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  • NIH VideoCast - Dramatic effect of Nicotinamide Riboside in an Alzheimer???s disease mouse model with DNA repair defect
    • - Dr. Yujun Hou, NIA, NIH (2018/02/22)
    • - Category : DNA Repair
    DNA Repair

    Young Investigator Lectures Part 1:

    Dramatic effect of Nicotinamide Riboside in an Alzheimer???s disease mouse model with DNA repair defect - Dr. Yujun Hou, NIA, NIH

    NIH VideoCast - Dramatic effect of Nicotinamide Riboside in an Alzheimer???s disease mouse model with DNA repair defect

  • NIH VideoCast - Washington Regional Nursing Research Consortium (WRNRC) Educational Offering: Journeys into Nursing Research
    • - Ann Peterson RN, PhD, CC, NIH and Nancy J. Ames, RN, PhD, CC, NIH (2018/02/22)
    • - Category : Special
    Two nurse researchers describe their experiences in research. They will focus on some steps in the research process, including hypothesis generation, research study development, implementation and team work. Common challenges and achievements will be shared to help inform your research journey.

    NIH VideoCast - Washington Regional Nursing Research Consortium (WRNRC) Educational Offering: Journeys into Nursing Research

  • NIH VideoCast - 2018 Demystifying Medicine: The microbiome in man, animals, and disease: where do we stand?
    • - Yasmine Belkaid, PhD, NIAID, NIH and Barbara Rehermann, MD, NIDDK, NIH (2018/02/22)
    • - Category : Demystifying Medicine
    The Demystifying Medicine Lecture Series is designed to help bridge the gap between advances in biology and their applications to major human diseases. The lectures include presentations of patients, pathology, diagnosis, and therapy in the context of major diseases and current research. All clinicians, trainees including fellows, medical students, Ph.D. students, and other healthcare and research professionals are welcome to attend.

    For more information go to https://demystifyingmedicine.od.nih.gov/

    NIH VideoCast - 2018 Demystifying Medicine: The microbiome in man, animals, and disease: where do we stand?

  • NIH VideoCast - Biowulf Seminar Series: How to build a dog in 2,392,715,236 simple steps
    • - Heidi Parker, Ph.D., Senior Staff Scientist, Dog Genome Project, NHGRI, NIH (2018/02/22)
    • - Category : Special
    Biowulf Seminar Series

    The Biowulf seminar series continues with talks by Biowulf users. The first such seminar features Heidi Parker, the Senior Staff Scientist for the Dog Genome Project at NHGRI

    The NHGRI Dog Genome Project at NIH and focuses on the genetics of health and body structure in the domestic dog. We are particularly interested in the variation represented in individual dog breeds, which allows us to focus on locating genes involved in both canine cancer and the morphologic traits. Our research yields not only an understanding of how genes interact to create the modern dog breeds we see today and how we can keep our four-legged friends happy and healthy, but also insight into the health and disease of their two-legged caregivers.

    For more information go to https://hpc.nih.gov

    NIH VideoCast - Biowulf Seminar Series: How to build a dog in 2,392,715,236 simple steps

  • NIH VideoCast - NLM Board of Regents Meeting - February 2018 (Day 2)
    • - NLM, NIH (2018/02/16)
    • - Category : Advisory Board Meetings and Workshops
    NLM Advisory Council Meeting

    For more information go to https://www.nlm.nih.gov/od/bor/bor.html

    NIH VideoCast - NLM Board of Regents Meeting - February 2018 (Day 2)

  • NIH VideoCast - NLM Board of Regents Meeting - February 2018 (Day 1)
    • - NLM, NIH (2018/02/15)
    • - Category : Advisory Board Meetings and Workshops
    NLM Advisory Council Meeting

    For more information go to https://www.nlm.nih.gov/od/bor/bor.html

    NIH VideoCast - NLM Board of Regents Meeting - February 2018 (Day 1)

  • NIH VideoCast - National Cancer Advisory Board (NCAB) Virtual Meeting - February 2018
    • - NCI, NIH (2018/02/15)
    • - Category : National Cancer Advisory Board
    The 8th Virtual Meeting of the National Cancer Advisory Board (NCAB)

