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Web Desc
Lipidomics and Functional Metabolic Pathways in Disease
Organizer(s): Sarah Spiegel, Charles N. Serhan and Valerie B. O'Donnell
Date: March 31 - April 04, 2019
Location: Steamboat Grand, Steamboat Springs, CO, USA
Supported by the Directors' Fund
Summary of Meeting:
Recently, our understanding of lipid metabolism has significantly advanced, at least in part through applying state-of-the-art lipidomic mass spectrometry approaches to cellular, cohort and animal models. A large body of evidence now exists demonstrating that bioactive lipids play key roles in regulation of biological processes important for health and disease. However, lipidomics also reveals major gaps in our knowledge, highlighting the enormous numbers and functional and structural diversity of bioactive lipids, their interactions, spatial and temporal changes and the complicated systems biology of lipid metabolism. This Keystone Symposia conference covers areas of bioactive lipid research that have been particularly impacted by these new technologies, which may have the potential to transform precision medicine. The conference covers recent progress and perspectives in the study of bioactive lipid metabolic pathways, how these interconnect and are cross-regulated, and their involvement in the regulation of disease. The conference brings together outstanding senior and junior scientists with expertise in functions of bioactive lipids as well as those with a background in mass spectrometry lipidomics, structural biology and systems biology of lipids. Goals and anticipated outcomes are: 1) To summarize new approaches and state-of-the-art mass spectrometry technology. combined with informatics and statistics, in bioactive lipid research and to gain broad understanding of their limitations and potential application to precision medicine; 2) To acquire a broader understanding of how lipidomics can be integrated with proteomics/genomics and other ‘omics technologies to develop a systems-wide view of the lipidome; 3) To gain new knowledge in spatial and temporal interactions of bioactive lipids in cellular and subcellular systems, to better understand their functions in health and diseases; and 4) To present recent findings on the biological importance of newly discovered lipids and their roles in immunity and inflammation.
Scholarship Deadline: December 11 2018
Discounted Abstract Deadline: December 11 2018
Abstract Deadline: December 19 2018
Discounted Registration Deadline: January 30 2019
We gratefully acknowledge additional support for this conference from:
We gratefully acknowledge additional in-kind support for this conference from those foregoing speaker expense reimbursements:
Complexa Inc.
Pfizer Inc.
We gratefully acknowledge the generous grant for this conference provided by:
National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK)
Grant No. 1R13DK120257-01
Funding for this conference was made possible (in part) by 1R13DK120257-01 from the National Institutes of Health. The views expressed in written conference materials or publications and by speakers and moderators do not necessarily reflect the official policies of the Department of Health and Human Services; nor does mention of trade names, commercial practices, or organizations imply endorsement by the U.S. Government.
We appreciate the organizations that provide Keystone Symposia with additional support, such as marketing and advertising:
Click here to view more of these organizations
Special thanks to the following for their support of Keystone Symposia initiatives to increase participation at this meeting by scientists from underrepresented backgrounds:
Click here to view more of these organizations
Program
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Sunday, March 31
| 4:00PM - 8:00PM
Arrival and Registration
Room: Korbel Foyer
Sunday, March 31
| 6:00PM - 8:00PM
Welcome Mixer
Room: Korbel Foyer
No registration fees are used to fund alcohol served at this function.
