October 7-8, 2010 COEX, Seoul, Korea Seminar: Conference Center (3F) Grand Conference Room (4F) Exhibitions and Poster Presentation: Hall C1-C2 (3F) 한국분자 세포생물학회 Sponsored by Korean Federation of Science and Technology Societies
2010 년한국분자 세포생물학회운영위원및대의원명단 KSMCB Organizing Committee
2010 년한국분자 세포생물학회정기학술대회 The 22 nd Annual Meeting of the Korean Society for Molecular and Cellular Biology ü
Dr. Tobias Meyer (Stanford University, USA), Dr. Isaiah J. Fidler (The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center, USA), Dr. Jürgen Roth (University of Zurich, Switzerland), Dr. J. Clark Lagarias (University of California, USA) M&C
Dear Colleagues, The 22 nd Annual Meeting of the Korean Society for Molecular and Cellular Biology (KSMCB), the largest bioscience society in South Korea, will be held at COEX in Samsung-dong, Seoul, on October 7th and 8th, 2010. The continuous development of bioscience requires the diligent propagation of new knowledge and research results. The KSMCB s regular academic conferences have played the role of locomotive in developing South Korean bioscience to a world-class level by offering the opportunity to acquire cutting-edge bioscience knowledge, present and discuss study results, and collaborate with one another. This year, the Annual Meeting will be graced by Dr. Tobias Meyer (Stanford University, USA), Dr. Isaiah J. Fidler (The University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center, USA), Dr. Jürgen Roth (University of Zurich, Switzerland), and Dr. J. Clark Lagarias (University of California, USA) as keynote speakers. More than 170 domestic and foreign experts will present novel research results at symposiums spanning 24 different themes. There will be a symposium on research ethics, the only one of its kind at domestic bioscience associations. Presentations will be given in English at all symposiums, laying the groundwork for internationalizing our association. Also, there will be a ceremony of awards; the Molecules and Cells Award, the Macrogen Young Scientist Award, the Ilchun Memorial Lecture, the Bioneer Next Generation Research Award, the Excellent Doctoral Thesis Awards and the Excellent Poster Awards. In addition, bioscience enterprises will provide participants with valuable information on reagents and machinery at more than 140 booths. I would like to recommend that you actively participate in this year s regular academic conference so that you may reap the rich harvest of cutting-edge scientific information that will be available. Lastly, I would like to express heartfelt thanks to our Association s Academic Committee chairman and commissioners and symposium organizers, as well as the Korean Federation of Science and Technology Societies, and the enterprises holding exhibitions for all of their hard work in making this year s conference possible. Sincerely yours, October 7, 2010 Chin Ha Chung, Ph.D. President of Korean Society for Molecular and Cellular Biology
안 내 General Information
Schedule of the 22 nd Annual Meeting of the KSMCB Thursday, October 7, 2010 Place Time 08:00-09:20 09:20-11:50 11:50-12:50 12:50-13:10 13:10-13:50 13:50-14:30 14:30-15:10 15:10-15:30 15:30-18:00 18:00-19:00 Room 401 SY01 Small RNA: Biology and Applications Plenary Lectures (Rm. 401) SY07 Biology of Metastasis Room 402 Room 307 Room 308 Room 317 Room 318 SY02 Signaling in Plant-Microbe Interaction Council Meeting Registration SY03 Multifunctional Molecular Imaging Carl Zeiss Co. Academic Research Awards Lecture (Rm. 401) PL 1. Dr. Tobias Meyer (Stanford Univ., USA) PL 2. Dr. Isaiah J. Fidler (The Univ. of Taxas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center, USA) Break SY08 Molecular Genetics of Aging in Model Organisms SY04 Biomolecular Interactions: Protein Structure, Function, and Disease SY09 Protein Modification and Neurological Disease Reception (Rm. 402) Young Wha Scientific Co. SY05 Inflammatory and Immunological Signaling Lunch SY10 NK Cells and Therapeutic Application SY06 Chromatin and Transcription SY11 Research Ethics Symposium SY12 General Feature of Whole-Genome Study in Bacteria, Fungus, Rotifer, Plant and Human Hall C1- C2 (3F) Poster/Exhibition Poster Presentation 09:20-18:00 (Duty : 11:30-12:30, 15:20-16:20) Friday, October 8, 2010 Place Time 08:00-09:20 09:20-11:50 11:50-12:20 12:20-12:50 12:50-13:10 13:10-13:50 13:50-14:30 14:30-15:10 15:10-15:30 15:30-18:00 18:00-18:30 Korean Room 401 SY13 Cell Cycle Regulation KSMCB GA Plenary Lectures (Rm. 401) SY19 Autophagy and Cell Death Luncheon Symposium (12:00-12:50) Room 402 Room 307 Room 308 Room 317 Room 318 SY14 Plant Stress Response and Development SY20 Plant Hormones and Development Registration SY15 SY16 Stem Cells and Human Their Evolutionary Therapeutics Genetics and Disease Macrogen Young Scientist Award (Rm. 401) Bio-Medical Sci. Co. Ilchun Memorial Lecture (Rm. 401) PL 3. Dr. Jürgen Roth (Univ. of Zurich, Switzerland) PL 4. Dr. J. Clark Lagarias (Univ. of California, USA) Break SY21 Differentiation and Development Excellent Poster Awards & Closing Remark (Rm. 401) Lunch SY22 Convergence Sciences and Stem Cells SY17 Sensory Biology SY23 Viral Pathogenesis SY18 Translational Control and Diseases SY11 Research Ethics Symposium SY24 Bioimaging-Based High Content Screening for Biomarker Discovery Hall C1- C2 (3F) Poster/Exhibition Poster Presentation 09:20-18:00 (Duty : 11:30-12:30, 15:20-16:20)
