REGISTRATION
Registration for 2010 has now closed.
Onsite registration is still available.
Please click here for the registration form you can fill out and bring with you to register at Lorne.
Earlybird registration has now closed.
2010 registration fees include:
* Access to the sessions of choice
* Conference satchel complete with program and abstract book
* Tea breaks for the days of nominated attendance
* Welcome BBQ Dinner (Thu 4 Feb) and Conference Dinner (Fri 5 Feb) - dinners not included with day only registrations, conference dinner not included with additional trade pass
* GST
A tax invoice (receipt) will be provided for all registrants as the fee includes a GST component which will represent a credit for some delegates. The ABN for the conference is 90 093 246 176. All rates quoted include GST and are in Australian dollars.
Registration Type
| Price
|
Full Member Registration plus APS Renewal
| $410.00 |
Full Member Early Registration plus APS Renewal
| $350.00
|
Full Non-Member Registration
| $520.00
|
| Full Non-Member Early Registration | $470.00
|
| Student Non-Member Registration | $305.00
|
| Student Member Registration plus APS Renewal | $250.00 |
| Student Early Member Registration plus APS Renewal | $220.00 |
Day Registration
| $210.00
|
Complimentary Invited Speaker Registration
| $0.00
|
| Included Trade Pass | $0.00 |
| Additional Trade Pass | $235.00 |
| Social Functions | Cost
|
Additional Welcome BBQ Dinner ticket (Thursday 4 February)
| $55.00
|
Additional Conference Dinner ticket (Friday 5 February)
| $80.00
|
| Pre Lorne Workshop - Student | $25.00 |
| Pre-Lorne Workshop non-member | $50.00 |
| Transfer Royal Parade then Melb Airport to Erskine Mantra Resort on 04/02/2010 11:00 | $35.00 |
| Transfer Erskine Resort to Melb Airport then Royal Parade on 07/02/2010 2:00 | $35.00 |
Payment and Acknowledgement
All booking details will be acknowledged by email. After processing, the delegate will be sent a tax invoice by email and, when payment is completed, a participation record. Payments may be made by sending a cheque to the conference secretariat or by providing credit card details. Space for these details is provided on your tax invoice.
EARLY BIRD RATE PAYMENTS - If your registration was made before the early bird deadline expiry, but the payment was not made at the time and has not been received by Monday 7th December, the early bird discount will be removed.
National delegates – Cheques are to be made payable to the “Australasian Proteomics Society”. MasterCard, Visa or Bankcard are accepted.
International delegates – Payment may be made by credit card (MasterCard, Visa or Bankcard) or by bank cheque in Australian dollars drawn on an Australian Bank and made payable to the “Lorne Proteomics Conference”.
Any changes to the booking details should be directed to the conference secretariat who will endeavor to accommodate the request.
Cancellation Policy
Cancellations will incur a cancellation fee of A$100 if made in writing before 1st January 2010. No refund is payable after that date but registrations can be transferred to substitute delegates without penalty.
ERSKINE MANTRA RESORT, 4.5 star, The Conference Venue
(please note the old style guest house rooms no longer exist)
ASN has secured special discounted conference rates for your stay.
Booking Information
For all new bookings or to make changes to existing bookings contact Liz Crossley directly at \n
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Room Type
| Price Per Night
|
Heritage Room ((king bed or two single beds- single/double or twinshare)
| $150.00
|
Resort Room ((king bed or two single beds- single/double or twin share)
| $180.00
|
One Bedroom Apartment
| $210.00
|
*Sharing Rooms - Sharing rooms does not result in any increase in tariff and is an effective means of reducing the cost of attending the meeting. Please indicate on your registration form the room style you require and, if known, the names of other delegates with whom you wish to share. Only one person should book the room online, but in a separate email you can ask us to split the tariff between yourself and those sharing with you. Full payment for your stay can also be made.
*Extended Bookings - If staying for more than one conference, you should book all your accommodation on the first conference you register for, so you will not have to change rooms as each conference begins.
*Arrival and Departure Times - rooms are not guaranteed available until 2pm on each day though can be made available earlier in the day at the discretion of the hotel itself. NOTE: Delegates are required to check out of their rooms by 10.00am on the morning of their departure. Should any person fail to do so, a $95.00 late departure fee will apply.
*Cancellation Policy - Accommodation deposits are fully refundable until 30 days before the conference, after which no refunds will be made.
