Hans Clevers
Hubrecht Institute
The Netherlands
EMBO | EMBL Symposium
Please note that this event will now take place virtually.
Microbial-host interaction has a profound impact on numerous biological systems, including metabolism, immunology, DNA integrity and nutrition. Pathobionts and pathogenic bacteria have developed specific abilities to gain growth advantage and niche resilience which affect these key host biological processes, often leading to disease states such as cancer. While the connection between helicobacter infection and gastric cancer was originally considered an exception, many new examples of bacterial infection contributing to cancer have been identified. This symposium brings together the leading scientists in the field of microbial ecology, immunology, metabolism, genomics and infection to discuss the latest progress in microbial infection and cancer from an interdisciplinary perspective. This conference will provide a larger audience of young researchers and students with a stimulating platform to present their research, to network and to develop this emerging and exciting field further.
Hubrecht Institute
The Netherlands
German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ)
Germany
National Institutes of Health
USA
Charité
Germany
Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health
USA
The University of Tokyo
Japan
Hudson Institute of Medical Research
Australia
Imperial College London
UK
University of Zurich
Switzerland
University of Cambridge
UK
University of Würzburg
Germany
University of Göttingen
Germany
University of Trento
Italy
University of Illinois College of Medicine
USA
University of Utah/Huntsman Cancer Institute
USA
The Chinese University of Hong Kong
China
EMBL Heidelberg
Germany
EMBO Reports
Germany
University of Florida
USA
University of Oxford
UK
Max Planck Institute for Infection Biology
Germany
Leiden University
The Netherlands
EMBL Heidelberg
Germany
EMBL Heidelberg
Germany
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All times in the programme below are shown as the time in Europe/Berlin.
To find out the equivalent time zone in your location, enter Berlin, the programme time and date along with your city into the Time Zone Converter.
Time | Title |
---|---|
14:00 – 14:15 | Opening remarks |
14:15 – 15:00 | Keynote lecture 1: Stem cell-based organoids in human disease Hans Clevers – Roche Innovation Center, Switzerland AVAILABLE ON DEMAND AFTER LIVE STREAM |
15:00 – 17:30 | Session 1: Microbiome in infection and cancer Session chairs: Xin Lu & James Kinross |
15:00 – 15:25 | Microbiome control of host immunity Yasmine Belkaid – National Institutes of Health, USA AVAILABLE ON DEMAND AFTER LIVE STREAM |
15:25 – 15:40 | Host-microbiota interactions during colorectal cancer development Lars Vereecke – Ghent University, Belgium AVAILABLE ON DEMAND AFTER LIVE STREAM |
15:40 – 15:55 | Deficiency in mismatch repair (MMR) pathway increases susceptibility to colibactin-induced colorectal cancer Alberto Martin – University of Toronto, Canada AVAILABLE ON DEMAND AFTER LIVE STREAM |
15:55 – 16:10 | Break |
16:10 – 16:35 | Gut microbial co-metabolism determines the efficacy and toxicity of chemotherapy James Kinross – Imperial College London, UK AVAILABLE ON DEMAND AFTER LIVE STREAM |
16:35 – 16:50 | Diet-induced luminal nitrates selectively enrich genotoxic E. coli to induce colibactin-dependent colon carcinogenesis Bupesh Kumar Thakur – University of Toronto, Canada AVAILABLE ON DEMAND AFTER LIVE STREAM |
16:50 – 17:15 | Innate lymphoid cells adapt intestinal epithelial stem cells to genotoxic stress Andreas Diefenbach – Charité, Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Germany AVAILABLE ON DEMAND AFTER LIVE STREAM |
17:15 – 17:30 | Multi-omics analyses reveal multimodal Fusobacterium DNA damage perturbations in colorectal cancer Radhika Kataria – King’s College London, UK AVAILABLE ON DEMAND AFTER LIVE STREAM |
17:30 – 18:00 | Break and meet the speakers |
18:00 – 18:45 | Poster session |
18:45 – 19:55 | Session 2: Bacterial genomics and cancer Session chairs: Jun Yu & Achim Breiling |
18:45 – 19:00 | Association of Helicobacter pylori and autoimmune gastritis with stomach cancer in a cohort of young Finnish women Julia Butt – DKFZ Heidelberg, Germany AVAILABLE ON DEMAND AFTER LIVE STREAM |
19:00 – 19:15 | Mechanistic insight into Colibactin as a mutagenic driver of cancer Hilmar Berger – University of Kiel, Germany AVAILABLE ON DEMAND AFTER LIVE STREAM |