학술대회장안내 Venue Guide 3F Conference Center 3F 4F Grand Conference Room
Plenary Lecture Plenary Lecture 13:50-14:30 Thursday, October 7, 2010 (Grand Conference Room 401) Organizer & Chair : Sung Ho Ryu (Pohang University of Science and Technology, Korea) Professor Tobias Meyer is Professor of Chemical and Systems Biology in Stanford University since 1999. He received his MS in nuclear physics and then Ph.D in biophysics from the University of Basel, Switzerland. He trained as a Postdoctoral and Research Fellow at Stanford University with Professor L. Stryer. He had been a faculty member in Duke University Medical Center during 1991-1998. Professor Meyer has been working on the cell signaling, especially on the systemic understanding of signaling networks for cell migration and neuronal synapse formation and contributed over 100 publications in Cell, Science, Neuron etc. with pioneering research outputs. His current research direction may be summarized in the synopsis he described in his website as follows: Cells make use of an elaborate control system that integrates inputs from multiple receptors, computes this information and makes decisions about key cellular outputs such as cell migration, synapse formation, differentiation or proliferation. Our laboratory is focusing on discovering the rules that govern these decision processes by perturbing signaling steps, by monitoring signaling events and cell functions, and by employing mathematical modeling. We have already developed a number of novel biosensors and microscopy techniques to monitor cell signaling and functional processes over time, developed novel chemically induced enzyme activities for rapid signaling pathway perturbations and created a set of 2300 RNAi s to perturb signaling pathways by selectively reducing the expression of most human signaling proteins. We are particularly intrigued by the roles of calcium and lipid second messengers in the spatial and temporal coordination of cellular responses and a main current focus of the laboratory is on the questions how migrating cells polarize and chemotax and how neurons polarize their axons and dendrites and regulate their synapse number. While these studies focus on understanding specific control circuits, we are also working towards solving what is arguably the ultimate systems biology problem: How can a cells entire control system be quantitatively modeled? The experimental part of these studies makes use of genome-wide perturbations and monitoring multiple cellular decision points such as those triggering cell proliferation and differentiation. Our ultimate goals are to determine what elements of cellular control systems enable them to make specific decisions while being robust, how control systems have evolved, how we can synthetically create novel regulatory functions in existing control systems and how we can predict from mathematical models of signaling systems suitable molecular targets for therapeutic intervention
Plenary Lecture Plenary Lecture 14:30-15:10 Thursday, October 7, 2010 (Grand Conference Room 401) Organizer & Chair : Yeup Yoon (Mogam Biotechnology Research Institute, Korea) Isaiah J. Fidler, D.V.M., Ph.D., is the R.E. Bob Smith Distinguished Chair in Cell Biology, Professor and past Chairman Department of Cancer Biology, and Director of the Cancer Metastasis Research Center at The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center, in Houston, Texas. Over the past 40 years, Dr. Fidler has devoted his career to understanding the biology of cancer invasion and metastasis. In 1970, while carrying out research at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, he described the first method for labeling tumor cells with the radioactive marker 125 I-5-iodo-2 -deoxyuridine, allowing studies on the fate and distribution of tumor cells in vivo. These experiments provided the first evidence that only a small fraction of cells that enter the circulation survive to produce metastasis. Three years later, Dr. Fidler published a paper in Nature New Biology on the in vivo selection of successive tumor cell lines for metastasis, demonstrating that metastasis is a selective rather than random process - which up to then had been the prevailing view. In 1977, he published another landmark paper, this time in Science with his colleague Margaret Kripke at the NCI Frederick Cancer Research Center, demonstrating that clones derived in vitro from a parent culture of murine malignant melanoma cells vary greatly in their ability to produce metastatic colonies in the lungs of syngeneic mice. This work provided the first definitive evidence that tumors are biologically heterogeneous and that metastatic cells preexist in a cancer cell population and are not the result of adaptation during the metastatic process. After moving from NCI-Frederick Cancer Research to The University of Texas, M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston in the early eighties, he continued his work understanding