Less than 30 days prior to the arrival date of the conference, any cancelled accommodation will incur a cancellation fee equal to 100% of the total planned stay, as per your original booking
RENTING A HOUSE
If you would like to arrange to rent a property in Lorne, the properties available for the coming summer can be viewed on line at www.gorac.com.au
A useful site for accommodation is http://www.accommodationguide.com.au/sitemap/racv/Great-Ocean-Road-lorne.shtm
CARAVAN PARKS & CABINS
There are a number of Caravan parks in Lorne.
Venue
Mantra Erskine Beach Resort is located on absolute beachfront, in the historic seaside town of Lorne along the famous Great Ocean Road. Under two hours' drive from Melbourne, the resort is nestled between the crystal clear water of Louttit Bay and the Otway Hinterland.
INTERNET ACCESS
Mantra Erskine Beach Resort have installed a new system and all guest rooms now have hardwired internet access available (please see rates below).
As per past meetings the conferences will provide the internet café and wireless access within the convention centre all using the new system.
Payment Methods
| RPR Price (All below prices include GST)
|
1.
| Exsisting national & international partner ISP account
| Determined by ISP
|
| 2. | Usage billed to exsisting mobile phone account
| Rates are determined by the service provider. User will have access to these rates before log-in
|
3.
| Pre-paid (Online) credit cards
| Users may purchase multiple hours (used on a per minute bases) as special rates: 2 hours- $13.20 4 hours- $26.40 6 hours- $39.60 8 hours- $52.80 10 hours- $66.00
|
1 Day Account (24 hour access)
| $20.00 - limit of 200mb
|
| 2 Day Account (48 hour access) | $30.00 limit of 300mb
|
| 3 Day Account (72 hour access) | $40.00 limit of 400mb
|
| 4 Day Account (96 hour access) | $50.00 limit of 500mb
|
| 5 Day Account (120 hour access) | $60.00 limit of 600mb
|
| 10 Day Account (420 hour access) | $100.00 limit of 1Gb
|
1 Month Account
| $150 limit of 1.5Gb
|
| | Day accounts are purchased online and can be used at any Azure accomodation hotspot. This service expires are time limit has been reached or once data limit has been recahed, whichever happens first. |
TRAVEL
Buses are being arranged between Melbourne Airport and the city (Royal Parade outside Walter & Eliza Hall Institute) and the conference centre at Lorne. Seats must be reserved in advance on the registration form. Those booking a bus will be sent an email confirming arrangements shortly before the conference. You should include your mobile number in your registration personal details. The schedule is:
Thursday 4th February - Melbourne to Lorne
The bus leaves Royal Parade then on to Melbourne Airport before heading to Erskine Mantra Resort, 11:00am
Sunday 7th February - Lorne to Melbourne
The bus leaves Erskine Resort then on to Melbourne Airport then heads for Royal Parade, 2:00pm
If you are flying into Melbourne or flying out of Melbourne and wish to catch the conference bus, please allow enough time:
- to get through customs / baggage collection after your flight lands
- before your flight for possible transfer delays
IF THE BUS TRANSFERS DO NOT SUIT YOU....
There is a bus from the airport to Geelong railway station using Gull Buses. Your ticket and timetable can be organised online from
http://www.gull.com.au/ If they cannot help you with a direct transfer directly to Lorne, then another bus can be caught on the Apollo Bay route from the Geelong Railway station. Online details can be found at the MetLink Melbourne Website. You will need to check but the second bus is a regular service and you may not need to book your ticket in advance, simply get on the bus.
There is also a bus from the Avalon Airport to Lorne using Avalon Airport Shuttle. The cost is $65.00 per person. Transfers can be booked on line and it is a door to door service.
Their details are: Avalon Airport Shuttle
Tel #: 03 5278 8788
Fax #: 03 5278 6712
Email:
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Website: www.avalonairportshuttle.com.au
DOMESTIC AIR DISCOUNTS
Travellers should use the following links if they wish to secure a discounted flight!
VIRGIN BLUE www.virginblue.com.au
QANTAS www.qantas.com.au
OVERSEAS DELEGATE VISA INFORMATION
Please note that all travellers to Australia must have a valid visa before boarding their plane. Travellers to Australia cannot apply for a visa on arrival. For many countries, the visa is paperless and added automatically to your air ticket. Check with your travel agent if uncertain or use the following website links.
