TriRhena Gene Regulation Club

TriRhena Gene Regulation Club

The TriRhena Gene Regulation Club is a one-day symposium that brings together researchers from France (IGBMC), Germany (MPI-IE) and Switzerland (FMI) who share a common interest in gene regulation, and gives PhD students and postdocs the opportunity to share their unpublished work with the community, thereby strengthening international collaborations.

Next club event

Preliminary program

Time  
14:00 - 14:10 Opening comments
14:10 - 14:35 abstract 1
 
14:35 - 15:00 abstract 2
 
15:00 - 15:25 »NEW PI talk« with Valentin Flury (MPI-IE, Freiburg)
„tba.”
15:25 - 16:00 Coffee break
16:00 - 16:25 abstract 3
 
16:25 - 16:50 abstract 4
 
16:50 - 17:15 abstract 5
 
17:15 - 18:10 KEYNOTE
Steven West (University of Exeter, UK)
„tba.“
18:10  Apéro

 

Keynote speaker

Steven West (University of Exeter, UK)

We are pleased to announce that Steven West (Living Systems Institute, University of Exeter, UK) is the keynote speaker of the next TriRhena Gene Regulation Club in Basel.  Website


Practical Information

Register now

Participation is free, but registration is required. Places will be allocated on a first come, first served basis. The symposium offers no virtual participation via streaming.

Abstracts: present your work

A limited number of talk places are available. Everyone, especially young researchers and PhD students, are encouraged to submit their exciting new and unpublished work* for presentation.
*Abstracts will not be reproduced or made available to participants at the meeting.

  • Abstract submission & Registration deadline: 1 October 2024
REGISTER & SUBMIT AN ABSTRACT

Directions to FMI

The FMI is located at the Novartis Campus in the northern corner of Basel (Fabrikstrasse 24, 4056 Basel), just minutes from the French and German borders. The main entrance of the Campus is easily accessible by public transport, bicycle or car.

Get the directions the FMI here

 

About the event

The “Gene Regulation Club” is a one-day symposium that unites groups at three research institutions for biomedical research on a regular basis:

The event has an intimate, interactive atmosphere with typically 100-120 participants from the TriRhena region. Each Gene Regulation Club will be dedicated to topics that revolve around the regulation of gene expression, such as chromatin, transcription, or RNA processing. In addition, PhD students and postdocs will present near-final but unpublished work from groups at each of the institutes. With an informal but high quality character of the meeting, we aim to stimulate discussion and inspire new collaborations within the Tri-Rhena area.

The Gene Regulation Club is the successor event for the popular TriRhena Chromatin Club.

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