主讲时间:2016年6月29日(周三)下午3:00
主讲地点:生物医学转化研究院(成教楼)8层会议室
主持人: 尹芝南
主办单位:暨南大学生物医学转化研究院
广东省高水平大学建设医学科学与应用组团
广东省分子免疫与抗体工程重点实验室
和凤健康产学研联盟
主讲嘉宾: Dr. Xiaonan Xin
主讲题目:iPS derived human skeletal tissue and perspective for drug evaluation in vivo
Dr. Xin graduated from Gannan Medical College, Jiangxi, China and had practiced as a physician for five years before she studied for the Master degree at Sun Yat-sen University of Medical Science, Guangzhou, China. With the full support of Japanese Governmental Scholarship, she studied for three years and obtained her Ph.D. at Tokushima University School of Medicine in Japan. Thereafter, Dr. Xin received her postdoctoral training for three years at Albert Einstein School of Medicine in New York where she obtained the NIH Scientific Foundation Poster Awards. She joined the MEMORY Pharmaceuticals Corp., and appointed as a Research Scientist after postdoc training. She identified tissue specific alternative splicing transcription sites, which is important for the drug development that the company was working on. Her great contributions on the discovery for Memory Pharmaceutical Corp. made her the first author of the first U.S. patent for the company, and made her the recipient of Special Achievement Award issued by company.
主讲嘉宾:Siyuan Wang Ph.D.
主讲题目:Multiplexed DNA tracing and RNA profiling in single cells with sequential FISH
Dr. Wang is a Jane Coffin Childs Fellow working in Professor Xiaowei Zhuang’s lab at Harvard University.His research in Zhuang lab has focused on the development and application of advanced imaging technologies. His first postdoctoral paper (PNAS, 2014) introduced the best photoactivatable fluorescent protein, named mMaple3, for single-molecule based superresolution imaging (STORM/PALM). The work also established the criteria for evaluating novel fluorescent proteins for superresolution imaging. Next, Their work developing a highly-multiplexed RNA fluorescence in situ hybridization technique enabled localized detection and quantification of 1000 different RNA species in a single cell (Science, 2015). Several other works are currently in press or under review.