Calendar of gene regulation events online
The calendar below lists webinars and meetings relevant to gene regulation. All times below are in GMT (London, UK). The link to export these events to Outlook or Google Calendar is at the bottom of this page. The calendar below includes all virtual events related to gene regulation, not limited to those organised by Fragile Nucleosome. To add your own virtual event that is not yet in our list, please email [email protected]. For a list of conferences and schools in the area of gene regulation, see the separate page “conferences, meetings and schools”. Also, have a look at complementary lists of webinars at The Node (developmental biology and related subjects), Physics of Life (biophysics) and mathseminars.org (mathematics & physics).
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QMUL Epigenetics Webinar
May 16, 2023 @ 4:30 pm - 6:00 pm BST
Scheduled Webinars
Peter Rugg-Gunn, Babraham Institute
“Establishing the human epigenome in development and pluripotency”
Join the Zoom webinar here.
9th February, 16:30 GMT
Yingming Zhao, University of Chicago
“A New Family of Histone Lysine Acylation Pathways Linking Metabolism to Gene Expression”
16th February, 3-6pm GMT
- 3.00-3.40pm: Efrat Shema (Weizmann Institute, Israel)
“Single-molecule epigenetics: Decoding the epigenome for cancer research and diagnostics” - 3.40-4.20pm: Rob Klose (University of Oxford, UK)
“Dissecting Polycomb-mediated gene repression” - 4.20-4.30pm: Break
- 4.30-5.10pm: Iva Tchasovnikarova (The Gurdon Institute, UK)
“Fluorogenetic interrogation of chromatin position effects'” - 5.10-5.20pm: Sarantis Chlamydas (Active Motif)
“Chromatin mapping – advanced sample preparation methods enabling multi-omics experiments” - 5.20-6.00pm: Steven Henikoff (Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Centre, USA)
“Genome-wide mapping of protein-DNA interaction dynamics”
Register here
Liran Carmel, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
“Paleo-epigenetics: using ancient DNA methylation to study human evolution”
Déborah Bourc’his, Institut Curie
“DNA methylation and stem cell homeostasis during spermatogenesis”
Jane Skok, NYU Langone Medical Center
“The impact of cancer associated CTCF mutations on chromatin architecture and gene regulation”