Information about attending an event in Australia can be found at http://www.immi.gov.au/visitors/index.htm (Visa Arrangements for Events, Conferences and Meetings in Australia)
You can apply for an ETA (an ETA is an electronically stored authority for travel to Australia) directly through the following link https://www.eta.immi.gov.au/ETA/ETAInput.jsp;jsessionid=3F691177972E95B4EF9F56E5517CCD6C For more details about ETA or to find out if your nationality is included in this easy system please visit; www.eta.immi.gov.au
Details for contacting the appropriate visa office closest to the applicant's place of residence can be found at http://www.immi.gov.au/contacts/overseas/index.htm
PROGRAM
The 2010 program has not been finalised, please keep posted for details.
Please Click Here for a copy of the pre-conference workshop program.
Please Click Here for a copy of the conference program.
CONFIRMED INVITED SPEAKERS
Robert Balaban, Division of Intramural Research, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute
Dr. Robert Balaban is Scientific Director of the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI). He is also the Chief of the Laboratory of Cardiac Energetics, Division of Intramural Research, NHLBI. Dr. Balaban attended the University of Miami as an undergraduate in marine biology and received Bachelor of Sciences degrees in Biology and Chemistry in 1975. He attended graduate school at Duke University with an NIH training fellowship where he received his Ph.D. in Physiology and Pharmacology in 1980. The title of his dissertation was “The coupling of aerobic metabolism to active ion transport in the kidney”. Dr. Balaban was awarded a NATO Post-Doctoral Fellowship in the Department of Biochemistry at The University of Oxford (1980-1981). He worked with Dr. Brain Ross and Dr. George Radda on biological applications of NMR in the kidney and mitochondria. Dr. Balaban joined the NHLBI as a staff fellow in the Laboratory of Kidney and Electrolyte Metabolism in 1981. After continuing his work in renal energetics and organic osmolytes in the kidney, Dr. Balaban redirected his efforts to the study of the heart. In 1988 be became the Chief of the newly formed Laboratory of Cardiac Energetics in the NHLBI. He was appointed to Scientific Director of the Laboratory Research Program in December of 1999. He became the overall Scientific Director of the NHLBI intramural program in 2004.
Stephen Blanksby, University of Woolongong
Stephen completed an Honours degree (1995) and a PhD (1999) in the field of gas phase ion chemistry at the University of Adelaide under the supervision of Professor John Bowie. He then undertook postdoctoral research in the laboratories of Professor Helmut Schwarz at the Technical University of Berlin (1999) and at the University of Colorado with Professor G. Barney Ellison and the rest of the famed “Boulder ion gang” (2000-2002). Blanksby was appointed to the School of Chemistry at the University of Wollongong in 2002 where he has built a research group that works on putting the “fun” back into fundamental ion chemistry. In an ongoing collaboration with Dr Todd Mitchell, discoveries in gas phase ion chemistry have been successfully applied to provide new analytical technologies for the rapidly emerging field of lipidomics. Blanksby has continued (with colleague, Assoc. Prof. Jenny Beck) to build on the strong legacy of mass spectrometry-based research at UOW making it one of the most advanced instrumental laboratories in the country. Blanksby is a member of the RACI, serving president of the Australian and New Zealand Society for Mass Spectrometry and founding member of the SMC. His research has recently been recognized by several national awards, including the Rennie Medal (RACI, 2007), the Bowie Medal (ANZSMS, 2009) and the LeFèvre Prize (RACI & AAS 2009).
Richard Caprioli, Vanderbilt
Richard M. Caprioli is the Stanley Cohen Professor of Biochemistry and Director of the Mass Spectrometry Research Center at Vanderbilt University School of Medicine. He is also currently Professor in the Departments of Chemistry and Pharmacology at Vanderbilt University. Dr. Caprioli received his B.S. in 1965 from Columbia University in New York, N.Y., his Ph.D. in 1969 in Biochemistry, also at Columbia University with Professor David Rittenberg. He did a one-year postdoctoral fellowship at Purdue University with Professor John H. Beynon. In 1970, he was appointed as Assistant Professor of Biochemistry at Purdue. In 1975, Dr. Caprioli moved to the University of Texas Medical School in Houston where he was Professor of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology and Director of the Analytical Chemistry Center until his move to Nashville in early 1998.