Monday, April 01
| 7:00AM - 8:00AM
Breakfast
Room: Spring Creek/Burgess Creek
Monday, April 01
| 8:00AM - 9:00AM
Welcome and Keynote Address
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 1 of 1
*
Charles N. Serhan
, Brigham and Women's Hospital, USA
Resolvins and Pro-Resolving Mediators in Resolution of Inflammation and Tissue Regeneration: Targeted Metabolipidomics
Monday, April 01
| 9:00AM - 11:45AM
Resolution of Inflammation, Infection & Tissue Regeneration
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 1 of 8
* Charles N. Serhan
, Brigham and Women's Hospital, USA
Monday, April 01
| 9:00AM - 11:45AM
Resolution of Inflammation, Infection & Tissue Regeneration
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 2 of 8
Gabrielle Fredman
, Albany Medical Center, USA
Dysregulation of Resolution Pathways in Atherosclerosis
Monday, April 01
| 9:00AM - 11:45AM
Resolution of Inflammation, Infection & Tissue Regeneration
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Coffee Break
Monday, April 01
| 9:00AM - 11:45AM
Resolution of Inflammation, Infection & Tissue Regeneration
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 4 of 8
Emma Borgeson
, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
Lipoxins in Cardiometabolic and Kidney Disease
Monday, April 01
| 9:00AM - 11:45AM
Resolution of Inflammation, Infection & Tissue Regeneration
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 5 of 8
Valerio Chiurchiù
, IRCCS Santa Lucia Foundation, Italy
Resolution of Inflammation is Altered in Chronic Inflammatory Diseases: From the Periphery to the Brain
Monday, April 01
| 9:00AM - 11:45AM
Resolution of Inflammation, Infection & Tissue Regeneration
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 6 of 8
Charles R. Brown
, University of Missouri, USA
Short Talk: Eicosanoid-Mediated Clearance of Apoptotic Cells Is Critical for the Resolution of Experimental Lyme Arthritis
Monday, April 01
| 9:00AM - 11:45AM
Resolution of Inflammation, Infection & Tissue Regeneration
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 7 of 8
Takehiko Yokomizo
, Juntendo University School of Medicine, Japan
Short Talk: Leukotriene B4 Promotes Neovascularization and Macrophage Recruitment in Age-Related Macular Degeneration (AMD)
Monday, April 01
| 9:00AM - 11:45AM
Resolution of Inflammation, Infection & Tissue Regeneration
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 8 of 8
Patricia C. Kane
, NeuroLipid Research Foundation, USA
Short Talk: The Application of Bioactive Lipids to Attenuate Epigenetic Insult, Unfolded Proteins and Ceramides in Neurological Disorders
Monday, April 01
| 11:45AM - 5:00PM
On Own for Lunch
Monday, April 01
| 11:45AM - 1:00PM
Poster Setup
Room: Spring Creek/Burgess Creek
Monday, April 01
| 1:00PM - 10:00PM
Poster Viewing
Room: Spring Creek/Burgess Creek
Monday, April 01
| 3:00PM - 4:30PM
Workshop 1: LIPID MAPS Tools and Advances in Lipidomics Tech
niques
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
The LIPID MAPS Lipidomics Gateway is a comprehensive online resource providing databases of lipid structures and lipid-associated genes or proteins, a variety of lipidomics tools, experimental data for lipids and genes along with protocols and standards, context specific cellular networks and pathways as well as guidelines, tutorials and instructional material for the research community. It features a lipid classification system which has gained worldwide acceptance and an interactive online lipid structure database, the LIPID MAPS structure database (LMSD) with over 43,000 unique curated structures making it the largest of its kind in the world. The LIPID MAPS in-silico structure database (LMISSD) of over a million computationally generated structures covers most of the commonly occurring lipid classes. The LIPID MAPS Proteome Database (LMPD) of lipid-related genes and proteins contains data for over 8,500 genes and over 12,500 proteins from 10 major research species. One can access annotations, such as genomic DNA, mRNA, protein domain, ontology and biochemical pathway information, with cross-links to external databases, relevant to each gene/protein of interest. The Lipidomics Gateway contains a comprehensive suite of online mass spectrometry search and prediction tools to provide an integrated search and reference resource for lipidomics MS researchers. A suite of structure-drawing tools has been developed and deployed which dramatically increase the efficiency of generating large and complex lipid structures, facilitate data entry into lipid-structure databases and permit 'on-demand' structure generation in conjunction with a variety of mass spectrometry-based informatics resources.
LIPID MAPS is currently funded by a multi-institutional grant from the Wellcome Trust, held jointly by Cardiff University, University of California, San Diego and the Babraham Institute, Cambridge. Our international team includes programmers, curators and webmaster and is led by Valerie O'Donnell, Ed Dennis, Shankar Subramaniam and Michael Wakelam.
Speaker 1 of 3
* Alfred H. Merrill, Jr.
