Nobel Laureate Roger Tsien, PhD, Keynotes Cedars-Sinai Nanomedicine Conference March 15, 16

Posted: Published on March 9th, 2013

This post was added by Dr Simmons

Newswise LOS ANGELES (March 11, 2013) Nobel laureate Roger Tsien, PhD, will keynote Cedars-Sinais March 15 and 16 Nanomedicine for Imaging and Treatment Conference, which will assemble a multidisciplinary group of nationally and internationally renowned academic researchers, clinicians and representatives from private industry and the National Institutes of Health.

Tsien, professor of pharmacology, chemistry and biochemistry at the University of California, San Diego, shared the 2008 Nobel Prize in chemistry for the discovery and development of the green fluorescent protein (GFP), which glows bright green and is found in one species of jellyfish. Among its biochemical uses, synthetic green fluorescent protein can be bound to other proteins to track their movement and behavior.

Experts from two dozen organizations will lead sessions on identified and emerging issues in nanomedicine, focusing on recent achievements in drug delivery, nanomedicine and imaging, the role of the NIH in nanodrug development, and the latest preclinical and clinical advances in the treatment of cancer, neurodegenerative diseases and other conditions. The program was designed to provide many opportunities for those attending to talk and share ideas with members of the faculty.

Scientists specializing in nanotechnology and nanomedicine generally work with substances smaller than 100 nanometers. One nanometer is one-millionth of a millimeter. A sheet of paper is 100,000 nanometers thick and a strand of human DNA is 2.5 nanometers in diameter. Nano researchers manipulate substances and materials in the realm of their atomic makeup.

Nanotechnology has the real potential to revolutionize a wide array of medical and biotechnology tools and procedures so that they are more personalized, portable, cheaper, safer and easier to administer, according to the United States National Nanotechnology Initiative website, which says nanomedicine already is making an impact in many areas, such as biological imaging for early disease diagnosis, molecular imaging for early cancer detection, therapeutic targeting of cancer cells, and monitoring of individual cells and molecules as they move in their environments.

The conferences March 15 sessions will focus on nanomedicine for advanced imaging and targeted drug delivery. Tsiens 1 p.m. presentation will be on new molecules to image neuronal function and disease processes. Other sessions will include:

Transport oncophysics and opportunities for nanomedicine Bringing nanomedicines to cell organelles Nanoscale electrostatic delivery systems: from layered nanoparticles to RNAi microsponges Design and biorecognition of water-soluble macromolecular therapeutics Multivalent hyperbranched polymeric nanoparticles as self-reporting drug delivery vehicles A window into the Alzheimers brain Direct brain MR-guided delivery of nanoparticles in neuro-oncology and neurodegenerative disorders MRI of cancer using targeted contrast agents Mapping the human vasculature by in vivo phage display Ligand-directed targeting and molecular imaging in translational medicine A discussion on multidisciplinary research in oncology, with a panel of experts from the National Institutes of Health

March 16 sessions, spotlighting nanotechnologys major role in the future of medical treatment, will include:

Nanotechnology for medicine Harnessing the combined powers of antibody-fusion proteins and nanopolymers for cancer therapy Nanomedicine for targeted drug delivery to epithelial barriers of intestines, skin and lung The clinical significance of iron oxide nanoparticles Supramolecular nanomedicines for targeted cancer therapy Nanotechnology strategies to overcome multidrug resistance Protein-based nanoparticles target tumors and drug resistance Nanobiomaterials: advances, safety and security Translating nanomedical research into nanomedical applications Panel discussion among industry and legal experts

This will be Cedars-Sinais second nanomedicine conference for science and health care professionals, presented by the Department of Neurosurgery and the Samuel Oschin Comprehensive Cancer Institute.

Continued here:
Nobel Laureate Roger Tsien, PhD, Keynotes Cedars-Sinai Nanomedicine Conference March 15, 16

This entry was posted in Uncategorized. Bookmark the permalink.

Comments are closed.