Eric Deutsch, Institute for Systems Biology
Dr. Eric Deutsch is a senior research scientist at the Institute for Systems Biology, specializing in bioinformatics and integration of data for systems biology research, with a focus on proteomics. He is the lead designer for the Systems Biology Experiment Analysis Management System (SBEAMS). He contributes the development of minimum information standards, data formats, and databases for microarray, proteomic, and other types of functional genomics experiments. Dr. Deutsch is the head of the PeptideAtlas Project, which aims to collect proteomic mass spectrometry data from labs around the world to synthesize a master list of observed peptides and proteins and disseminate the results back to the community. He also heads the group that develops the Trans Proteomic Pipeline (TPP) and other software tools that enable proteomics data analysis.
Yaeta Endo, Ehime University
Prof Endo is currently the Executive Director of Ehime University, Japan.
Through his career he has had numerous appointments such as Research Associate in Biochemistry at the University of Chicago, Professor in Biotechnology at Ehime University and Director of Cell-Free Science and Technology Research Centre just to name a few.
During his study and career he has been recognised for his work and been awarded prestigious awards including the TDK Award,Biotechnology Award Japan and the Official Commendation by the Ministry of Science and Education Japan.
Mike MacCoss, Department of Genome Sciences
Michael MacCoss has been working with mass spectrometry instrumentation since 1994 when he was an undergraduate in a stable isotope geochemistry lab at the University of Vermont. He became interested in biomedical applications working in Dr. Patrick Griffin’s protein mass spectrometry lab at Merck Research Laboratories during two summer internships in 1995 and 1996. In 2001, he completed a Ph.D. in Analytical Chemistry with Professor Dwight Matthews in the development of stable isotope and mass spectrometry methodologies for the measurement of human amino acid and protein metabolism. After completing his degree, Dr. MacCoss moved to The Scripps Research Institute to work with Professor John R. Yates III as a postdoctoral fellow. During his postdoctoral training, Dr. MacCoss worked on methodology and software for many areas of proteomics, ranging from the improved characterization of post-translational modifications and the quantitative analysis of complex protein mixtures. Dr. MacCoss moved to the University of Washington in 2004 as an Assistant Professor of Genome Sciences, where his lab has focused on the development and application of mass spectrometry based technologies for the high throughput characterization of complex protein mixtures. In 2009 he was promoted to Associate Professor.
Jenny Cham, Cranfield University
Jenny Mead started her career in bioscience studying biochemistry at Imperial College, London. Having worked in product development at Merck KGaA pharmaceuticals, Darmstadt, Germany, she decided to change direction taking an applied Masters in bioinformatics, at Cranfield University, UK; a university renowned for its expertise in engineering. At Cranfield, she published work in interspecies microarray bioinformatics, then switched to post-genomic bioinformatics research, undertaking an Engineering Doctorate in proteome bioinformatics sponsored by GlaxoSmithKline, the UK pharmaceutical firm. Her research portfolio to date includes new approaches to improve the quality of protein identifications from automated proteomics pipelines, and most recently, development of cutting-edge bioinformatics solutions for Multiple Reaction Monitoring (MRM) transition design. Jenny has also produced the most comprehensive reviews available in the area of public computational resources for proteomics, aimed at informing the lab-based practitioner of the array of resources available for free on the web. In November 2009, she is moving to the prestigious European Bioinformatics Institute (EBI), Hinxton, UK, to further champion the growth and uptake of freely-available bioinformatics tools on the internet.
Harvey Millar, University of Western Australia
Harvey Millar did his BSc (Hons) and PhD (1997) in plant biochemistry and molecular biology at ANU, Canberra. He has previously held fellowships in the UK and Australia (HFSPO, ARC APD, ARC QEII) and is currently an ARC Australian Professorial Fellow at UWA. He has been awarded the Peter Goldacre Medal from the Australian Society for Plant Scientists (ASPS 2003), the Premier's Prize for Early Career Achievement in Science for Western Australia (2003), and the Science Minister’s Prize for Australian Life Scientist of the Year, one of the Prime Minister’s Science Prizes (2005). He serves on the Editorial Boards of The Journal of Biological Chemistry, Journal of Proteomics and Plant Methods. His research is focused on understanding the role mitochondria play in the primary carbon and nitrogen metabolism of plants and their response to oxidative stress.
