Soutenance publique de thèse - Pauline TRICQUET
Le complexe Elongator intervient dans l'ajout de modifications dérivées du 5'-carboxylméthyluridine (cm5U) sur les ARN de transfert (ARNt), influençant ainsi la traduction de certains ARN messagers (ARNm) et contribuant à maintenir l'intégrité du protéome. Ce complexe est impliqué dans divers processus biologiques et revêt une importance particulière en cancérologie. L'identification d'inhibiteurs chimiques d'Elongator présente un intérêt significatif tant dans la recherche fondamentale que dans la recherche pharmaceutique.Grâce à un criblage en levure, ce travail révèle un nouveau rôle potentiel pour Elongator et identifie un inhibiteur chimique du complexe. Ce composé se présente comme un candidat intéressant en tant qu'inhibiteur pharmacologique, ouvrant ainsi de nouvelles perspectives pour la recherche de thérapies anticancéreuses.
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Narilis annual meeting
NARILIS is pleased to invite its members from UNamur and CHU UCL Namur to come together on December 17, 2024, for an exciting afternoon of scientific exchange. The program will run over an afternoon, and will feature many scientific talks and a "speed dating" poster session. The day will end with a festive walking dinner to celebrate all the successes of the year!This event is a fantastic opportunity to showcase your research. We encourage all researchers and clinician-researchers to actively participate and submit their communication proposals. Here’s how you can get involved:20-min talks in duo, trio or quatuor“My thesis in 5 minutes”Posters
More info on the NARILIS website
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EMBO Workshop | Establishing state-of-the-art mollusc genomics
EMBO Courses and Workshops are selected for their excellent scientific quality and timelines, provision of good networking activities for all participants and speaker gender diversity (at least 40% of speakers must be from the underrepresented gender). Organisers are encouraged to implement measures to make the meeting environmentally more sustainable.Upon registration - More info and registration on the EMBO website.
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50 ans de microscopie électronique à l’UNamur
Au programme
16h00 | Accueil des participants dans le hall de la Faculté de médecine16h30 | Séance anniversaire et inaugurale17h30 | Drink et visite (en groupe) des laboratoiresParticipation externe sur invitation. Une question ? Contacter Jean-François Colomer : jean-francois.colomer@unamur.be
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ILEE-NARILIS lunch seminar
Charting the DNA methylome landscape in cancer, chronic disease and phenotype
Abstract: Our team has developed some of the first pipelines for genome-scale DNA methylation analysis. Our work has revealed aberrant methylation and expression patterns in several cancer types and revealed new mechanism of epigenetic regulation in cancer cells. We are now applying cutting-edge whole genome scale DNA methylation analysis in tissues as well as well as in cell free DNA (epigenetic liquid biopsy) and epigenetic editing platforms to investigate clinically relevant biomedical questions in cancer (for example, methylation map of colorectal, prostate, lung cancer and pancreatic cancer patients). Our work in epigenetic editing has implication in revealing causal function and new epigenetic regulation. In this talk, I will present the key findings from some of our works over the years and also elaborate on some recent and future directions in understanding the role of DNA methylation events in cancer metastasis, early detection, and treatment monitoring in solid cancers and also in chronic diseases and phenotype. More information on the ILEE website
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Soutenance publique de thèse de doctorat en Sciences physiques - Andrea Scarmelotto
Abstract
Radiotherapy is a cornerstone of cancer treatment and is currently administered to approximately half of all cancer patients. However, the cytotoxic effects of ionizing radiation on normal tissues represent a major limitation, as they restrict the dose that can be safely delivered to patients and, consequently, reduce the likelihood of effective tumor control. In this context, delivering radiation at ultra-high dose rates (UHDR, > 40 Gy/s) is gaining increasing attention due to its potential to spare healthy tissues surrounding the tumor and to prevent radiation-induced side effects, as compared to conventional dose rates (CONV, on the order of Gy/min).The mechanism underlying this protective effect—termed the FLASH effect—remains elusive, driving intensive research to elucidate the biological processes triggered by this type of irradiation.In vitro models offer a valuable tool to support this research, allowing for the efficient screening of various beam parameters and biological responses in a time- and cost-effective manner. In this study, multicellular tumor spheroids and normal cells were exposed to proton irradiation at UHDR to evaluate its effectiveness in controlling tumor growth and its cytotoxic impact on healthy tissues, respectively.We report that UHDR and CONV irradiation induced a comparable growth delay in 3D tumor spheroids, suggesting similar efficacy in tumor control. In normal cells, both dose rates induced similar levels of senescence; however, UHDR irradiation led to lower apoptosis induction at clinically relevant doses and early time points post-irradiation.Taken together, these findings further highlight the potential of UHDR irradiation to modulate the response of normal tissues while maintaining comparable tumor control.JuryProf. Thomas BALLIGAND (UNamur), PrésidentProf. Stéphane LUCAS (UNamur), SecrétaireProf. Carine MICHIELS (UNamur)Dr Sébastien PENNINCKX (Hôpital Universitaire de Bruxelles)Prof. Cristian FERNANDEZ (Université de Bern)Dr Rudi LABARBE (IBA)
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46th annual BCLAS sypmposium
2025 theme: Stress and emotions in animals
The purpose of the symposium aligns with the missions of BCLAS to promote the replacement, reduction and refinement of laboratory animal use by driving reflection, sharing information, providing education and support to the scientific community, authorities and public, in order to lead to an ethical, responsible and qualitative research enabling further improvement in human & animal health.
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SFMBBM PhD Day 2024
This event will be the perfect opportunity not only to discover the latest advances in the field of biological macromolecules research, but also to share knowledge, collaborate, as well as to showcase the outstanding work of PhD students. PhD students are encouraged to submit an abstract for an oral presentation and/or poster. Five talks will be selected on the basis of received abstracts and added to the final programme. Prizes will be awarded for the best oral presentation and the best poster at the end of the event.
More info about abstract submission and registration on the website
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