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Molecular Biophysics Minisymposium
The Molecular Biology Minisymposium is held at Rutgers each May; a tradition started by Wilma Olson more than twenty years ago. Faculty, students and postdoctoral fellows attend this popular event which features a keynote address by a scientist of international repute in molecular biophysics and provides students and postdocs with opportunities to present their research in the form of short talks and at a lunch time poster session.


Keynote speakers

2000 Barry Honig (Columbia University)
“From Sequence to Structure to Function”

2001 Joseph Laskowitz (University of Maryland)
“Radiative Decay Engineering: Biochemical and Biomedical Applications”

2002 Michael Rossmann (Purdue University)
“Structure and Function of viruses such as Dengue and Sindbi’s viruses”

2003 Mitchell Lewis (University of Pennsylvania)
“Allostery, Cooperativity, and the Genetic Switch”

2004 Wim G. J. Hol (University of Washington)
“Medicinal Protein Crystallography and Structural Genomics of Tropical Diseases”

2005 Dagmar Ringe (Brandeis University)
“From Structure to Function: When and How”

2006 Tom Blundell (Cambridge University)
“Structural Biology, Multiprotein Complexes and Drug Discovery: Challenges and Opportunities”

2007 Jonathan Chaires (University of Louisville)
“Five Decades (Almost) of Drug-DNA Interactions”

2008 Gregory Petsko (Brandeis University)
“The Structural Enzymology of Parkinson’s Disease”

2009 Lewis Kay (University of Toronto)
“Seeing the Invisible by Solution NMR Spectroscopy”

2010 Carol Post (Purdue University)
“Protein Stability: It’s What Inside That Counts”
 

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