, Georgia Institute of Technology, USA
Introduction: A Brief History of LIPID MAPS
Monday, April 01
| 3:00PM - 4:30PM
Workshop 1: LIPID MAPS Tools and Advances in Lipidomics Tech
niques
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
The LIPID MAPS Lipidomics Gateway is a comprehensive online resource providing databases of lipid structures and lipid-associated genes or proteins, a variety of lipidomics tools, experimental data for lipids and genes along with protocols and standards, context specific cellular networks and pathways as well as guidelines, tutorials and instructional material for the research community. It features a lipid classification system which has gained worldwide acceptance and an interactive online lipid structure database, the LIPID MAPS structure database (LMSD) with over 43,000 unique curated structures making it the largest of its kind in the world. The LIPID MAPS in-silico structure database (LMISSD) of over a million computationally generated structures covers most of the commonly occurring lipid classes. The LIPID MAPS Proteome Database (LMPD) of lipid-related genes and proteins contains data for over 8,500 genes and over 12,500 proteins from 10 major research species. One can access annotations, such as genomic DNA, mRNA, protein domain, ontology and biochemical pathway information, with cross-links to external databases, relevant to each gene/protein of interest. The Lipidomics Gateway contains a comprehensive suite of online mass spectrometry search and prediction tools to provide an integrated search and reference resource for lipidomics MS researchers. A suite of structure-drawing tools has been developed and deployed which dramatically increase the efficiency of generating large and complex lipid structures, facilitate data entry into lipid-structure databases and permit 'on-demand' structure generation in conjunction with a variety of mass spectrometry-based informatics resources.
LIPID MAPS is currently funded by a multi-institutional grant from the Wellcome Trust, held jointly by Cardiff University, University of California, San Diego and the Babraham Institute, Cambridge. Our international team includes programmers, curators and webmaster and is led by Valerie O'Donnell, Ed Dennis, Shankar Subramaniam and Michael Wakelam.
Speaker 2 of 3
Eoin Fahy
, University of California, San Diego, USA
The LIPID MAPS Lipidomics Gateway
Monday, April 01
| 3:00PM - 4:30PM
Workshop 1: LIPID MAPS Tools and Advances in Lipidomics Tech
niques
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
The LIPID MAPS Lipidomics Gateway is a comprehensive online resource providing databases of lipid structures and lipid-associated genes or proteins, a variety of lipidomics tools, experimental data for lipids and genes along with protocols and standards, context specific cellular networks and pathways as well as guidelines, tutorials and instructional material for the research community. It features a lipid classification system which has gained worldwide acceptance and an interactive online lipid structure database, the LIPID MAPS structure database (LMSD) with over 43,000 unique curated structures making it the largest of its kind in the world. The LIPID MAPS in-silico structure database (LMISSD) of over a million computationally generated structures covers most of the commonly occurring lipid classes. The LIPID MAPS Proteome Database (LMPD) of lipid-related genes and proteins contains data for over 8,500 genes and over 12,500 proteins from 10 major research species. One can access annotations, such as genomic DNA, mRNA, protein domain, ontology and biochemical pathway information, with cross-links to external databases, relevant to each gene/protein of interest. The Lipidomics Gateway contains a comprehensive suite of online mass spectrometry search and prediction tools to provide an integrated search and reference resource for lipidomics MS researchers. A suite of structure-drawing tools has been developed and deployed which dramatically increase the efficiency of generating large and complex lipid structures, facilitate data entry into lipid-structure databases and permit 'on-demand' structure generation in conjunction with a variety of mass spectrometry-based informatics resources.
LIPID MAPS is currently funded by a multi-institutional grant from the Wellcome Trust, held jointly by Cardiff University, University of California, San Diego and the Babraham Institute, Cambridge. Our international team includes programmers, curators and webmaster and is led by Valerie O'Donnell, Ed Dennis, Shankar Subramaniam and Michael Wakelam.
