Extracellular Heat Shock Protein 70 is Lipid Modified

Speaker

InYoung Kim, Ph.D. Candidate

Date

July 18, 2011, 1:00 pm–3:00 pm

Location

KCBD
Room: 1103

Description

IMMU-DE Extracellular Heat Shock Protein 70 is Lipid Modified and Demonstrates IL-10 Mediated Immune Modulatory Functions via Toll-Like Receptor 2/6


Submitting Unit: Committee on Immunology
Type of Event: Defense
Date of Event: Monday, July 18 2011
Start Time: 2:00 PM
End Time: 4:00 PM
Building: Knapp Center for Biomedical Discovery, Room 1103

Name of Series, Lectureship, Ceremony:
Student Defense

Title of talk or presentation:
Extracellular Heat Shock Protein 70 is Lipid Modified and Demonstrates IL-10 Mediated Immune Modulatory Functions via Toll-Like Receptor 2/6

Speaker’s Name and Degrees:
InYoung Kim, Ph.D. Candidate

Speaker’s Institutional Affiliation:
Committee on Immunology

Description:
THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO
BIOMEDICAL SCIENCES CLUSTER


Thesis Defense
Presented by


InYoung Kim
Graduate Student
Committee on Immunology
(Jabri Lab)

“Extracellular Heat Shock Protein 70 is Lipid Modified and Demonstrates IL-10 Mediated Immune Modulatory Functions via Toll-Like Receptor 2/6”

Monday, July 18th, 2011
2:00 PM
KCBD 1103

Latest News

IGSB Fellow Yoav Gilad heads study on how social stress changes immune system gene expression in primates

“We were able to use gene expression to classify individuals based on their rank,” said Yoav Gilad, PhD, associate professor of human genetics at the University of Chicago Biological Sciences and senior author of the study in PNAS. “Demonstrating these very plastic and temporal changes was novel and quite interesting.” Press Release

UChicago scientists find untapped potential in the “microbiome” of bacteria inside the human body

While microbiologists were classically limited to studying only bacterial species they could get to grow in a laboratory dish, the new method of metagenomics has allowed ecologists to discover thousands of new species in a single scoop of soil or teaspoon of seawater. Now that technology is being applied by University of Chicago Medicine researchers, in collaboration with Argonne National Laboratory, to the ecosystem of the human gut.Press Release

IGSB Senior Fellow Janet Rowley wins the 2012 Japan Prize for Healthcare and Medical Technology

Janet Davison Rowley, MD, the Blum-Riese Distinguished Service Professor of Medicine, Molecular Genetics & Cell Biology and Human Genetics at the University of Chicago, will share the 2012 Japan Prize for Healthcare and Medical Technology with Brian J. Druker, MD, from the Oregon Health and Science University, and Nicholas B. Lydon, PhD, formerly with Novartis. They were chosen for their roles in the development of the first precisely targeted anti-cancer drug, called imatinib (Gleevec®). Press Release

IGSB Fellow Habibul Ahsan receives named professorship

Habibul Ahsan, MD, MMedSc, professor in the departments of health studies, human genetics and medicine, director of the Center for Cancer Epidemiology and Prevention at the University of Chicago Medical Center and associate director of the University of Chicago Comprehensive Cancer Center, has been named a Louis Block Professor. Press Release

Top Japanese Scientist leaving government post to move to the University of Chicago Medical Center

“Dr. Nakamura has made major contributions to modern genetics and genomics,” said Kenneth Polonsky, MD, Dean of the Biological Sciences Division and the Pritzker School of Medicine at the University of Chicago. “We are extremely gratified by his interest in continuing his illustrious career at the University of Chicago.”  Press Release

IGSB Core Faculty Robert Grossman appointed Chief Research Informatics Officer of the Division of the Biological Sciences

Robert Grossman, PhD, assumed the role of chief research informatics officer and is currently overseeing a research group focused on bioinformatics, data mining, data intensive computing and related areas. Press Release

Subscribe to RSS Feed