    NIH VideoCast - National Cancer Advisory Board (NCAB) Virtual Meeting - February 2018

  • NIH VideoCast - 2018 Demystifying Medicine: Does inflammation cause cardiovascular disease? If so, how?
    • - Alan Remaley, MD, PhD, NHLBI, NIH and Nehal Mehta, MD, NHLBI, NIH (2018/02/15)
    • - Category : Demystifying Medicine
    The Demystifying Medicine Lecture Series is designed to help bridge the gap between advances in biology and their applications to major human diseases. The lectures include presentations of patients, pathology, diagnosis, and therapy in the context of major diseases and current research. All clinicians, trainees including fellows, medical students, Ph.D. students, and other healthcare and research professionals are welcome to attend.

    For more information go to https://demystifyingmedicine.od.nih.gov/

    NIH VideoCast - 2018 Demystifying Medicine: Does inflammation cause cardiovascular disease? If so, how?

  • NIH VideoCast - Great Teachers: The NIH Clinical Center`s 2018 Distinguished Clinical Research Scholar and Educator in Residence Lecture: Conflict of Interest in Medicine: Facts and Friction
    • - Catherine D. DeAngelis, MD, MPH, University Distinguished Service Professor, Emerita and Professor Emerita, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and Public Health. Editor in Chief Emerita, Journal of the American Medical Association (2018/02/15)
    • - Category : Clinical Center Grand Rounds
    Great Teachers: The NIH Clinical Center`s 2018 Distinguished Clinical Research Scholar and Educator in Residence Lecture: Conflict of Interest in Medicine: Facts and Friction

    For more information go to http://www.cc.nih.gov/about/news/grcurrent.html

    NIH VideoCast - Great Teachers: The NIH Clinical Center`s 2018 Distinguished Clinical Research Scholar and Educator in Residence Lecture: Conflict of Interest in Medicine: Facts and Friction

  • NIH VideoCast - Generation of Neuronal Diversity in the Drosophila CNS
    • - Chris Doe, Ph.D., University of Oregon (2018/02/14)
    • - Category : Neuroscience
    NIH Neuroscience Series Seminar

    Dr Doe???s lab investigates central nervous system development in Drosophila. His lab is currently interested in (1) temporal identity programs used to generate an ordered series of neural progeny from a single progenitor, (2) how spatial patterning and temporal identity are integrated to generate heritable neuronal identity, (3) how neuronal progenitors change competence to respond to intrinsic and extrinsic cues over time, and (4) the developmental mechanisms driving neural circuit assembly, with a focus on larval locomotor circuits and adult central complex circuits.

    For more information go to https://neuroscience.nih.gov/neuroseries/Home.aspx

    NIH VideoCast - Generation of Neuronal Diversity in the Drosophila CNS

  • NIH VideoCast - National Advisory Council for Complementary and Integrative Health (NACCIH) ??? February 2018
    • - NCCIH, NIH (2018/02/13)
    • - Category : Advisory Board Meetings and Workshops
    This is the Open Session of the 65th meeting of the National Advisory Council for Complementary and Integrative Health held on 02/09/2018. The agenda for this Open Session includes presentations on the status of NCCIH from David Shurtleff, PhD, the Clinical Trials Policy at NIH from Michael Lauer, MD, PhD, a Concept Clearance, and an Update on Clinical Trials at NCCIH. For more information on NCCIH and the NACCIH, see https://nccih.nih.gov/about/naccih.

    NIH VideoCast - National Advisory Council for Complementary and Integrative Health (NACCIH) ??? February 2018

  • NIH VideoCast - Sugar and the beating heart: the conundrum of heart failure in diabetes
    • - E. Dale Abel, M.D., Ph.D., Francois M. Abboud Chair in Internal Medicine and John B. Stokes Chair in Diabetes Research; Chair and Department Executive Officer, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Iowa, Carver College of Medicine (2018/02/11)
    • - Category : WALS - Wednesday Afternoon Lectures
    NIH Director???s Wednesday Afternoon Lecture Series

    Dr. Abel is internationally recognized for his research on the molecular mechanisms responsible for cardiac dysfunction in obesity, type 2 diabetes, and type 1 diabetes, and for studies of the role of mitochondrial dysfunction in the development of insulin resistance, obesity, and its complications.