Speaker 3 of 3
Paul R.S. Baker
, Avanti Polar Lipids, USA
The Essential Union Between Standards and Methodology for Quantitative Lipidomics
Monday, April 01
| 4:30PM - 5:00PM
Coffee Available
Room: Korbel Foyer
Monday, April 01
| 5:00PM - 7:00PM
Lipidomics/Metabolomics - Global Profiling vs. Targeted Anal
ysis
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 1 of 3
Craig E. Wheelock
, Karolinska Institutet, Sweden
Lipid Mediator Metabolic Profiling: Sub-Phenotyping of Respiratory Disease
Monday, April 01
| 5:00PM - 7:00PM
Lipidomics/Metabolomics - Global Profiling vs. Targeted Anal
ysis
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 2 of 3
Markus R. Wenk
, National University of Singapore, Singapore
Translation of Lipidomic Technologies towards Quantification of Blood Lipids
Monday, April 01
| 5:00PM - 7:00PM
Lipidomics/Metabolomics - Global Profiling vs. Targeted Anal
ysis
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 3 of 3
* Edward A. Dennis
, University of California, San Diego, USA
Lipidomic Profiling in Nonalcoholic Steatohepatitis
Monday, April 01
| 7:00PM - 8:00PM
Social Hour with Lite Bites
Room: Spring Creek/Burgess Creek
No registration fees are used to fund alcohol served at this function.
Monday, April 01
| 7:30PM - 10:00PM
Poster Session 1
Room: Spring Creek/Burgess Creek
Tuesday, April 02
| 7:00AM - 8:00AM
Breakfast
Room: Spring Creek/Burgess Creek
Tuesday, April 02
| 8:00AM - 9:00AM
Keynote Address
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 1 of 2
* Jesper Z. Haeggström
, Karolinska Institute, Sweden
Tuesday, April 02
| 8:00AM - 9:00AM
Keynote Address
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 2 of 2
Lina M. Obeid
, Stony Brook Medicine, USA
Sphingolipid Metabolic Pathways Regulate Cancer Metabolism
Tuesday, April 02
| 9:00AM - 12:00PM
Novel Approaches to Lipid Metabolism
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 1 of 8
* Jesper Z. Haeggström
, Karolinska Institute, Sweden
Deciphering Molecular Mechanisms of Enzymes in the 5-Lipoxygenase Pathway
Tuesday, April 02
| 9:00AM - 12:00PM
Novel Approaches to Lipid Metabolism
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Coffee Break
Tuesday, April 02
| 9:00AM - 12:00PM
Novel Approaches to Lipid Metabolism
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 3 of 8
Steffany A.L. Bennett
, University of Ottawa, Canada
The Lipogenetics of Dementia: Lipidomic Pathways Differentially Disrupted in Alzheimer’s Disease, Parkinson’s Disease with Dementia and Dementia with Lewy Bodies.
Tuesday, April 02
| 9:00AM - 12:00PM
Novel Approaches to Lipid Metabolism
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 4 of 8
Antonio J. Vidal-Puig
, University of Cambridge, UK
Molecular Mechanisms of Energy Balance
Tuesday, April 02
| 9:00AM - 12:00PM
Novel Approaches to Lipid Metabolism
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 5 of 8
Junken Aoki
, Tohoku University, Japan
Short Talk: A Versatile Method to Determine the Positional Specificity of Lysophospholipid Acyltransferases (LPLATs) and its Application to Identification of an sn-1 LPLAT
Tuesday, April 02
| 9:00AM - 12:00PM
Novel Approaches to Lipid Metabolism
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 6 of 8
Joseph P. Dewulf
, de Duve Institute, UCLouvain, Belgium
Short Talk: ECHDC1 Prevents the Formation of Branched Chain Fatty Acids
Tuesday, April 02
| 9:00AM - 12:00PM
Novel Approaches to Lipid Metabolism