David G Myszka, Center for Biomolecular Interaction Analysis, University of Utah
David G. Myszka received a Ph.D. in Biochemistry from The Ohio State University in 1991 and completed a Postdoctoral Fellowship at SmithKline Beecham in 1995 before joining the University of Utah. He has worked in the areas of molecular recognition and biosensor technology development for 18 years. He founded and directs the Center for Biomolecular Interaction Analysis which provide academic researchers with access to state-of-the-art biosensor analysis as well as BioSensor Tools for training and contract services. He has been active in educating the biosensor community on how to improve experimental design as well as data analysis. His research group is currently focused on the analysis of G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) as well as the development of parallel-processing array-based biosensors.
Manfred Raida
Dr. Manfred Raida is group leader of mass spectrometry at the Experimental Therapeutics Centre, A*STAR, Singapore. He studied chemistry at the Free University of Berlin (Germany) and did his diploma degree and doctorate in Biochemistry at the J.W.Goethe University and the Max-Planck Institute for Biophysics, both Frankfurt/Main (Germany) analyzing the anion transport across the red cell membrane after chemical modification and the transport protein, the band-3 protein. After working as scientist for DIAGEN, Duesseldorf (Germany) now QIAGEN, he joined the Lower Saxony Institute for Peptide Research in Hannover (Germany) heading the department of analytical peptide chemistry. There he set up the mass spectrometry for LC-MS analysis of peptides mixtures obtained from human hemofiltrate and other analytical techniques to identify the peptides by mass spectrometry methods and chemical sequencing. This work resulted in the discovery of several novel peptides with potential biological functions. In 2000 he joined Amersham, Freiburg (Germany) as European support manager for mass spectrometry, but left after one year for Cellzome, Heidelberg (Germany). Here he was responsible for the development of high sensitive LC-MS/MS methods for the identification of proteins in biological complexes and post-translational modifications. Further, he developed method for chemical proteomics to identify drug targets by affinity approaches. In 2007 he moved to the newly founded Experimental Therapeutics Centre (ETC) in Singapore to set up the protein analytics, mainly based on mass spectrometry. The ETC is currently establishing the centre of mass spectrometry for protein analysis for Singapore, which he is heading. This centre will support academia and industry in mass spectrometry related questions. Dr Raida’s current work covers beside the identification of proteins and post-translational modifications in relation to biological processes, the identification of targets of small molecules and drugs in development, the identification and verification of potential biomarkers for infectious diseases and cancer.
Albert Sickmann, Institute for Analytical Sciences
Dr. Sickmann received his diploma in biochemistry from the Ruhr-University of Bochum in 1998 and his PhD in Chemistry in 2001. He was Juniorprofessor at the Medical Proteome Center in Bochum (2001-2003) and becomes professor for protein research and Proteomics at the DFG research center for experimental biomedicine at the university of Würzburg (2003-2008). Since September 2008 he is director of the department of bioanalytics at the Institute of Analytical Sciences (ISAS) in Dortmund. Dr. Sickmann is an expert in the field of biological mass spectrometry applications, posttranslational modifications as well as quantitative proteomics. His research includes proteomic analysis of human plateles and yeast mitochondria.
Gary Siuzdak, Scripps Research Institute
Dr. Siuzdak is Senior Director of the Scripps Center for Mass Spectrometry and Professor of Molecular Biology at The Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla, California (http://masspec.scripps.edu/). He is also Faculty Guest at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and former Vice President of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry. His research includes developing novel approaches to metabolomics, the development of nanostructure-initiated desorption/ionization, intact viral analysis, preparative mass spectrometry, and mass-based inhibitor-enzyme screening. He has over 160 peer-reviewed publications and three books, the latest being The Expanding Role of Mass Spectrometry in Biotechnology, 2nd Edition 2006.
Bernd Wolscheid, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology / ETH Zurich
Dr. Bernd Wollscheid is the head of the NCCR Neuro Center for Proteomics and a research group leader at the Institute of Molecular Systems Biology (IMSB) at ETH Zurich. Dr. Wollscheid received his diploma in Chemistry from the Albert Ludwigs University of Freiburg, Germany and his PhD in Molecular Immunology from the Max Plank Institute of Immunobiology. He was postdoctoral fellow and a research scientist at the Institute of Systems Biology. Dr. Wollscheid is an expert in the field of biological mass spectrometry applications, quantitative proteomics and bioinformatics. At the IMSB, Dr. Wollscheid heads a research group in the emerging field of Neuroproteomics which focuses on the detection and functional characterization of cell surface proteins upon perturbation of the nervous system as predictive markers of disease. A major objective of the research group in this context is the development and application of MRM-based assays towards the absolute quantitation of the cell surfacome.