the processes of tumor progression and biologic diversification of human malignancies. To this end, he has performed seminal work showing the utility of orthotopic nude mice models in studying the biology of human metastases compared with ectopic models, which generally fail to produce metastases. He has also demonstrated that specific organ microenvironments influence the resistance of metastatic cells to chemotherapy and experimental biological therapies. His work on the importance of the organ microenvironment (e.g., in influencing tumor cell gene expression) has reinvigorated interest in the venerable seed and soil hypothesis first put forward by the English surgeon Stephen Paget in 1889 (who noted the dependence of metastasis on cross talk between selected cancer cell seeds and specific organ soils ). More recently, Dr. Fidler s group has shown that organ-specific cytokines (e.g., epidermal growth factor, vascular endothelial growth factor, transforming growth factor beta and platelet derived growth factor) also regulate angiogenesis in primary neoplasms and their metastases. Dr. Fidler has authored more than 800 primary research articles, book chapters, and reviews. Among his many honors are the American Cancer Society s Distinguished Service Award, City of Paris Medal of Vermeil, the WHO Medal for Biological Science, the Bristol-Myers Squibb Award for Distinguished Achievement in Cancer Research, and Nature Publishing s Lifetime Achievement Award. Much of what is known about the fundamental biology and mechanisms of metastasis originated from the Fidler group. Over 50 clinical fellows have passed through the doors of his laboratory, and he has been responsible for training and mentoring over fifty postdoctoral researchers, most of whom are leading research in the cancer field.
Plenary Lecture Supported by WCU Program at Yonsei University Plenary Lecture 13:50-14:30 Friday, October 8, 2010 (Grand Conference Room 401) Organizer & Chair : In Kwon Chung (Yonsei University, Korea) Jürgen Roth, M.D., Ph.D. Professor Jürgen Roth became the first Professor of Cell and Molecular Pathology in Europe when he was appointed to the University of Zurich in 1990. He directed the newly established Division of Cell and Molecular Pathology at the Department of Pathology until 2009 and currently is a Distinguished Professor at Yonsei University Graduate School, WCU program. He received his medical degree from the Friedrich Schiller University Jena and a PhD in Cell Biology from the University of Jena and of Basel in Switzerland. He trained as a Visiting Scientist at the Cancer Research Institute of the University of Vienna, Austria. He was a resident and docent in General and Surgical Pathology at University of Jena, Research Associate and Lecturer in the Department of Morphology at University of Geneva, and Associate Professor of Cell Biology at the Biocenter of the University of Basel. He has been Editor-in- Chief of the European Journal of Cell Biology and is currently Editor-in-Chief of Histochemistry and Cell Biology. He has served as president and past-president of the Society for Histochemistry and of the International Glycoconjugate Organization and as board member of the International Federation of the Societies for Histochemistry and Cytochemistry. He has been awarded a medical honorary degree from Peking University, was elected Honorary Member of the Society of Histochemistry, received medals of Honor from various Japanese Universities, was named Invited Fellow of the Japanese Society for Promotion of Science and was awarded many scientific prizes. Professor Roth has contributed over 300 publications to the cell biology of cellular organelles and for immunoelectron microscopy, has published or edited several books and organized many International Conferences and Symposia. Professor Roth s research interest encompasses the molecular cell biology of the endoplasmic reticulum and the Golgi apparatus in regard to protein glycosylation and protein quality control and of cell surface glycoconjugates during development and in tumors. He invented the immunogold technique for electron microscopy, the most powerful and most widely used technique of immunoelectron microscopy today and advised lectin-gold techniques as well. He was the first to directly demonstrate the subcompartmentalization of the Golgi apparatus and to characterize the TGN as part of the Golgi apparatus, to demonstrate that protein O-glycosylation starts in the Golgi apparatus, and for instance that polysialic acid of the neural cell adhesion molecule is an oncofetal antigen in human organogenesis and malignant tumors. His work on protein quality control resulted in the discovery of the first glyco-code for glycoprotein degradation by the ubiquitin-proteasome system, the identification of pre-golgi intermediates as a major quality control check point, and led to the discovery of the first known ERAD dislocation receptor. His recent studies on the ERAD dislocation receptor EDEM1 established a novel vesicular exit pathway from the endoplasmic reticulum and demonstrated the importance of selective basal autophagy in quality control and protein turnover.
