Public evening
Grow your own custom-made kidney - Science fiction of science fact? read morePublic evening
On Wednesday 15th October, Astrid Joosten presented a RIMLS public evening asking the question: how far are we from a custom-made personalised kidney? Currently, we can't repair kidney damage, but what about the future? In an event, organised together with the Dutch Kidney Foundation, scientists, clinicians and other stakeholders discussed state-of-the-art research into developing a biological artificial kidney, ethical dilemma's, and their expectations for the future. The evening, attended by more than 200 members of the public, formed a fantastic opening event for the two-day New Frontiers symposium focussing on regenerative medicine.
The Netherlands has about 1 million people with chronic kidney disease. In more than 60,000 cases, the kidneys don't work well or even at all. From the 6,500 patients who must purify their blood through dialysis, more than a thousand will die each year. One possible treatment is kidney transplantation. However, at the end of 2013, 735 people in the Netherlands were on the waiting list for a kidney. Almost a thousand people did receive a kidney transplant; more than half of the kidneys came from a living donor.
Kidney damage is currently irreversible and the risk of further kidney deterioration is large. Kidney failure is a reastic consequence. But suppose that recovery is possible? That would be a huge breakthrough. Regenerative medicine is the science which investigates how we can take advantage of the natural ability of the body to repair damaged tissues. Stem cells play a major role in this.
Presenter Astrid Joosten hosted members of the public in an entire evening dedicated to the frontiers of the kidney research. Where are the limits and can those can be extended further? In addition to the scientific presentations, the public could view demonstrations in a virtual lab. The public evening concluded with an interactive panel discussion in which Hans Bart, Director of the Netherlands Kidney Patients Association, participated. Hans Bart is one of the aforementioned living kidney donors.
During the break there was a virtual kidney laboratory in the lobby of the Auditorium.
After the welcome speech from Tom Van Oostrom General Manager Kidney Foundation there was a presentation about biological artificial kidney research in Nijmegen by Dr. Roos Masereeuw Followed by a presenatation about kidney tailored for each patient by Prof. Dr. Ton Rabelink, LUMC.
During the interactive panel discussion with Luuk Hilbrands (nephrologist), Roos Masereeuw (researcher), Evert van Leeuwen (ethics), Hans Bart (kidney patients Association), Ton Rabelink, (nephrologist) there was a lively discussion, led by Astrid Joosten.
Bloemendal Medal
The Hans Bloemendal Medal for 2014 is awarded to Professor Christine Mummery, in recognition of her groundbreaking studies spanning the disciplines of biophysics and molecular biology. read moreBloemendal Medal
Christine Mummery studied Physics and has a PhD in Biophysics from the University of London. She received a postdoctoral fellowship from the Royal Society (UK) for research at the Hubrecht Institute where she became group leader and, in 2002, Professor of Developmental Biology. Her research focussed on development and differentiation of mouse and human embryonic stem cells (hES), in particular the role of growth factor signalling in directed differentiation. She has pioneered studies characterizing cardiomyocytes from hES cells and was among the first to inject them into mouse heart and assess their effect on myocardial infarction. Currently, her lab uses stem cell derived cardiomyocytes and vascular cells as disease models for drug discovery and cardiac repair. She serves on the Medical and Ethical Councils of the Netherlands Ministry of Health (CCMO), providing specialized advice on human embryos and stem cell clinical trials. She is an elected member of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences (KNAW, 2010), editor and editorial board member of journals that include Stem Cell Research, Cell Stem Cell, Stem Cells, elected board member of International Society for Stem Cell Research (ISSCR), and president of the International Society of Differentiation. In addition, she is on the boards of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences (KNAW), Dutch
Medical Research Council (ZonMW) and Netherlands Heart Institute (ICIN). She has written a popular book on stem cells "Stem Cells: scientific facts and fiction" (2011) intended as a semi-lay guide to stem cell biology and applications. Christine Mummery is a passionate and devoted researcher with over 300 publications and 12,000 citations.
More photo's: link
About Hans Bloemendal
Hans Bloemendal has made significant contributions to the fields of biochemistry and molecular biology throughout his illustrious career and as a prominent scientist at the forefront of research on lens proteins He was the first to provide a new insight into the complex behaviour of lens proteins, demonstrating that crystallin heterogeneity was due to a combination of multimeric associations of different crystallin polypeptides. From 1965 to 1988, he was full professor of Biochemistry at the Radboud University Nijmegen, at both the Faculty of Science and the Faculty of Medicine. His research group was the first to isolate translatable mRNAs coding for crystallin proteins, in a time when messenger RNA isolation was still in its infancy. Once again as a pioneer, he turned to the primary structure of crystallin polypeptides, cDNA and gene cloning. His cell biology studies not only included the spatial distribution of crystallins in the lens, lens cell culture, viral transformation of lens epithelial cells, lens aging and cataract, but also beautiful work on the cytoskeleton and plasma membrane in the lens. His love and devotion to molecular life sciences is illustrated by the fact that, at his age he is still active in the field: he is a distinguished example and role model for young students and scientists alike. Next to his scientific career, Hans Bloemendal was active in many other areas. The most important of these is of course his singing. Already for more than half a century he has been the first cantor at the most important synagogue in Amsterdam. His ritual Jewish songs have been recorded many times.