ABSTRACTS
Abstract submission has now closed.
If you have a late poster abstract and would like it to be considered please email
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Poster Submission deadline - has now been extended until 18th December, 2009
Oral Submission deadline - 20th November, 2009
SUBMISSION OF ABSTRACTS
Abstracts for all Conference presentations will be published as the Proceedings of the Conference. The Program Committee will select some presentations for the oral program from the submitted abstracts and will notify those authors. Other submissions will be offered a poster presentation.
GENERAL INFORMATION
By clicking on the link, you will be taken to a web page where you can cut and paste your abstract in several simple steps. The benefits of this system are many but include:
i. Allowing you to preview your abstract and make modifications to your satisfaction.
ii. Ensuring you know your lodgement is completed as you will receive an immediate email confirmation
iii. Ensuring accurate indexing of all authors in the abstract book
iv. Ensuring consistent presentation of all abstracts in the proceedings (overarching formatting is imposed).
Before You Start
* Are you using one of the following browsers
INTERNET EXPLORER (ver 5.5 or newer)
NETSCAPE (ver 7.4 or newer) or
MOZILLA (ver 1.3 or newer)
If not the screen will tell you if it detects you are using the wrong software and you would be better to change to a computer with one of them installed.
* Is your abstract text less than 300 words – it will not allow you to paste larger submissions. The word count does NOT include your title, authoring or cited references
* Have you got your abstract open and running on your own computer? – you need to be able to cut and paste it onto the web.
* Have you got an image in your abstract? If you have, you must have saved it as it's own image file on your computer first. (It should be a .tif .gif .png or .jpg file)
* Have you got a table in your abstract? If you have, it may copy and paste straight into the submission. This is likely if you have used the Times New Roman font and it is not physically large (try and keep it less than 12 cm wide on an A4 sheet). Otherwise you should save a copy of your table as an image file on your own computer first and upload that. (It should be a .tif .gif .png or .jpg file)
THE PROCESS
Firstly you will need to complete your personal details. Importantly on the first page you must let us know if you are not the actual person who will be going to the meeting to present the work. If this is the case, you need to know the presenting person's email address.
There is a preliminary page of questions, this is where you are asked about your presentation preference, the category your work falls into, and so on.
When you get to the final confirmation page, you will be invited to go on and register. If you do it at this stage, you will not have to enter your personal details again.
WHEN YOU'VE FINISHED THE SUBMISSION
As long as you haven't incorrectly filled your own email address, you will get an immediate confirmation which includes a .pdf copy of your submission for your records. On the last screen of the lodgement page
YES - YOU CAN MAKE CHANGES AFTER YOU HAVE SUBMITTED!!
Your confirmation email will have instructions on how to go back and edit your work or make small changes. This will remain open and possible until the program committee allocates your work to the program.
ACCEPTANCE NOTIFICATION
Notification of programming decisions will come from the secretariat shortly after the expiry of deadlines and the working program will be posted to the web site. The notification will include specific presentation instructions but in the interim, those preparing posters should note the maximum size allowed is 100cm wide by 120cm deep. Velcro will be available to fix the poster to the boards. Computer data projection is the preferred presentation method for orals.
WEB PUBLISHING
A couple of weeks before the meeting, the final program will be published to this web page along with hyperlinks to the abstracts.
SPONSORS
Please contact the
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for sponsorship details.
TRADE WORKSHOPS
Trade Workshop opportunities are again available at the 15th Annual Proteomics Symposium. Please contact the
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for further details.
Friday 5th February 2010
Lunchtime
Agilent Technologies Workshop - “Novel Strategies for Biomarker Discovery using LCMS”
Biomarker Discovery researchers use a range of novel approaches. Join two leading scientists as they share their strategies for Biomarker Discovery using LCMS.