Plenary Lecture Plenary Lecture 14:40-15:20 Friday, October 8, 2010 (Grand Conference Room 401) Organizer & Chair : Giltsu Choi (Department of Biological Sciences, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, Korea) Professor J. Clark Lagarias received his Ph.D degree from University of California, Berkeley, joined the UC Davis faculty in 1980 as an assistant professor, and became the full professor in the section of Molecular and Cellular Biology in 1991. He was appointed as the Paul K. and Ruth R. Stumpf Professor of Plant Biochemistry from 1999 to 2006. Professor Lagarias was elected to the National Academy of Sciences (USA) in Plant Biology in May 2001. Professor Lagarias has studied how plants perceive light through phytochromes, a group of plant photoreceptors. He is renowned for his research on the molecular and biochemical bases of how phytochromes perceive light information - light intensity and quality. His meticulous characterization of the biochemical and photochemical properties of purified phytochrome in 80 s presented a portrait of phytochrome as we know of it now. In late 80 s and early 90 s, he studied in planta synthesis of phytochrome chromophore and developed a method to assemble phytochrome holoproteins using recombinant apoproteins. The method provided scientists around the world a tool with which one can investigate the biochemical and molecular properties of phytochromes without grinding tons of etiolated oat seedlings in the cold dark room. In late 90 s, he showed that cyanobacteria has a phytochrome with histidine kinase activity and demonstrated that plant phytochromes possess serine/threonine kinase activity. These two discoveries startled the world, providing new insights into how phytochromes transmit light signal to their downstream signaling components. His revelations are going on in the 21 st century as he recently engineered fluorescent phytochromes and light-independent constitutively active phytochromes. The achievements promise practical applications in biomedical and agricultural fields. The impression of his works reverberates in our minds, reminding us how much a brilliant and determined scientist can achieve in a mere three decades.
Symposia Symposium 1 Small RNA: Biology and Applications 09:20-11:50, Thursday, October 7, 2010 (Grand Conference Room 401) Organizers : Sang-Kyung Lee (Department of Bioengineering, Hanyang University, Korea) Dong-Eun Kim (Department of Bioscience and Biotechnology, Konkuk University, Korea) Chair : Dong-Eun Kim (Department of Bioscience and Biotechnology, Konkuk University, Korea) SY01-1 SY01-2 SY01-3 SY01-4 SY01-5 SY01-6
Symposium 2 Signaling in Plant-Microbe Interaction 09:20-11:50, Thursday, October 7, 2010 (Grand Conference Room 402) Organizer : Doil Choi (Department of Plant Sciences, Seoul National University, Korea) Chair : Kyung Hee Paek (School of Life Sciences and Biotechnology, Korea University, Korea) SY02-1 SY02-2 SY02-3 SY02-4 SY02-5
Symposium 3 Multifunctional Molecular Imaging 09:20-11:45, Thursday, October 7, 2010 (Hall 307) Organizer : Jung-Joon Min (Department of Nuclear Medicine, Chonnam National University Medical School, Korea) Chair : Hyon E. Choy (Genome Research Center for Enteropathogenic Bacteria, Chonnam National University Medical School, Korea) SY03-1 SY03-2 SY03-3 SY03-4 SY03-5
Symposium 4 Biomolecular Interactions: Protein Structure, Function, and Disease 09:20-11:50, Thursday, October 7, 2010 (Hall 308) Organizer : Myung Hee Kim (Korea Research Institute of Bioscience and Biotechnology, Korea) Chair : Young Ho Jeon (Korea Basic Science Institute, Korea) SY04-1 SY04-2 SY04-3 SY04-4 SY04-5