19:15 – 19:30 | Improved detection of colibactin-linked mutations in human cancer Jens Puschhof – German Cancer Research Center / Hubrecht Institute, Germany AVAILABLE ON DEMAND AFTER LIVE STREAM |
19:30 – 19:55 | Metagenomics for the study of the microbiome-cancer interaction Nicola Segata – University of Trento Italy AVAILABLE ON DEMAND AFTER LIVE STREAM |
19:55 – 20:55 | Speed networking |
Time | Title |
---|---|
13:00 – 14:00 | Poster session |
14:00 – 15:35 | Session 2: Bacterial genomics and cancer (continued) Session chairs: Jun Yu & Achim Breiling |
14:00 – 14:25 | Induction of BRCAness by the Helicobacter pylori CagA oncoprotein Masanori Hatakeyama – The University of Tokyo, Japan AVAILABLE ON DEMAND AFTER LIVE STREAM |
14:25 – 14:40 | A Fecal Microbiota Signature with High Specificity for Pancreatic Cancer Ece Kartal – Heidelberg University, Germany AVAILABLE ON DEMAND AFTER LIVE STREAM |
14:40 – 14:55 | Repetitive Exposure to Non-Typhoidal Salmonellae is an Environmental Risk Factor for Colon Cancer Daphne van Elsland – Leiden University Medical Centre, The Netherlands LIVE STREAM ONLY |
14:55 – 15:10 | Gut microbiome in colorectal cancer: basic research and clinical translation Jun Yu – The Chinese University of Hong Kong, China AVAILABLE ON DEMAND AFTER LIVE STREAM |
15:10 – 15:35 | Campylobacter jejuni-derived cytolethal distending toxin promotes cancer metastasis through the activation of MMP9 by JAK2-STAT3 signaling Zhen He – Sixth Affiliated hospital of Sun Yat-sen University, China AVAILABLE ON DEMAND AFTER LIVE STREAM |
15:35 – 16:05 | Break and meet the speakers |
16:05 – 17:40 | Session 3: Bacterial metabolism and cancer Session chairs: Thomas Rudel |
16:05 – 16:20 | Fusobacterium nucleatum secretes amyloid FadA as a molecular switch for commensal-to-pathogen conversion Yiping Han – Columbia University, USA AVAILABLE ON DEMAND AFTER LIVE STREAM |
16:20 – 16:35 | The intestinal microbiota modulates pancreatic carcinogenesis through intratumoral natural killer cells Ryan Thomas – University of Florida, USA AVAILABLE ON DEMAND AFTER LIVE STREAM |
16:35 – 17:00 | Microbiome metabolic pathways reveal a diet-microbe link for enhancing colon cancer immunity Wendy Garrett – Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, USA LIVE STREAM ONLY |
17:00 – 17:15 | Microbiome-host crosstalk analysis unravels formate as an oncometabolite in colorectal cancer Elisabeth Letellier – University of Luxembourg, Luxembourg AVAILABLE ON DEMAND AFTER LIVE STREAM |
17:15 – 17:40 | Tumor metabolisms mimic: Metabolic reprogramming as a driver for bacterial infection Thomas Rudel – Julius-Maximilians-Universität Würzburg, Germany LIVE STREAM ONLY |
17:40 – 18:10 | Break and Meet the speakers |
18:10 – 18:55 | Keynote lecture 2: Host micro biome interactions in health and disease Eran Elinav – German Cancer Research Center, Germany LIVE STREAM ONLY |
18:55 – 20:25 | Session 4: Bacteria and therapeutic responses Session chairs: Jun Sun & Christian Jobin |
18:55 – 19:20 | Intestinal barriers inhibit microbial infection and colon cancer Jun Sun – University of Illinois, USA AVAILABLE ON DEMAND AFTER LIVE STREAM |
19:20 – 19:35 | Gut microbiota that render an anti-tumor response Rabi Upadhyay – New York University School of Medicine, USA AVAILABLE ON DEMAND AFTER LIVE STREAM |
19:35 – 20:00 | Serologic markers of infection and cancer risk in the upper genital tract: expanding evidence Britton Trabert – University of Utah/Huntsman Cancer Institute, USA AVAILABLE ON DEMAND AFTER LIVE STREAM |
20:00 – 20:15 | The gut-cancer dialogue governing tumor immunosurveillance Laurence Zitvogel, University Paris Saclay, France PRE-RECORDED TALK |
20:15 – 20:45 | Meet the speakers |
20:45 – 21:45 | Bar mixer |
Time | Title |
---|---|
14:00 – 16:30 | Session 5: Bacteria and immune responses Session chairs: Jacques Neefjes & Britton Trabert |
14:00 – 14:15 | Interaction of bacterial genera associated with therapeutic response to immune checkpoint PD-1 blockade in a United States cohort Rachel Newsome – University of Florida, USA AVAILABLE ON DEMAND AFTER LIVE STREAM |
14:15 – 14:40 | Uncovering the pro-tumourigenic role of innate immune DNA sensors in gastric cancer Brendan Jenkins – Hudson Institute of Medical Research, Australia AVAILABLE ON DEMAND AFTER LIVE STREAM |
14:40 – 15:05 | How Salmonella contributes to colon and gallbladder cancer Jacques Neefjes – Leiden University, The Netherlands AVAILABLE ON DEMAND AFTER LIVE STREAM |
