Skip to main content
Past Events from October 18, 2022 – September 21, 2023 – Shi Lab Past Events from October 18, 2022 – September 21, 2023 – Shi Lab

CCB Colloquium – Professor Simon Scheuring, Weill Cornell Medicine,

“Breaking Speed and Resolution Limitations of High-Speed AFM for Membrane Protein Structure-Function Analysis” Simon Scheuring1,2,* 1 Weill Cornell Medicine, Department of Anesthesiology, 1300 York Avenue, New York, NY-10065, USA. 2 Weill Cornell Medicine, Department of Physiology and Biophysics, 1300 York Avenue, New York, NY-10065, USA High-speed atomic force microscopy (HS-AFM) is a powerful technique that … Read More

CCB Colloquium – Professor Dragomir Milovanovic, DZNE

Condensate Biology at the Synapse  Brain functioning critically relies on neuronal communication that mainly occurs by chemical signaling at the specialized contacts known as synapses. At synapses, messenger molecules are packed into synaptic vesicles (SVs), which are secreted upon the arrival of an action potential. For neuronal signaling to persist, synapses have to maintain an … Read More

CCB Colloquium – Professor Dingchang Lin, Johns Hopkins University

Electronic and molecular approaches for neural recording: deciphering the brain in space and time Resolving neuronal activity in space and time is a long-sought capability in neuroscience, which is, however, still hard to achieve using existing technologies. In this talk, I will share with the audience our strategies toward this goal via innovations at the device … Read More

CCB Colloquium – Professor Keith Mickolajczyk, RWJ Medical School

Single-molecule biophysical approaches to studying the mechanisms of motor proteins Ribosomes are molecular machines made of protein and RNA that translate mRNA into proteins. The biogenesis of new ribosomes is the most energetically costly process in the cell, accounting for ~60% of all ATP consumed. New ribosomes begin as rRNA, and are sequentially matured through … Read More

CCB Colloquium – Professor Xiaoyang Su, Rutgers Medical School and Cancer Institute of New Jersey

LC-MS Metabolomics Reveals the Role of SLC45A4 in GABA de novo Synthesis Affiliations: 1Departments of Medicine, Division of Endocrinology, Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, Rutgers University; 2Metabolomics Shared Resource, Rutgers Cancer Institute of New Jersey, New Brunswick, NJ 08901, USA Solute carrier (SLC) proteins are membrane transporters that govern the cross-membrane exchanges of glucose, amino acids, inorganic … Read More

Special Seminar – Professor Neha Jain, Indian Institute of Technology

CCB 3217

Modulation of amyloid assembly by chaperone-like proteins Soluble proteins have an inherent propensity to undergo altered protein folding, forming cross-B sheet-rich structures called amyloids. Amyloid fibrils have gained significant attention due to their involvement in neurodegenerative disorders. Parkinson's disease (PD) is one of the most common movement disorders and the fastest-growing age-related neurological disorder. It … Read More