Symposium 5 Inflammatory and Immunological Signaling 09:20-11:50, Thursday, October 7, 2010 (Hall 317) Organizer : Hyeyoung Kim (College of Human Ecology, Yonsei University, Korea) Chairs : Hyeyoung Kim (College of Human Ecology, Yonsei University, Korea) Dong Min Shin (College of Dentistry, Yonsei University, Korea) SY05-1 SY05-2 SY05-3 SY05-4 SY05-5 SY05-6
Symposium 6 Chromatin and Transcription 09:20-11:50, Thursday, October 7, 2010 (Hall 318) Organizers : Aeri Kim (Department of Molecular Biology, Pusan National University, Korea) Yeun Kyu Jang (Department of Biology, Yonsei University, Korea) Chairs : Hyockman Kwon (Department of Bioscience and Biotechnology, Hankuk University of Foreign Studies, Korea) Soo-Jong Um (Department of Bioscience and Biotechnology, Sejong University, Korea) SY06-1 SY06-2 SY06-3 SY06-4 SY06-5 SY06-6
Symposium 7 Biology of Metastasis 15:30-18:00, Thursday, October 7, 2010 (Grand Conference Room 401) Organizers : Yeup Yoon (Mogam Biotechnology Research Institute, Korea) In-San Kim (Kyungpook National University School of Medicine, Korea) Chair : In-San Kim (Kyungpook National University School of Medicine, Korea) SY07-1 SY07-2 SY07-3 SY07-4
Symposium 8 Molecular Genetics of Aging in Model Organisms 15:30-18:00, Thursday, October 7, 2010 (Hall 307) Organizer & Chair : Kyung-Jin Min (Department of Natural Medical Sciences, Inha University, Korea) SY08-1 SY08-2 SY08-3 SY08-4 SY08-5 SY08-6
Symposium 9 Protein Modification and Neurological Disease 15:30-18:05, Thursday, October 7, 2010 (Hall 308) Organizer : Cheol Yong Choi (Department of Biological Science, Sungkyunkwan University, Korea) Chair : Jong-Bok Yoon (Department of Biochemisty, Yonsei University, Korea) SY09-1 SY09-2 SY09-3 SY09-4 SY09-5 SY09-6
Symposium 10 NK Cells and Therapeutic Application 15:30-18:00, Thursday, October 7, 2010 (Hall 317) Organizer : Jae Youl Cho (School of Bioscience and Biotechnology, Kangwon National University, Korea) Chairs : In Pyo Choi (Korea Research Institute of Bioscience and Biotechnology, Korea) Sungjin Kim (Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, Michigan State University, USA) SY10-1 SY10-2 SY10-3 SY10-4 SY10-5
(Korean) Symposium 11 15:30-16:20, Thursday, October 7, 2010 (Hall 318) 15:30-16:20, Friday, October 8, 2010 (Hall 318)
Symposium 12 General Feature of Whole-Genome Study in Bacteria, Fungus, Rotifer, Plant and Human 16:20-18:00, Thursday, October 7, 2010 (Hall 318) Organizer & Chair : Ik-Young Choi (Seoul National University, Korea) SY12-1 SY12-2 SY12-3 SY12-4 SY12-5
Symposium 13 Cell Cycle Regulation 09:20-11:50, Friday, October 8, 2010 (Grand Conference Room 401) Organizer & Chair : Yun-Sil Lee (College of Pharmacy & Division of Life Science & Pharmaceuticals, Ewha Womans University, Korea) SY13-1 SY13-2 SY13-3 SY13-4 SY13-5 SY13-6
Symposium 14 Plant Stress Response and Development 09:20-12:00, Friday, October 8, 2010 (Grand Conference Room 402) Organizer : Ju-Kon Kim (Bioscience and Bioinformatics, Myongji University, Korea) Chairs : Sang Yeol Lee (Environmental Biotechnology National Core Research Center, Gyeongsang National University, Korea) Hyun-Sook Pai (Department of Biology, Yonsei University, Korea) SY14-1 SY14-2 SY14-3 SY14-4 SY14-5 SY14-6
By the Korean Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Symposium 15 Stem Cells and Their Therapeutics 09:20-11:50, Friday, October 8, 2010 (Hall 307) Organizer & Chair : Kyung-Mi Lee (Department of Biochemistry, Korea University College of Medicine, Korea) SY15-1 SY15-2 SY15-3 SY15-4
