Cold Spring Harbor

Sunday, March 29, 2020, 1:00 pm EDT
Cold Spring Harbor One Bungtown Road Cold Spring Harbor, NY 11724

This special Commemorative Symposium will celebrate the life of the late irreplaceable and irrepressible Sydney Brenner (January 13, 1927 - April 5, 2019). It will take place at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory beginning at 7 p.m. on Sunday, March 29, 2020 and concluding with late afternoon departure on Tuesday March 31.

 

Sydney made countless indelible marks on the development of modern biology. From his long and fruitful collaboration with Francis Crick to crack the genetic code (among so much more), to his co-discovery of messenger RNA; and from his cultivation of the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans into a widely-used model system, which resulted in his shared 2002 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, to his foundational efforts in establishing the Human Genome Organization (HUGO). We are privileged to host this celebratory meeting in his honor and hope you will join us.

 

Sessions Will Cover:

"A lifetime of discovery (biographical overview)"

"Everything fell into place and my future scientific life was decided then and there"

"Sydney let out a yelp … he had seen the answer"

"I would like to tame a small metazoan organism to study development directly (C. elegans I)"

"Nature's gift to Science (C elegans II)"

"Behaviour if the result of a complex ill-understood set of computations performed by nervous systems"

"Personal reminiscences (by invitation)"

 

Session Chairs:

Tom Blumenthal, University of Colorado

Phillip Goelet, Acidophil, LLC

Jonathan Hodgkin, University of Oxford, UK

Barbara Meyer, HHMI / University of California, Berkeley

Thoru Pederson, University of Massachusetts Medical School

Keith Peters, University of Cambridge, UK

Mila Pollock, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Gerald Rubin, HHMI / Janelia Farm Research Campus

Terry Sejnowski, The Salk Institute for Biological Studies

Byrappa Venkatesh, Institute of Molecular and Cell Biology, Singapore

Anne Villeneuve, Stanford University

 

Invited Speakers:

Caroline Albertin, Marine Biological Laboratory

Bruce Alberts, University of California, San Francisco

Donna Albertson, University of California, San Francisco

Samuel Aparicio, BC Cancer Research Centre, Canada

Cori Bargmann, Rockefeller University

Robert Baughman, Okinawa Institute of Science & Technology, Japan

Arantza Barrios, University College, London, UK

Roger Brent, Fred Hutch

Martin Chalfie, Columbia University

Matthew Cobb, University of Manchester, UK

Stanley Cohen, Stanford University Medical School

Antonio Coutinho, Instituto Gulbenkian de Ciencia, Portugal

Richard Durbin, University of Cambridge, UK

Sam Eletr, Rhythm Diagnostic Systems

Errol Friedberg, UT Southwestern Medical Center

Balazs Gulyas, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore

Michael Hayden, University of British Columbia, Canada

David Hirsh, Columbia University

Oliver Hobert, Columbia University

Shawn Hoon, A*STAR, Singapore

Kim Janda, The Scripps Research Institute

Sophie Jarriault, IGBMC - CERBM, France

Jonathan Karn, Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine

Cynthia Kenyon, Calico Life Sciences

Conrad Lichtenstein, Nemesis Bioscience, Ltd, UK

Seng Gee Lim, National University Hospital, Singapore

Susan Mango, Harvard University

Steven Martin, University of California, Berkeley

Matthew Meselson, Harvard University

Ikue Mori, Nagoya University, Japan

Carina Farah Mugal, Uppsala University, Sweden

Keith Peters, University of Cambridge, UK

Daniela Rhodes, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore

Richard Roberts, New England Biolabs, Inc.

Daniel Rokhsar, University of California, Berkeley

Gary Ruvkun, Massachusetts General Hospital

Ahna Skop, University of Wisconsin-Madison

Joan Steitz, HHMI/Yale University

Bruce Stillman, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Antony Stretton, University of Wisconsin-Madison

Robert Waterston, University of Washington

John White, University of Wisconsin-Madison

John Wong, Johns Hopkins University Medicine

Keith Yamamoto, University of California, San Francisco

Gene Yeo, University of California, San Diego

Semir Zeki, University College London, UK

 

 

Financial Support for this Commemorative Symposium is kindly provided by: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, New England Biolabs, and an anonymous donor.

 

The UK Genetics Society has generously offered to match UK Gen Soc members 50% of the registration, room and board charges for attending this event. Please submit proof of membership via email to Val Pakaluk when registering. Funds are limited and will be awarded on a first come first served basis.

 

Social Media:

 

The designated hashtag for this meeting is #cshlbrennersymp. Note that you must obtain permission from an individual presenter before live-tweeting or discussing his/her talk, poster, or research results on social media. Click the Policies tab above to see our full Confidentiality & Reporting Policy.

 

Pricing:

 

Academic Package: $885

Graduate/PhD Student Package: $760

Corporate Package: $1,160

Academic/Student No-Housing Package: $600

Corporate No-Housing Package: $775

 

Regular packages are all-inclusive and cover registration, food, housing, parking, a wine-and-cheese reception, and lobster banquet. No-Housing packages include all costs except housing. Full payment is due four weeks prior to the meeting.