Speakers:
Dr. Bernd Wollscheid
Institute of Molecular Systems Biology
SWITZERLAND
Dr. Michelle Hill
University of Queensland
Diamantina Institute
Australia
Register online now
Agilent Assist 1800 802 420
Bruker Biosciences Workshop - "New Technologies for Life Science Mass Spectrometry"
At ASMS 2009, Bruker launched three all-new, truly innovative major mass spectrometry platforms. Dr Matthias Pelzing (Applications Manager, Asia Pacific and Japan) will profile these new MALDI-TOF-TOF, ion trap and FT-ICR product lines - ultrafleXtremeTM, amaZonTM ETD, solarix TM. He will also discuss significant advances in Bruker’s applied proteomics solutions, including Label Free quantitation LC-MALDI, MALDI Imaging and Top Down Sequencing (TDS) approaches. This workshop will also showcase the next generation maXisTM including high-performance ETD, a major step forward in top-down analysis of proteins with high resolution ESI-TOF technology.
The MALDI Biotyper system, launched in Australia at ASM 2009, offers fast and reliable identification of microorganisms in your lab, and will be presented by MALDI Biotyper Product Manager, Leith Fremlin.
Amanda Bulman from Bio-Rad Laboratories USA will be introducing a new approach to biomarker discovery – the Lucid Proteomics System, co-developed with Bruker Daltonics.
Presenters: Dr. Matthias Pelzing, Applications Manager Asia Pacific and Japan & Mr. Leith Fremlin, MALDI Biotyper Product Manager, Bruker Biosciences Pty Ltd, Australia; Dr. Amanda Bulman, Bio-Rad Laboratories USA.
Saturday 6th February 2010
Lunchtime
Thermo Fisher Scientific Proteomics LC-MS Workshop
This highly informative workshop is aimed at sharing our new technologies and the entire
workflow from discovery to quantification.
New Tools to Enhance Protein Identification and Differential Quantitation
(Dr Julie Horner)
Validation Proteomics Using Targeted Approaches with Triple Quadrupole Mass Spectrometry
(Dr Andreas F Hühmer)
Waters Australia Workshop - Innovations in Ion Mobility MS/Synapt G2
Recent innovations in Ion Mobility and New detections systems for LCMS have allowed the next generation of SYNAPT to be released. SYNAPT G2 brings together a number of innovative technologies to increase resolution at fast scan speed, increase mass accuracy, increase mobility resolution and most important for many Proteomics applications increase in Dynamic range.
The seminar will cover with examples each of these technologies to show the advances made in the technology.
The Dionex UltiMate 3000 RSLCnano System Workshop
The recently introduced UltiMateTM 3000 RSLCnano system sets a new standard for nano LC. The system has been designed with the three main desires for any analytical system in mind; Performance, Ease of Use and Robustness.
Performance is delivered by the continuous direct flow nano pump that allows backpressures up to 800 bars over the full flow range from 20 nl/min to 50 µl/min.
Ease of use comes from the nanoViper fitting system, a new preassembled fingertight connection for nano LC columns and tubing that every column installation perfect and reproducible.
Robustness is shown by the unparalleled retention time precision of the RSLCnano system.
Join us for the seminar in which we will explain the above and many other exciting features that make the RSLCnano the new standard for nano LC. Proteomics application examples will be discussed in detail.
Sunday 7th February
Lunch Session - 12:45pm - 1:45pm
PROTEOMICS AND PROTEINS CONJOINED TRADE WORKSHOP
1. Bio-Rad
Proteomics - Bio-rad Protein interaction -discovery Workshop.
Innovative developments using multiplexing protein interaction technology ( ProteOn XPR36 ) , covering the areas of lipoprotein, antibody and drug target discovery,screening and validation.
Speakers:
Dr David Myszka -- Utah university
( World leading authority in SPR technology)
Dr .Laura Moriarty - Bio-rad ProteOn Research Team- Hercules
APS Workshop on “Computational Analyses of Proteome Databases”
Please click here for pre-conference schedule.
Presented by: Dr Eric Deutsch, Institute for Systems Biology and Dr Jenny Mead, Cranfield University
Venue: Pre Lorne Workshop Venue
W313 Computer laboratory
Level 3
Medical Building
Corner Grattan Street/Royal Parade
Parkville
Date: Wednesday Feb 3, 2010
Registration: Workshop registration is FREE for APS members. Non-APS members wishing to attend the workshop are asked to pay a registration fee of $25 (students) or $50 (postdoctoral/professional staff). To register for the workshop, please use the online registration form for the 15th Annual Proteomics Symposium (Details on the Registration Page). If you would like to attend the pre-Lorne workshop ONLY (and not the Lorne Proteomics Symposium) please e-mail Matt Perugini <
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> for registration.