macromolecular assembly