    Dr. Abel earned his medical degree with distinction from the University of the West Indies in Kingston, Jamaica. He was a Rhodes Scholar and clinical research fellow with Professor John G. Ledingham at the University of Oxford, England, where he also earned a Ph.D. in physiology. He completed an internship and residency in medicine at McGraw Medical Center, a part of Northwestern University Medical School, where he served as chief resident of internal medicine at the VA Lakeside Medical Center. He was a clinical and research fellow and instructor at Harvard Medical School before joining the faculty at the University of Utah in 2000.

    Dr. Abel has earned many awards including the Van Meter Prize of the American Thyroid Association in 2001 and the 2012 Gerald D. Aurbach Award, from The Endocrine Society for "outstanding" contributions to endocrine research.

    He was elected Chair of the Board of Scientific Counselors of the NIH National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, and now serves as a member of the advisory council of the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute. He was chair of the Sarnoff Cardiovascular Research Foundation`s Scientific Committee from 2012 to 2013, and is a fellow of the American Heart Association and the American College of Physicians. He was recently elected as president of the Endocrine Society.

    Dr. Abel is an elected member of the American Society for Clinical Investigation, American Clinical and Climatological Association, and the Association of American Physicians. He was elected to the National Academy of Medicine in October 2015. br>For more information go to https://oir.nih.gov/wals/2017-2018/sugar-beating-heart-conundrum-heart-failure-diabetes

    NIH VideoCast - Sugar and the beating heart: the conundrum of heart failure in diabetes

  • NIH VideoCast - NIAMS Advisory Council - February 2018
    • - NIAMS, NIH (2018/02/10)
    • - Category : Advisory Board Meetings and Workshops
    94th NIAMS Advisory Council

    The NIAMS Advisory Council meets three times each year to advise the Institute about its research portfolio and broader issues of science policy, and provide peer review of grant applications that have been scored by scientific review groups. Members of the Council are drawn from the scientific and lay communities and represent all areas within the Institute???s research mission.

    For more information go to http://www.niams.nih.gov/About_Us/Committees/council_roster.asp

    NIH VideoCast - NIAMS Advisory Council - February 2018

  • NIH VideoCast - 2018 Demystifying Medicine: The New Frontier: Immunotherapy of cancer
    • - James Gulley, MD, PhD, NCI, NIH and James Hodges, PhD, MBA, NCI, NIH (2018/02/09)
    • - Category : Demystifying Medicine
    The Demystifying Medicine Lecture Series is designed to help bridge the gap between advances in biology and their applications to major human diseases. The lectures include presentations of patients, pathology, diagnosis, and therapy in the context of major diseases and current research. All clinicians, trainees including fellows, medical students, Ph.D. students, and other healthcare and research professionals are welcome to attend.

    For more information go to https://demystifyingmedicine.od.nih.gov/

    NIH VideoCast - 2018 Demystifying Medicine: The New Frontier: Immunotherapy of cancer

  • NIH VideoCast - Large-effect De Novo Mutations and the Pathobiology of Autism Spectrum and Tourette Disorders
    • - Matthew State, Ph.D., University of California, San Francisco (2018/02/07)
    • - Category : Neuroscience
    NIH Neuroscience Series Seminar

    Dr. State Lab studies the genetics and genomics of developmental neuropsychiatric disorders, with a particular interest in Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD), Tourette Disorder (TD), and Childhood-Onset Schizophrenia (COS). Historically, their research has focused on the contribution of rare variation to these conditions, as the identification of rare mutations with relatively large effects can provide insights into underlying pathophysiological mechanisms. As the field has found increasing success in gene discovery, their lab has increasingly focused on leveraging complex genetic architectures to identify tractable treatment targets and strategies. They use a wide range of genomic technologies including high-throughput sequencing (genome, exome, RNA-Seq), genotyping microarrays, and traditional molecular biology and model systems approaches.