Next to his scientific career, Hans Bloemendal was active in many other areas. The most important of these is of course his singing. Already for more than half a century he has been the first cantor at the most important synagogue in Amsterdam. His ritual Jewish songs have been recorded many times.
The Hans Bloemendal lecture award has been bestowed on a number of very prominent scientists active in many different research fields. A full list of previous winners can be found via this link.
Keynote lectures
Keynote 1: Christine Mummery (Leiden University Medical Centre, NL) Keynote 2: Robert Langer (Massachusetts Institue of Technology, USA). read moreKeynote lectures
KEYNOTE 1:
Christine Mummery (Leiden University Medical Centre, NL).
Stem cells in cardiovascular development and disease.
Focuses on the biology and function of human embryonic and (patient derived) induced pluripotent stem cells. Methods for inducing their differentiation to cardiovascular cells are investigated using the underlying principles of developmental biology in combination with state of the art molecular biology.
KEYNOTE 2:
Robert Langer (Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA).
Novel drug delivery systems, tissue engineering, technology transfer.
He is one of 13 institute professors at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT's highest honor), has published more than 1100 articles, holds more than 800 issued and pend-ing patents and has 24 biotech companies to his name. He is the most cited engineer in history with more than 90,000 citations and is the only person to be elected to all four U.S. national academies.
Official sponsor of the lecture by Robert Langer: BioMedical Materials program (BMM)
Programme
Download poster: link
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Download programme: link
CONFIRMED SPEAKERS
KEYNOTE 1:
Christine Mummery (Leiden University Medical Centre, NL)
Stem cells in cardiovascular development and disease
KEYNOTE 2:
Robert Langer (MIT, USA)
Novel drug delivery systems, tissue engineering, technology transfer
Clemens van Blitterswijk (Twente University, NL)
Smart biomaterials, cartilage and bone repair, 3D scaffolds, synthetic bone grafts
Achim Goepferich (University of Regensburg, DE)
Biomaterials, repair/replacement tissues, innovation drug delivery, biodegradable materials
Jeffrey Hubbell (EPFL, Lausanne, Switzerland/University of Chicago, USA)
Biomaterial and growth factor engineering in regenerative medicine
Ali Khademhosseini (MIT, USA)
Bioengineering, cell-cell & cell-biomaterial interaction
See film: ACS Breakthrough Science
James Kirkpatrick (Johannes Gutenberg University, DE)
Endothelial cell pathobiology in inflammation and healing processes, biomaterial vascularization, bone tissue engineering, cartilage tissue engineering, respiratory tract regeneration, in vivo proof of principle studies
Evert van Leeuwen (Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre, NL)
Ethics & stem cells
Frank Luyten (Skeletal Biology and Engineering Research Center, BE)
Formation of skeletal tissues and joint morphogenesis
Phillip B. Messersmith (Northwestern University, USA)
New biomaterials for the repair, replacement, or augmentation of human tissue
Teruo Okano (Tokyo Women's Medical University (TWMU), JP)
cell sheet engineering / clinical applications
Molly Stevens, (Imperial College London, UK)
Directed differentiation of stem cells, the design of novel bioactive scaffolds and new approaches towards tissue regeneration; peptide-functionalised nanoparticles
Henk Stunnenberg (Radboud University, RIMLS, NL)
Transcription factor binding sites, 3D structure, epigenetic marks, DNA-methylation and RNA transcriptomes
Samuel Stupp (Northwestern University, USA)
(Supra-molecular) self-assembly, biomaterials
Gernot Walko (Centre for Stem Cells and Regenerative Medicine, UK)
Self-renewal and lineage selection, tumour formation, regulation of cell fate decisions
James Yoo (Wake Forest Institute for Regenerative Medicine, USA)
Biotechnology, degenerative disorders, engineering/bioengineering
Venues
Radboudumc Auditorium>The New Frontiers Symposium will be held at the Radboudumc Auditorium, Geert Grooteplein 15, 6525 GA Nijmegen, route 296.
The symposium dinner will be held in Landmark Wijnfort Lent, Bemmelse Dijk 4, 6663 KV Lent. A coach is available to take you from the Radboud Auditorium to Landmark.