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 7 of 8
Nicholas Vincent DiPatrizio
, University of California, Riverside, School of Medicine, USA
Short Talk: Endocannabinoids in the Gut: Lipid-Derived Mediators of Gut-Brain Signaling
Tuesday, April 02
| 9:00AM - 12:00PM
Novel Approaches to Lipid Metabolism
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 8 of 8
Jessica M. Ellis
, East Carolina University, USA
Short Talk: Acyl-CoA Synthetase 6-Mediates Docosahexaenoic Acid (DHA) Enrichment in Brain and Testis
Tuesday, April 02
| 12:00PM - 1:00PM
Workshop 2: The Lipidomics Standards Initiative
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 1 of 2
* Gerhard Liebisch
, University of Regensburg, Germany
Tuesday, April 02
| 12:00PM - 1:00PM
Workshop 2: The Lipidomics Standards Initiative
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 2 of 2
* Kim Ekroos
, Lipidomics Consulting Ltd., Finland
Tuesday, April 02
| 12:00PM - 5:00PM
On Own for Lunch
Tuesday, April 02
| 12:00PM - 1:00PM
Poster Setup
Room: Spring Creek/Burgess Creek
Tuesday, April 02
| 1:00PM - 10:00PM
Poster Viewing
Room: Spring Creek/Burgess Creek
Tuesday, April 02
| 4:30PM - 5:00PM
Coffee Available
Room: Korbel Foyer
Tuesday, April 02
| 5:00PM - 7:15PM
Systems Biology of Lipids/'Omics
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 1 of 6
* Peter Ghazal
, Cardiff University, UK
The ‘Molecular Wires’ that Link the Immune System to Cholesterol Metabolism
Tuesday, April 02
| 5:00PM - 7:15PM
Systems Biology of Lipids/'Omics
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 2 of 6
Manuel Mayr
, King's College, University of London, UK
The Future of Lipidomics: A Multi-Omics Approach to Cardiovascular Disease Risk
Tuesday, April 02
| 5:00PM - 7:15PM
Systems Biology of Lipids/'Omics
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 3 of 6
Gary Siuzdak
, The Scripps Research Institute, USA
Activity Metabolomics and Discovering Metabolites that Alter Physiology
Tuesday, April 02
| 5:00PM - 7:15PM
Systems Biology of Lipids/'Omics
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 4 of 6
Stephanie M. Cologna
, University of Illinois at Chicago, USA
Short Talk: Integrating Proteomics and Lipidomics Reveals Converging Pathway Alterations in Niemann-Pick Disease Type C
Tuesday, April 02
| 5:00PM - 7:15PM
Systems Biology of Lipids/'Omics
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 5 of 6
Elena Lian
, Colorado State University, USA
Short Talk: The Paradox of Arachidonic Acid: Can a Proinflammatory Precursor Act as a Pro-Viral Molecule to Support Flavivirus Infection?
Tuesday, April 02
| 5:00PM - 7:15PM
Systems Biology of Lipids/'Omics
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 6 of 6
Erin Nanette Shepheard McGowan
, University of Melbourne, Australia
Short Talk: Macrophage Fatty Acid Desaturase 1 (FADS1) Is Important for the Survival of the Intracellular Parasite Leishmania Mexicana
Tuesday, April 02
| 7:15PM - 8:15PM
Social Hour with Lite Bites
Room: Spring Creek/Burgess Creek
No registration fees are used to fund alcohol served at this function.
Tuesday, April 02
| 7:30PM - 10:00PM
Poster Session 2
Room: Spring Creek/Burgess Creek
Wednesday, April 03
| 7:00AM - 8:00AM
Breakfast
Room: Spring Creek/Burgess Creek
Wednesday, April 03
| 8:00AM - 11:00AM
Lipidomics and Metabolic Syndrome
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 1 of 9
* Alfred H. Merrill, Jr.
