Systems Chemistry



May 26th - 30th, Bozen, Italy

 

Program

 

Tom Blundell (University of Cambridge, UK)
Exploring Biological and Chemical Space with High-Throughput Crystallographic, Biophysical and Computational Methods: The New Dimensions of Drug Discovery

Tim Clark (University of Erlangen, Germany)
The Chemistry of Signal Transduction in the TetR System

Athel Cornish-Bowden (CNRS Marseille, France)
Catalysis at the Origin of Life

Antione Danchin (Institut Pasteur, Paris, France)
Patches in the Genetic Program as Prerequisites for the Construction of a Synthetic Cell

Alexander Heckel (University of Frankfurt, Germany)
Shedding Light on Nucleic Acids and DNA under Construction

Douglas Kell (University of Manchester, UK)
Drug and Xenobiotic Transport via Membrane Carriers - an Exception or the Rule? Biophysical versus Mechanistic Analyses

Joseph Lehár (CombinatoRx, Cambridge, MA, USA)

Systems Biology from Synergistic Chemical Combinations

Steve Ley (University of Cambridge, UK)
New Tools for the Molecule Makers: Emerging Technologies

Sara Linse (University of Lund, Sweden)
Protein Interaction, Association and Fibrillation

Ben List (MPI Mühlheim, Germany)
New Concepts for Catalysis

Eric Meggers (University of Marburg, Germany)
Chemical Biology with Organometallics

Justin Roberts (UC Riverside, CA, USA)
High-Throughput Analysis of Nucleoside- and Nucleotide-binding by Proteins

Gisbert Schneider (University of Frankfurt, Germany)
The Chances and Limitations of Molecular Design

Peter Seeberger (ETH Zürich, Switzerland)
Microreactors as Tools for Organic Synthesis

Michele Vendrusculo (University of Cambridge, UK)
Life on the Edge: Proteins are Close to their Solubility Limits

Günter von Kiedrowski (University of Bochum, Germany)
Systems Chemistry and the Origin of Life

Holger Wallmeier (Frankfurt, Germany)
A Dynamical Supramolecular System for Chemical Biology - a Step Towards
Contiguous Structural Spaces

Hans Westerhoff (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, The Netherlands)
Chemistry in Three Dimensions: How a System’s Biology May Regulate its
System’s Chemistry.

Dave Winkler (CSIRO Melbourne, Australia)
Modeling for Regenerative Medicine

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