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Up Directory CCL 06.05.15 Molecular Interactions - Bringing Chemistry to Life, Bozen, Italy
From: chemistry-request at ccl.net
To: chemistry-request at ccl.net
Date: Sat Mar 11 18:27:50 2006
Subject: 06.05.15 Molecular Interactions - Bringing Chemistry to Life, Bozen, Italy
Molecular Interactions - Bringing Chemistry to Life

May 15th - 19th, 2006, Bozen, Italy

http://www.beilstein-institut.de/events

The Beilstein workshops address contemporary issues in the chemical and
related sciences by employing an interdisciplinary approach. Scientists 
> from a wide range of areas often outside chemistry are invited to 
present aspects of their work for discussion with the aim of not only to 
advance science, but also, to enhance interdisciplinary communication.

The workshop will take place in the historic Hotel Schloss Korb. The 
setting and the limited number of participants (ca. 50-60), provide a 
very convivial atmosphere for the ready exchange of thoughts and ideas.

Please find further general information, the scientific program, the 
first circular and the registration form on our web site:

http://www.beilstein-institut.de/events

Registration has started. Places at the workshop are limited and will be 
allocated on a first-come basis.

Please feel free to pass on the information to colleagues whom you think 
would also be interested in attending.

We are looking forward to seeing you there!



Scientific Program

Tom Blundell (Cambridge)
Protein-protein interactions in cell regulation and signalling: targets 
for drug discovery

Wilhelm Boland (MPI Jena)
Herbivore-induced volatiles in plant defence: early and late events in
enemy-recognition and response

Nediljko Budisa (MPI Martinsried)
Reprogrammed Protein Translation and Expanded Genetic Code

Tim Clark (Erlangen)
Biological communication via molecular surfaces

Jonathan Clayden (Manchester)
Remote control of stereochemistry: communicating information via
conformation

Athel Cornish-Bowden (CNRS Marseille)
Bringing chemistry to life: what does it mean to be alive?

Jonathan Essex (Southampton)
Coarse-grained modelling of membrane systems

Richard Goldstein (NMIR London)
Modelling the evolution of influenza

Stephen Haggarty (Broad Institute, Cambridge)
The principle of complementarity: chemical versus biological space

Andreas Hirsch (Erlangen)
Artificial micelles and liposomes

Trevor Howe (Janssen, Beerse)
Interpretation of drug discovery data through visualization; current
 issues

Laurent M. Humeau (VIRxSYS, Gaithersburg)
 From the bench to the clinic: story and lessons from VRX496, the first
lentivector ever tested in phase 1 clinical trial

Sijbren Otto (Cambridge)
Bringing supramolecular chemistry to life

Joelle N. Pelletier (Montreal)
Modifying enzyme specificity by combinatorial active site mutations

Mark Sansom (Oxford)
Molecular simulations of membrane proteins

Gisbert Schneider (Frankfurt)
Designing natural product-derived focused libraries

Peter Seeberger (ETH Hnggerberg)
Chemical glycomics - from carbohydrate arrays to malaria vaccine

Oliver Seitz (Humbolt University Berlin)
DNA-directed synthesis - Chemistry for genetic analyses

Marcey Waters (UNC Chapel Hill)
Controlling biomolecular recognition with designed proteins

Holger Wallmeier (Sanofi-Aventis)
Summary
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