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Displaying from Friday, November 20, 2015
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November 2015
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Friday 20 |
12:00 - EVENT - Bayliss Seminar Series: Tonny Kinene : African Cassava Whitefly, Bemisia tabaci, systematics and rates of evolution
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The cassava plant which millions of families in East Africa depend on for there daily calories is under attack by the African cassava whitefly, Bemisia tabaci which is a small sap sucking insect causing extensive damage to major food staples in all parts of the world. B. tabaci is a species (...)
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Wednesday 25 |
12:00 - SEMINAR - Bayliss Seminar Series: Achala Mederian Kotuwe : De novo birth and stepwise evolution of a seed peptide
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I will describe the natural, stepwise evolutionary journey that lead to the creation of a novel, functional peptide in sunflower seeds. This peptide, Sunflower Trypsin Inhibitor‑1 (SFTI‑1) originates within the same coding sequence as a seed storage albumin called PawS1 and is (...)
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Friday 27 |
12:00 - SEMINAR - Bayliss Seminar Series: Dr Jack Clegg : Self-assembly of metallo-supramolecular cages, barrels and cubes: subtle changes produce significant consequences
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The self-assembly of multi-nuclear metallosupramolecular architectures has received significant recent attention due to potential applications in host-guest chemistry and catalysis. The programmed formation of these beautiful and complex systems generally results from the combination of the (...)
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December 2015
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Tuesday 01 |
12:00 - SEMINAR - Bayliss Seminar Series: Ethan Merritt : Targeting Calcium-dependent protein kinases in pathogenic apicomplexa: structure-based approaches to target identification, scaffold hopping, and new drugs for parasitic diseases
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The MSGPP collaboration has used structural genomics, targeted genetics, and synthetic
chemistry to identify, validate, and exploit potential drug targets in parasitic protozoa. One
notable success from this approach has targeted Calcium-Dependent Protein Kinases (CDPKs), a class of proteins found (...)
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Wednesday 02 |
12:00 - SEMINAR - Bayliss Seminar Series: Rebecca Simmons : Deciphering the Role of Atypical DNA Methylation in Neurodevelopmental Disorders
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DNA methylation (5mC) is a gene regulatory mechanism that is associated with repressed transcription through recruitment of methyl binding proteins or by physically blocking transcription factor binding. DNA methylation typically occurs in the CpG dinucleotide context where a methyl group is added (...)
12:00 - SEMINAR - Bayliss Seminar Series: Sean Ramsey : Disturbing the balance: are signalling pathways at the mercy of an oxidised protein network?
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Biological function in organisms and cells is maintained by signalling pathways of inter-related proteins responding to internal and external stimuli. The activities of many of the proteins involved in cell signalling are susceptible to redox changes caused by reversible oxidation of protein thiol (...)
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Friday 04 |
12:00 - SEMINAR - Bayliss Seminar Series: Dr Dino Spagnoli : Surfaces, Star Dust and Students: The three S’s that have dominated my work life
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My research interests over the last 4 years have been in three distinct and different areas. In this talk I will highlight the recent progress made in all three areas.
S1. Chemical properties of the (001) β-Ga2O3 surface
Monoclinic β-Ga2O3 is an n-type semiconductor (...)
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Monday 07 |
12:00 - SEMINAR - Bayliss Seminar Series: Professor Stephen Hill : Investigating Cell Surface Receptor Dimerization and Complex Formation with Fluorescent Ligands
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Previous work in our lab, using fluorescent adenosine receptor agonists and antagonists, has provided novel insights into the allosteric regulation of adenosine A3 (A3AR) and A1 (A1AR) receptors by allosteric ligands and receptor dimerization in single living cells (1-2). We have also used a (...)
Professor Stephen Hill studied Pharmacology in Bristol (BSc, 1976) and then undertook PhD studies in the Department of Pharmacology in Cambridge (PhD 1979). After postdoctoral studies in Cambridge (1979-1981) he was appointed to a lecturer position in the Department of Pharmacy at the University of (...)