Symposium 16 Human Evolutionary Genetics and Disease 09:20-11:50, Friday, October 8, 2010 (Hall 308) Organizers & Chairs : Dong-Jik Shin (Yonsei University College of Medicine, Yonsei Cardiovascular Genome Center/Yonsei University Research Institute of Science for Aging, Korea) Jong-Young Lee (Division of Structural and Functional Genomics, Center for Genome Science, Korean National Institute of Health, KCDC, Korea) SY16-1 SY16-2 SY16-3 SY16-4 SY16-5
Symposium 17 Sensory Biology 09:20-12:00, Friday, October 8, 2010 (Hall 317) Organizer : Sung Joong Lee (Seoul National University School of Dentistry, Korea) Chairs : Sung Joong Lee (Seoul National University School of Dentistry, Korea) Uhtaek Oh (Sensory Research Center, College of Pharmacy, Seoul National University, Korea) SY17-1 SY17-2 SY17-3 SY17-4 SY17-5 SY17-6
Symposium 18 Translational Control and Diseases 09:20-11:50, Friday, October 8, 2010 (Hall 318) Organizer : Sunghoon Kim (College of Pharmacy, Seoul National University, Korea) Chairs : Sunghoon Kim (College of Pharmacy, Seoul National University, Korea) Sung Key Jang (Department of Life Science, Pohang University of Science and Technology, Korea) SY18-1 SY18-2 SY18-3 SY18-4 SY18-5
Symposium 19 Autophagy and Cell Death 15:30-18:00, Friday, October 8, 2010 (Grand Conference Room 401) Organizer : Dong Hyung Cho (The Graduate School East-West Medical Science, KyungHee University, Korea) Chairs : Dong Hyung Cho (The Graduate School East-West Medical Science, KyungHee University, Korea) Heung Kyu Lee (KAIST Graduate School of Medical Science and Engineering, Korea) SY19-1 SY19-2 SY19-3 SY19-4 SY19-5 SY19-6
Symposium 20 Plant Hormones and Development 15:30-18:00, Friday, October 8, 2010 (Grand Conference Room 402) Organizer & Chair : Hyung-Taeg Cho (School of Biological Sciences, Seoul National University, Korea) SY20-1 SY20-2 SY20-3 SY20-4 SY20-5
Symposium 21 Differentiation and Development 15:30-18:00, Friday, October 8, 2010 (Hall 307) Organizer : Young-Yun Kong (School of Biological Sciences, Seoul National University, Korea) Chair : Young-Guen Kwon (Department of Biochemistry, College of Life Science and Biotechnology, Yonsei University, Korea) SY21-1 SY21-2 SY21-3 SY21-4 SY21-5
Symposium 22 Convergence Sciences and Stem Cells 15:30-18:00, Friday, October 8, 2010 (Hall 308) Organizer & Chair : Kyung-Sun Kang (Adult Stem Cell Research Center, Lab. of Stem Cell and Tumor Biology, Dept. of Veterinary Public Health, College of Veterinary Medicine, Seoul National University, Korea) SY22-1 SY22-2 SY22-3 SY22-4
Symposium 23 Viral Pathogenesis 15:30-18:00, Friday, October 8, 2010 (Hall 317) Organizer : Yong-Soo Bae (Biological Science, Sungkyunkwan University, Korea) Chairs : Yong-Soo Bae (Biological Science, Sungkyunkwan University, Korea) Soon Bong Hwang (Ilsong Institute of Life Science, Hallym University, Korea) SY23-1 SY23-2 SY23-3 SY23-4 SY23-5
Symposium 24 Bioimaging-Based High Content Screening for Biomarker Discovery 16:20-18:00, Friday, October 8, 2010 (Hall 318) Organizer & Chair : Jong-Soon Choi (Korea Basic Science Institute, Korea) SY24-1 SY24-2 SY24-3 SY24-4
시 상 Awards
초록등록 Abstract Submission
우수포스터상응모안내 (Excellent Poster Awards)
포스터발표 Poster Presentation
포스터제작안내 Guidline for Poster Preparation
기기전시회 Exhibition
기기전시회참가안내
2010 년도한국분자 세포생물학회정기학술대회기기전시참가및초록집광고게재신청서
제품설명회 Company Workshop 제품설명회참가신청서
출장협조의뢰서
교통편안내 Direction
주차안내
한국분자 세포생물학회 Korean Society for Molecular and Cellular Biology