celebrate
research 2012
Systems Health Taking personalized medicine beyond the genome
Monday, March 5, 2012 Telus Theatre The Chan Centre for the Performing Arts 1:00 - 4:00 pm
Program 1:00 pm
Opening Remarks Dr. Robert Sindelar, Professor & Dean
1:10 pm
The epigenetics revolution – why our genetic code is a script and not a blueprint Dr. Nessa Carey
2:00 pm
Exploration and recent findings from the human microbiome Dr. Karen Nelson
3:00 pm
Phenotypic flexibility and systems health in practice: towards P4 medicine in type 2 diabetes Dr. Ben van Omen
3:50 pm Closing Remarks Dr. Kishor Wasan, Professor & Associate Dean, Research & Graduate Studies 4:00 pm
Wine & Cheese Reception
Our Speakers
Dr. Nessa Carey
Nessa Carey has had successful careers in academia and industry, where she specializes in translating early stage science into new opportunities to create drugs to treat human diseases. For nearly a decade she has been focused on epigenetics, the scientific discipline that explains why the genetic code alone cannot describe the beautiful biological complexity we see around us, from the different cell types in the human body, to the control of flowering times in plants. Nessa is a member of the External Research and Development Innovation organization at Pfizer. She was previously Director of Research at CellCentric and has worked for two years as Head of Biology at TopoTarget. Nessa has a PhD from the University of Edinburgh, is an Honorary Senior Lecturer at Imperial College, and author of “The Epigenetics Revolution How Modern Biology is Rewriting Our Understanding of Genetics, Disease and Inheritance.”
Karen is Director of the Rockville, Maryland campus of the J. Craig Venter Institute (JCVI). She has a PhD in Microbiology from Cornell University and has extensive experience in microbial ecology, genomics and metagenomics as well as in microbial physiology.
Dr. Karen Nelson
While at The Institute for Genomic Research (TIGR) in 1999, she led the genome sequencing of Thermotoga maritima MSB8, and the landmark publication provided insights into microbial evolution. She has also been involved in the analysis of the microbiota of the human stomach and gastrointestinal tract, and Karen and her group were part of a national team of researchers who completed the first comprehensive metagenomic survey of the human gastrointestinal tract. Currently she is a key investigator in the multi-centre NIH Human Microbiome Project, which focuses on understanding the microbes that live in and on the human body and their contribution to human health and disease. Ben van Ommen is Principal Scientist at TNO, the Dutch organization for Applied Scientific Research. He is also Director of the TNO systems biology program and leading the activities on nutrigenomics, nutritional systems biology, personalized health and personalized medicine, and Director of NuGO, the Nutrigenomics Organization.
Dr. Ben van Ommen
His research applies systems biology to metabolic health and metabolic disease, focusing on understanding all relevant processes involved in maintaining optimal health and causing specific disease subphenotypes as well as developing new biomarkers and treatment strategies.
Learn more about our research To learn more about research at UBC Pharmaceutical Sciences visit: www.pharmacy.ubc.ca/research/overview
Thank You Sincere thanks to our sponsors for helping make this event a success.
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Save the date! The new Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences Building opens this fall. Be sure to visit our website for the latest information on this state-of-the-art facility, winner of a Canadian Architect Award of Excellence!
www.pharmacy.ubc.ca