, Georgia Institute of Technology, USA
Wednesday, April 03
| 8:00AM - 11:00AM
Lipidomics and Metabolic Syndrome
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 2 of 9
Claudio J. Villanueva
, University of California, Los Angeles, USA
Global Analysis of Plasma Lipids and Adaptive Thermogenesis
Wednesday, April 03
| 8:00AM - 11:00AM
Lipidomics and Metabolic Syndrome
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 3 of 9
Philipp E. Scherer
, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, USA
Intracellular Lipid Metabolism Impairs ß Cell Compensation during Diet-induced Obesity
Wednesday, April 03
| 8:00AM - 11:00AM
Lipidomics and Metabolic Syndrome
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Coffee Break
Wednesday, April 03
| 8:00AM - 11:00AM
Lipidomics and Metabolic Syndrome
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 5 of 9
Morris J. Birnbaum
, Pfizer Inc., USA
Pharma and Academia Cross-Talk and the Metabolic Syndrome
Wednesday, April 03
| 8:00AM - 11:00AM
Lipidomics and Metabolic Syndrome
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 6 of 9
L. Ashley Cowart
, Virginia Commonwealth University, USA
Short Talk: Sphingosine Kinase 1 Regulates Sexual Dimorphism in Non-Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease via Estrogen-Dependent Suppression of Fibrosis
Wednesday, April 03
| 8:00AM - 11:00AM
Lipidomics and Metabolic Syndrome
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 7 of 9
Cory P. Johnson
, University of Maine, USA
Short Talk: Sending Signals: Adipose Sensory Nerves May Communicate with the Brain via Lipid Metabolites
Wednesday, April 03
| 8:00AM - 11:00AM
Lipidomics and Metabolic Syndrome
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 8 of 9
Anna Alexanova
, Tampere University, Finland
Short Talk: Modeling Lipid Metabolism of Coronary Artery Disease Patients with Induced Pluripotent Stem Cell-Derived Hepatocytes
Wednesday, April 03
| 8:00AM - 11:00AM
Lipidomics and Metabolic Syndrome
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 9 of 9
Habtamu B. Beyene
, Monash University, Australia
Short Talk: High-Throughput Plasma Lipidomic Profiling Identifies Differential Association of Lipid Signatures with Insulin Resistance in Men versus Women
Wednesday, April 03
| 11:00AM - 5:00PM
On Own for Lunch
Wednesday, April 03
| 11:00AM - 1:00PM
Poster Setup
Room: Spring Creek/Burgess Creek
Wednesday, April 03
| 1:00PM - 10:00PM
Poster Viewing
Room: Spring Creek/Burgess Creek
Wednesday, April 03
| 4:30PM - 5:00PM
Coffee Available
Room: Korbel Foyer
Wednesday, April 03
| 5:00PM - 7:00PM
Cancer Lipidomics
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 1 of 6
* Sarah Spiegel
, Virginia Commonwealth University, USA
Wednesday, April 03
| 5:00PM - 7:00PM
Cancer Lipidomics
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 2 of 6
Michael J.O. Wakelam
, Babraham Institute, UK
Lipidomic Analysis of Cancer Identifies Potential Therapeutic Targets
Wednesday, April 03
| 5:00PM - 7:00PM
Cancer Lipidomics
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 3 of 6
Tim F. Greten
, NCI, National Institutes of Health, USA
Mechanisms of Immune Escape in Liver Cancer
Wednesday, April 03
| 5:00PM - 7:00PM
Cancer Lipidomics
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 4 of 6
Yusuf A. Hannun
, Stony Brook Cancer Center, USA
Neutral Ceramidase in Colon Cancer
Wednesday, April 03
| 5:00PM - 7:00PM
Cancer Lipidomics
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 5 of 6
Lipin Kao
, East Carolina University, USA
Short Talk: Chemotherapy Selection Pressure Elicits Marked Alterations of Sphingolipid Composition in Acute Myelogenous Leukemia Cells
Wednesday, April 03
| 5:00PM - 7:00PM
Cancer Lipidomics
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 6 of 6
Justin M. Snider
, Stony Brook University, USA
Short Talk: Probing Sphingolipid Flux in Response to Chemotherapeutics
Wednesday, April 03
| 7:00PM - 8:00PM
Social Hour with Lite Bites
Room: Spring Creek/Burgess Creek
No registration fees are used to fund alcohol served at this function.