15:05 – 15:20 | Battle for the Endoplasmic Reticulum: Host versus Pathogen Paulomi Sanghavi – Tata Institute of Fundamental Research, India AVAILABLE ON DEMAND AFTER LIVE STREAM |
15:20 – 15:35 | The role of morphogen signals in shaping healthy and infected-precancerous gastric mucosa. Francesco Boccellato – University of Oxford, UK AVAILABLE ON DEMAND AFTER LIVE STREAM |
15:35 – 16:00 | Co-infections modulate H. pylori-induced gastric preneoplasia Anne Müller, University of Zürich, Switzerland AVAILABLE ON DEMAND AFTER LIVE STREAM |
16:00 – 16:30 | Break and Meet the speakers |
16:30 – 18:45 | Session 6: Bacteria and mammalian cell proliferation/transformation Session chairs: Anne Muller & Rachel Newsome |
16:30 – 16:55 | Aetiologies of mutational signatures in human cancer: from infection to endogenous abnormalities Ramona Schulz-Heddergott, University of Göttingen, Germany AVAILABLE ON DEMAND AFTER LIVE STREAM |
16:55 – 17:10 | Modeling Helicobacter pylori-induced gastric carcinogenesis using wild type and genetically modified murine gastric organoids Jiazhuo He – University of Zürich, Switzerland AVAILABLE ON DEMAND AFTER LIVE STREAM |
17:10 – 17:25 | Synthetic colibactin analogs promote specific transcriptomic and mutational changes in intestinal epithelial cells Michael Dougherty – University of Florida, USA AVAILABLE ON DEMAND AFTER LIVE STREAM |
17:25 – 17:50 | Gut microbiota signatures of colorectal cancer Georg Zeller – EMBL Heidelberg, Germany AVAILABLE ON DEMAND AFTER LIVE STREAM |
17:50 – 18:05 | Ectopic expression of H. pylori CagA in human gastric organoids leads to intestinal differentiation Mar Reines – Max Planck for Infection Biology, Germany AVAILABLE ON DEMAND AFTER LIVE STREAM |
18:05 – 18:20 | Dysregulated endolysosomal trafficking in cells arrested in the G1 phase of the host cell cycle impairs Salmonella vacuolar replication Ana Eulalio – CNC, University of Coimbra, Portugal AVAILABLE ON DEMAND AFTER LIVE STREAM |
18:20 – 18:45 | Aetiologies of mutational signatures in human cancer: from infection to endogenous abnormalities Serena Nik-Zainal – The University of Cambridge, UK AVAILABLE ON DEMAND AFTER LIVE STREAM |
18:45 – 19:10 | Break and Meet the speakers |
19:10 – 19:25 | Closing Remarks |
Registration Fees (include access to all of the talks, digital poster sessions and online group discussions, and help us cover our costs to run the event. For further information please refer to the FAQ page):
PhD Student | €140 |
Academia | €190 |
Industry | €240 |
Accredited journalists may be eligible to register for a complimentary registration. Registrants may be required to provide accreditation or equivalent proof of press membership after registration. Please contact Christopher Stocks for more information.
Types of payments accepted are international bank transfers and credit card payments.
Abstract submission deadline: Wednesday 16 February 2022.
Only registered participants are eligible to submit an abstract. We only accept online abstract submissions.
After you have logged in and successfully registered, you will receive an email asking you to submit your abstract. Click on the link provided and enter your abstract in the text box provided. Alternatively you can submit your abstract by clicking on the link on the confirmation page directly after registering. The same login credentials are used for both processes.
When submitting your abstract you can also apply for an oral or poster presentation. A selection process will take place with the results announced 2-3 weeks after the abstract submission deadline.
Please note:
Title: The title should not exceed 20 words. Only the first word of the title should start with a capital letter and the rest of the title should be in lowercase.
Authors and Affiliations: Please fill in the author’s details as requested in the online form. The compulsory details are: First Name, Last Name, Organisation Name (Affiliation or Company), Country and Email. Mark only one author as the role of First author and please don’t forget to indicate who will be presenting. The order of the authors will be listed as follows: First Author, Co-First Author (alphabetically if multiple), co-author(s) (in the order added by the submitter).
Presentation Types: When submitting your abstract, you can apply for an oral or poster presentation. A selection process will take place with the results announced 2-3 weeks after the abstract submission deadline.