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Wednesday 09 |
12:00 - SEMINAR - Bayliss Seminar Series: Dr. Chris Carrie : Plant mitochondria contain an essential twin arginine translocation pathway
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Twin-arginine translocation pathways have been identified in all domains of life. However in the eukaryotic domain they were thought to be only found in chloroplasts even though almost all plant mitochondrial genomes encode for a TatC protein. Our recent work has demonstrated that in Arabidopsis (...)
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January 2016
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Wednesday 27 |
12:00 - SEMINAR - Statistical Guidelines for Public Health : This seminar will use examples from the medical literature to bridge the statistical literacy gap and will indicate when it is time to consult the statisticians.
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In the absence of large, randomised, well-controlled clinical trials (with independent replication) to address every research question we all need to increase our statistical literacy. We are often faced with the need to critically assess grant applications, manuscripts or reports without a (...)
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February 2016
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Thursday 04 |
9:00 - SEMINAR - Live GAMSAT Practice Test & Review Course : This GAMSAT Practice Test & Review Course is taught by Dr. Ferdinand who is the author of the Gold Standard GAMSAT textbook; has five years of experience teaching GAMSAT courses; and he produced more than 100 GAMSAT YouTube videos with step-by-step worked solutions for the official GAMSAT practice materials (published by ACER). Join us for problem-based learning with an experienced GAMSAT expert.
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The Gold Standard GAMSAT will host a GAMSAT Practice Test & Review seminar on Feb 4 - 5, 2016 at University Hall, University of Western Australia. The course will start at 9 am and ends at 6 pm daily.
The tutor of this course is Dr. Brett Ferdinand, author of the Gold Standard (...)
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Thursday 11 |
12:00 - SEMINAR - Bayliss Seminar Series: Farzaneh Sarrami : Computational design of biological molecules using high-level theoretical procedures
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Thursday 18 |
The next meeting of the Faculty of Science, Women in Science group will be a morning tea. All are welcome.
The morning tea is a great opportunity to network with other scientists in an informal setting. We will be discussing the implementation of the Faculty of Science mentoring (...)
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Monday 22 |
13:00 - SEMINAR - Assembly of centromeric chromatin in Drosophila and beyond : School of Anatomy, Physiology & Human Biology Seminar Series
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The Seminar: My lab studies mechanisms involved in epigenetics and epitranscriptomics. Data from our studies of the incorporation of the histone variant CENP-A into centromeric chromatin will be presented. In addition, I will report on our work on the posttranscriptional modification of long (...)
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Thursday 25 |
12:00 - SEMINAR - Bayliss Seminar Series: DNA Topoisomerases in Bacteria and Plants: Mechanism and Drug Targeting
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March 2016
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Tuesday 01 |
15:00 - SEMINAR - Raine Medical Research Foundation Seminar : New procedure for Raine Programs – Open to all medical researchers in Western Australia
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Please join us to hear about the 2016/2017 Raine Medical Research Foundation funding programmes including Grants, Fellowships, Research Collaboration Awards, Visiting Professor Awards and Publication Prizes.
The Raine Foundation has allocated in excess of $36m for medical research since (...)
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Thursday 03 |
12:00 - SEMINAR - Bayliss Seminar Series: Exploring Nanoparticle-based Targeted Drug Delivery of Novel Combinatorial Treatments for Secondary Degeneration following Neurotrauma
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12:00 - SEMINAR - Bayliss Seminar Series: : Developing Lysyl Oxidase (LOX) inhibitors as anti-fibrotic drugs to ameliorate skin fibrotic disorders and scarring
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Tuesday 08 |
18:45 - EVENT - RACI presents the 2016 Bayliss Youth Lecture : Zombies, Cars and Shoes: Case Studies in Physical Evidence
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While it’s not the only type of evidence used in most investigations, trace evidence can provide invaluable information to the investigator and influence the legal process of criminal prosecutions. Join Kari as she details the chemistry behind examining physical evidence, and talks about some (...)
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