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Mathematical Systems Biology of Cancer II
Oct 24, 2007 to Oct 26, 2007

Organizer(s)

Joe Gray, Elizabeth Purdom, Terry Speed and Paul Spellman.
To apply for funding, you must register by Fri, Oct 26 2007.
This workshop is co-sponsored by the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and SRI International.

We will again focus on the application of mathematical and computational tools to understand the properties of cancer and other biological systems. It is recognized that many biological processes cannot be understood by studying individual components. Instead, it is the interactions between these components that define the properties of the system. The past thirty years has seen the identification of dozens of processes and hundreds of genes or proteins that become disregulated during cancer development. While certain types of cancers share common properties, each cancer is a unique genetic disease where mutations in many components and pathways interact. A systems based approach has the greatest chance of determining the system malfunctions that cause each individual's disease and of identifying effective treatments.

This workshop is designed to encourage and support the mathematical community's involvement in the effort to study cancer using system approaches. Conference presenters will include mathematicians and computer scientists presently involved in systems approaches to cancer and more general fields of biology. These presenters will cover general approaches to systems biology including analysis of genome scale data as well as statistical, continuous, and hybrid methods for pathway modeling. The workshop will also provide tutorials covering the use of tools and methods in systems biology as well as on the fundamental biological processes involved in cancer. In addition, the workshop will provide travel support for students and postdocs from the mathematical sciences to foster interest in this field.

From a biological perspective, the workshop will capitalize on work being performed by Investigators at LBNL, SRI, and UCSF who study the signaling networks associated with breast cancer. The program is developing high throughput assays to characterize these cell lines and examine how they respond to manipulations of key genes. Assays include mRNA expression profiling, measurements of protein abundance, and phenotypic responses using high content screening microscopy. Data and models from this program will be shared at this workshop (prior to publication) for examination and analysis by the participants. It is hoped that participants become engaged in these problems for the long term and that the LBNL led effort will continue to provide data and models for analysis in the future. LBNL even intends to allow its experimental infrastructure to be used to test hypotheses generated by meeting participants in future years.

Previous participants are strongly encouraged to attend again, and should notify the conference organizers if they have work that utilizes data from the Integrative Cancer Biology Program that may be of general interest.

A block of rooms has been reserved at the Rose Garden Inn. Reservations may be made by calling 1-800-992-9005 OR directly on their website. Click on "Groups" on the bottom of the page and enter the appropriate group code CGMSBC (this code is not case sensitive) into box labeled: "I am an Attendee" - this will open up a window showing all of the group information. You will proceed from there.
The cut-off date for reservations is October 1, 2007.

Funding

To apply for funding, you must register by Fri, Oct 26 2007. Click to Register
Students, recent Ph.D.'s, women, and members of underrepresented minorities are particularly encouraged to apply. Funding awards are made typically 6 weeks before the workshop begins. Requests received after the funding deadline are considered only if additional funds become available.
Schedule
Wednesday, October 24, 2007
8:45AM - 9:00AM Welcome by MSRI
8:45AM - 5:00PM TUTORIALS
9:00AM - 9:45AM Elizabeth Purdom Introduction to Exon Arrays
9:45AM - 10:30AM Sach Mukherjee Monte Carlo Methods For Learning Biological Networks
11:00AM - 12:00PM William Chen Issues in Modeling Signal Transduction and Other Reaction Networks with ODEs
12:00PM - 1:30AM Lunch
1:30PM - 2:15PM Li Lang The Applications of Differential Equation Based Nonlinear Regression in Pharmacokinetics and Metabolomics
2:15PM - 3:00PM Serban Nacu Searching for differentially expressed pathways in microarray data
3:00PM - 3:30PM Tea break
3:30PM - 4:15PM Ben Raphael Analyzing Structural Rearrangements in Cancer Genomes
4:15PM - 5:00PM Susan Holmes New in situ data for the analysis of interactions between cancer and the immune system in auxillary lymph nodes
5:00PM - 6:00PM Reception
Thursday, October 25, 2007
9:00AM - 5:00PM INVITED SPEAKER PRESENTATIONS
9:00AM - 10:00AM Suzanne Gaudet Analysis of the regulators of caspase activation by death receptor ligands
10:00AM - 10:30AM Coffee break
10:30AM - 11:30AM Neil Hayes Genomic Classification of Lung Cancer for Clinical Use
11:30AM - 12:30PM Lingchong You A Bistable Rb/E2F Switch: A Model for Mammalian Cell Cycle Entry
12:30PM - 1:30PM Lunch
1:30PM - 2:30PM Garry Nolan Inference engines for primary cell signaling using patient samples
2:30PM - 3:30PM Khuloud Jaqaman Stochastic models of yeast kinetochore-microtubule interactions
3:30PM - 4:00PM Tea break
4:00PM - 5:00PM Alan Perelson Modeling viral infections **MSRI Biology Colloquium Lecture Series**
Friday, October 26, 2007
9:00AM - 5:00PM DATA ANALYSIS PRESENTATIONS
9:00AM - 9:45AM Introduction to ICBP data
9:45AM - 10:30AM Mark Robinson A Comparison of Affymetrix Gene Expression Arrays
10:30AM - 11:00AM Coffee break
11:00AM - 11:45AM Elizabeth Purdom Detection of Alternative Splicing with Exon Arrays
12:00PM - 1:30PM Lunch
1:30PM - 2:15PM Dustin Potter The Analysis of Differential Methylation Hybridization Data
2:15PM - 3:00PM Keith Baggerly Cell Lines, Microarrays, Drugs and Disease: Trying to Predict Response to Chemotherapy
3:00PM - 3:30PM Tea break
3:30PM - 4:15PM Ben Raphael Derivation and Consequences of Rearranged Cancer Genomes
4:15PM - 5:00PM Adam Olshen Segmentation of Array CGH Data with Application to Allele Specific Copy Number, Clonality, and Copy Number Variation


Questions about this workshop should be sent either by email to
or by regular mail to:
Mathematical Systems Biology of Cancer II
Mathematical Sciences Research Institute
17 Gauss Way, Berkeley, CA
94720-5070.
USA

The Institute is committed to the principles of Equal Opportunity and Affirmative Action.



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