    For more information go to https://neuroscience.nih.gov/neuroseries/Home.aspx

    NIH VideoCast - Large-effect De Novo Mutations and the Pathobiology of Autism Spectrum and Tourette Disorders

  • NIH VideoCast - Clinical Center Research Hospital Board Meeting - February 2018
    • - Office of the Director, NIH (2018/02/06)
    • - Category : Advisory Board Meetings and Workshops
    Clinical Center Advisory Board Meeting

    For more information go to https://ccrhb.od.nih.gov

    NIH VideoCast - Clinical Center Research Hospital Board Meeting - February 2018

  • NIH VideoCast - Sexual and Reproductive Health in Persons with Disabilities
    • - Tom Shakespeare, MPhil, Ph.D., Professor, Disability Research, Norwich Medical School, University of East Anglia (2018/02/06)
    • - Category : Special
    NICHD Special Lecture

    Dr. Shakespeare is currently professor of disability research at Norwich Medical School, University of East Anglia. He has a B.A., MPhil, and Ph.D. in social sciences from the University of Cambridge. His doctorate research explored conceptualizations of disability and subsequent research projects at the Universities of Sunderland, Leeds, and Newcastle explored the sexual rights of disabled people, childhood disability, and quality of life in restricted growth. He has published extensively on disability topics, including work for the World Health Organization, the United Nations, and the Nuffield Council on Bioethics, in addition to independent books and papers.

    Visit https://www.uea.ac.uk/medicine/people/profile/tom-shakespeare for his full biography and published works.

    NIH VideoCast - Sexual and Reproductive Health in Persons with Disabilities

  • NIH VideoCast - National Advisory Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NANDS) Council - February 2018
    • - National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, NIH (2018/02/03)
    • - Category : National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke
    The 201st meeting of the National Advisory Neurological Disorders and Stroke Council on February 1, 2018.

    For more information go to https://www.ninds.nih.gov/About-NINDS/Who-We-Are/Advisory-Council

    NIH VideoCast - National Advisory Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NANDS) Council - February 2018

  • NIH VideoCast - Application of MALDI-Ion Mobility Mass Spectrometry in Biological Analysis
    • - Shelley Jackson, Ph.D., Staff Scientist, NIDA, NIH (2018/02/03)
    • - Category : Proteomics
    Proteomics Interest Group

    Ion mobility (IM) spectrometry is a robust method that allows for the rapid separation and detection of a wide range of compounds. In this technique, ions in the drift cell obtain an average drift velocity from an electric field based upon their collision cross section (W) or shape, which allows for the separation of molecules depending upon their three-dimensional structure. Combining matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) mass spectrometry with IM results in the fast sorting of biomolecules in complex mixtures along trend lines. In this 2D analysis of biological families, lipids, peptides, and nucleotides are separated from each other by differences in their ion mobility drift times in a timescale of hundreds of microseconds. Molecular ions of similar chemical type fall along trend lines when plotted in two-dimensional plots of ion mobility drift time as a function of m/z. We have analyzed a wide variety of samples using MALDI-IM MS. This talk will highlight the use of MALDI-IM MS for the analysis of lipids and it advantages in mass spectrometry imaging.

    NIH VideoCast - Application of MALDI-Ion Mobility Mass Spectrometry in Biological Analysis

  • NIH VideoCast - Unraveling the Mysteries of Cardiovascular Disease: Lessons from NHLBI???s Framingham Heart Study
    • - Daniel Levy MD, NHLBI, NIH (2018/02/03)
    • - Category : Special
    The first speaker in the NHLBI 70th Anniversary Lecture Series is Dr. Daniel Levy, Director of the Framingham Heart Study. The NHLBI 70th Anniversary Lecture Series is designed to highlight not only significant advancements in heart, lung, blood, and sleep research, but also provide a visionary perspective of the promising opportunities ahead. This includes addressing some of the most compelling questions and critical challenges elicited in the 2016 NHLBI Strategic Vision. The lectures include presentations from thought leaders in the medical field. All NIH employees and interested members of the public are welcome to join.

    For more information go to https://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/events/2018/70th-Anniversary-Lecture-Series-1

    NIH VideoCast - Unraveling the Mysteries of Cardiovascular Disease: Lessons from NHLBI???s Framingham Heart Study