Please check our FAQs pages for further information on how to submit an abstract.
All academic and student registrants are invited to apply for a registration fee waiver, provided by the EMBL Advanced Training Centre Corporate Partnership Programme and EMBO. The registration fee waiver covers the registration sum that you have paid to attend the meeting. Conference participants are not required to pre-pay the registration fee to be selected for a fee waiver for a virtual meeting. If you have already paid the registration fee and are awarded a fee waiver, it will be reimbursed after the meeting.
The fee waiver will cover the registration sum that you have paid to attend the course or conference.
For participants and speakers with childcare responsibilities there is the possibility to apply for a grant, provided by the EMBL Advanced Training Centre Corporate Partnership Programme and EMBO, to offset childcare costs incurred when participating at a virtual event. Eligible costs include fees for a babysitter or childcare facility or travel costs for a care giver. Please note that priority will be given to early stage researchers. Costs will be reimbursed after the meeting only once a reimbursement form and original receipts have been received. Attendance at the event is required in order to be eligible to receive the reimbursement. In order to apply for this grant, you must be registered by the abstract submission deadline.
You may apply for financial assistance when submitting your motivation letter for courses, and abstract for conferences. In your application you will be asked to answer questions regarding why your lab cannot fund your attendance and how your attendance will make a difference to your career. Application for financial support will not affect the outcome of your registration application.
For the Boehringer Ingelheim Fonds Travel Grant, there is a pre-application question during the motivation letter submission process, and if selected you will be requested to complete a standard form and documentation consisting of your travel expense estimation.
The scientific organisers will select the recipients of all financial assistance during the motivation letter or abstract selection process. Results will be announced approximately 6-8 weeks before the event start date, however for some events this may be delayed. Selection results do not impact your admission to the meeting. Selection is based on your current work or study location, the reasons for needing financial support and the impact this event will have on your career.
Costs will be reimbursed after the meeting only once a reimbursement form and original receipts (from travel costs) have been received.
View our list of external funding opportunities and information on attending a conference as an event reporter.
For further information about financial assistance please refer to the FAQ page.
Accommodation is not included in the conference registration fee.
As further changes in our events are possible due to COVID-19, you should book flights, trains and hotels with flexible options and favourable cancellation conditions.
The hotels below have rooms on hold for participants until xxxx 2022, in some cases at special rates. Please quote the booking code xx22-0x and confirm the exact price of the room with the hotel directly.
Conference shuttle buses are free of charge for participants, and depart from designated bus stops near the hotels to EMBL and back, mornings and evenings.
The bus stops for this conference are:
View Conference shuttle bus stops and hotels in a larger map. Please note that not every bus stop will be used for every event.
Address: EMBL, Meyerhofstraße 1, 69117 Heidelberg, Germany. For further information on getting to EMBL Heidelberg visit Public Transportation to the Venue. For information about accommodation and local transportation please refer to the FAQ page.
Additional information can be found in our Code of Conduct.
It is important to stay healthy and move around, especially when you are attending an event virtually. We have put together a few coffee break stretches and yoga videos in the conference platform for you to enjoy during the event.
Please use the Q&A function in the event platform.
If you have any other questions, you can go to the Help Desk in the event platform. Click on ‘more’ on the top menu and click Help Desk.
The programme is planned based on the Europe/Berlin time zone, unless otherwise stated. Please take your time zone into consideration when planning your attendance.
Please find additional information including FAQs, terms and conditions on our Information for Participants page.
Media partners
EMBO Molecular Medicine, an EMBO Press journal
International Union of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
Molecular Oncology, a FEBSPRESS journal
Open Biology, a Royal Society journal
Sponsorship opportunities
We offer a variety of event sponsoring possibilities, with the flexibility to select a set sponsorship package or combine individual sponsorship options to suit your event budget. Discounts are available for companies sponsoring multiple events at EMBL Heidelberg. View other conferences, or contact sponsorship@embl.de for further information.
If you are interested in becoming a media partner of this event, please visit our media partnerships webpage.
EMBO | EMBL Symposia promote scientific communication and collaboration in the European research area. They provide scientists with a platform to discuss and exchange ideas on forward-looking topics and new developments in the life sciences.
Topics emphasise upcoming developments and the interdisciplinary nature of related fields. Jointly funded and organised by EMBO and EMBL – and complementary to their respective courses, workshops, and conference programmes – the symposia promote scientific communication and collaboration.
All symposia are held in the EMBL Advanced Training Centre (ATC) in Heidelberg, Germany, or virtually.
Date: 6 - 8 Apr 2022
Location: Virtual
Deadline(s):
Abstract submission: Closed
Registration: Closed
Organisers:
Contact: Christopher Stocks