Events - Page 9
Dr. Céline Vallot, Principal Investigator of the "Dynamics of epigenetics plasticity in cancer" group at the Curie Institute, Paris, France, will present the lecture "Tracking the dynamics of chromatin states in tumor cells at single-cell resolution: response and resistance to cancer therapies."
Morten Luhr at Centre for Molecular Medicine Norway will be defending the thesis “The unfolded protein response and the ATG8 protein family in autophagy” for the degree of Philosophiae doctor.
M.Sc. Morten Luhr at Centre for Molecular Medicine Norway will give a trial lecture on the given topic: “Interplay of autophagy and metabolism in therapy resistance of cancer cells”.
Dr. Stephan Ossowski, Group Leader at the Institute for Medical Genetics and Applied Genomics, University of Tübingen, Germany, will present the lecture "Computational Analysis of NGS Data for Clinical Diagnostics."

In many ways the engine of the Digital Life ambition is useful models of living systems that can explain and predict their system behaviour. Critical and constructive discussion of modelling approaches is accordingly of key importance. We will therefore also this year arrange a workshop where this is in focus.

Friday 7 Dec 2018, APT member Konstanze Kölle will have her public PhD defence at NTNU.

Welcome to this guest lecture 6 December held by Dr Chiara Toffanin (University of Pavia, Italy). She will visit NTNU, Trondheim as an opponent for Konstanze Kölle’s PhD defence, scheduled for 7 December.

The November breakfast seminar will be about mathematical modelling of animal physiology and will be given by Assoc. Prof. Susanna Röblitz, who recently started her research group at the Computational Biology Unit.
Dr. Alfonso Valencia, Group Leader and Director of the Life Sciences Department of the Barcelona Supercomputing Center, will present the lecture "Networks based approaches in biology and biomedicine."

The event will gather representatives from the centre, the centre's projects, and Research School to join a search conference shaping the future of DLN towards 2020 and beyond.

Lack of new antibiotics is a major threat to the global health. The two Digital Life projects INBioPharm and Digibiotics invite to a workshop to discuss different aspects, issues and current state of antibiotic discovery, development and production.
This seminar series features presentations detailing structural biology research currently underway at the University of Oslo.

Course no. MF9120BTS - Molecular Medicine (national PhD-level course

Professor Bonnie Berger is the Simons Professor of Mathematics at MIT, holds a joint appointment in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, and serves as head of Computation and Biology group at MIT's Computer Science and AI Lab. Her recent work focuses on designing algorithms to gain biological insights from advances in automated data collection and the subsequent large data sets drawn from them. She works on a diverse set of problems, including Compressive Genomics, Network Inference, Structural Bioinformatics, Genomic Privacy, and Medical Genomics. Additionally, she collaborates closely with biologists in order to design experiments to maximally leverage the power of computation for biological explorations.

ERASysAPP workshop combined with the DLN Volterra lecture.

The FAIRDOM team are arranging a satellite meeting to the International Conference on Systems Biology late October this year. More details by the FAIRDOM team below.

Centre for Digital Life Norway will offer you the opportunity to work with the innovation aspect of biotechnology and life science during a two day’s workshop, 17-18 October in Oslo.

Professor Jerome S. Engel is an internationally recognized expert on innovation, entrepreneurship, and venture capital, lecturing and advising business and government leaders around the world. Most recently he has focused on lean innovation entrepreneurship and developing innovation ecosystems globally. In the current event, he will share his insights on how this can be part of innovation in biology, health care and life science.
This seminar series features presentations detailing structural biology research currently underway at the University of Oslo.

Throughout history many different modeling approaches has been developed to understand biological systems. What can we learn from these models?

How can organisms maintain stable internal conditions in a changing environment or during growth? The concept of homeostasis has been important for understanding physiological regulation, development of disease and more recently for bioengineering and synthetic biology.

The centre welcomes Professor Natasa Pruzlj of Biomedical Data Science at UCL to give her Volterra lecture on Friday 28 September at NTNU. She will discuss linking heterogeneous data in the biomedical domain.
Dr. Eva Maria Novoa, Group Leader of the Epitranscriptomics and RNA Dynamics Group at the Centre for Genomic Regulation, Barcelona, Spain, will present the lecture "Elucidation of RNA structure dynamics using second- and third-generation sequencing technologies."

We are very excited that the biannual meeting for the International Study Group for Systems Biology (ISGSB) will be in Norway, Tromsø, this year! Centre for Digital Life Norway is involved in the event, which brings together systems biologists and mathematical modellers from around the world.