Wednesday, April 03
| 7:30PM - 10:00PM
Poster Session 3
Room: Spring Creek/Burgess Creek
Thursday, April 04
| 7:00AM - 8:00AM
Breakfast
Room: Spring Creek/Burgess Creek
Thursday, April 04
| 8:00AM - 11:15AM
Lipid Signaling in Inflammation
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 1 of 8
* Valerie B. O'Donnell
, Cardiff University, UK
Journal of Lipid Research Lectureship: Dysregulation of the Lysophospholipid/Autotaxin Axis Defines the Cardiovascular Risk SNP rs10757274 on Chromosome 9p21
Thursday, April 04
| 8:00AM - 11:15AM
Lipid Signaling in Inflammation
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 2 of 8
Diane K. Jorkasky
, Complexa Inc., USA
From the Fires of Inflammation to a Drug that Quenches the Flames: The Clinical Development of the Nitro Fatty Acid, CXA-10
Thursday, April 04
| 8:00AM - 11:15AM
Lipid Signaling in Inflammation
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Coffee Break
Thursday, April 04
| 8:00AM - 11:15AM
Lipid Signaling in Inflammation
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 4 of 8
Marcus Conrad
, Helmholtz Zentrum München, Germany
Oxidized Phospholipids in Ferroptosis and Neurodegeneration
Thursday, April 04
| 8:00AM - 11:15AM
Lipid Signaling in Inflammation
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 5 of 8
Gerhard Krönke
, Universitätsklinikum Erlangen, Germany
Lipid Oxidation as Regulative Element during Immune Tolerance and Hemostasis
Thursday, April 04
| 8:00AM - 11:15AM
Lipid Signaling in Inflammation
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 6 of 8
John-Demian Sauer
, University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA
Short Talk: Cyclooxygenase-2 Dependent Prostaglandin E2 Signaling through the EP3 Receptor Is Required for Cell-Mediated
Immunity to Listeria Monocytogenes
Thursday, April 04
| 8:00AM - 11:15AM
Lipid Signaling in Inflammation
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 7 of 8
Emily Bowman
, Ohio State University, USA
Short Talk: Lipidome Abnormalities May Contribute to Altered Macrophage Phenotype in HIV Infection
Thursday, April 04
| 8:00AM - 11:15AM
Lipid Signaling in Inflammation
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 8 of 8
Kirsten Dee Krieger
, Colorado State University, USA
Short Talk: Phosphatidylcholine: A Membrane Brick or Key to Replication of Dengue Viruses?
Thursday, April 04
| 11:15AM - 5:00PM
On Own for Lunch
Thursday, April 04
| 4:30PM - 5:00PM
Coffee Available
Room: Korbel Foyer
Thursday, April 04
| 5:00PM - 7:15PM
Lipid Recognition by the Adaptive Immune System
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 1 of 6
*
Jamie Rossjohn
, Monash University, Australia
How T Cells Sense Lipids
Thursday, April 04
| 5:00PM - 7:15PM
Lipid Recognition by the Adaptive Immune System
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 2 of 6
Graham S. Ogg
, University of Oxford, UK
Lipids and Allergic Skin Disease
Thursday, April 04
| 5:00PM - 7:15PM
Lipid Recognition by the Adaptive Immune System
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 3 of 6
Chyung-Ru Wang
, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, USA
Impact of Hyperlipidemia on CD1-Restricted Lipid Antigen-Specific T Cells
Thursday, April 04
| 5:00PM - 7:15PM
Lipid Recognition by the Adaptive Immune System
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 4 of 6
Mauro Corrado
, Max Planck Institute of Immunology and Epigenetics, Germany
Short Talk: Cardiolipin Controls CD8+ Memory T Cell Metabolism and Function
Thursday, April 04
| 5:00PM - 7:15PM
Lipid Recognition by the Adaptive Immune System
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 5 of 6
Nicole Lane Starr
, University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA
Short Talk: Lipidomic Analysis of Nasal Lavage Fluid from Healthy Subjects following Experimental Rhinovirus Inoculation
Thursday, April 04
| 5:00PM - 7:15PM
Lipid Recognition by the Adaptive Immune System
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Speaker 6 of 6
Julia Esser-von Bieren
, Technical University and Helmholtz Centre Munich, Germany
Short Talk: Remodeling of Myeloid Arachidonic Acid Metabolism Imparts Helminth-Driven Control of Type 2 Inflammation
Thursday, April 04
| 7:15PM - 7:30PM
Meeting Wrap-Up: Outcomes and Future Directions (Organizers)
Room: Korbel Grand Ballroom
Thursday, April 04
| 7:30PM - 8:30PM
Social Hour with Lite Bites
Room: Spring Creek/Burgess Creek
No registration fees are used to fund alcohol served at this function.
Thursday, April 04
| 8:00PM - 11:00PM
Entertainment
Room: Spring Creek/Burgess Creek
Entertainment is not subsidized by conference registration fees nor any U.S. federal government grants. Funding for this expense is provided by other revenue sources.
Thursday, April 04
| 8:00PM - 11:00PM
Cash Bar
Room: Spring Creek/Burgess Creek
Friday, April 05
| 10:24AM - 10:24AM
Departure
*Session Chair.
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