An international symposium set to highlight groundbreaking research and international collaborations is coming to UCD next week. Led by Professor Walter Kolch of Systems Biology Ireland (SBI), UCD, and Nevan Krogan, Professor and, Director of the Quantitative Biosciences Institute (QBI) at the University of California, San Francisco, the QBI/SBI Symposium on Molecular Networks of Cancer and Other Diseases will be held in The O’Reilly Hall at UCD from 16-18 October 2023. The free three-day event will feature more than 33 speakers from across Ireland, the United States and Australia.
The theme of this conference emphasises how basic discovery research can translate to graspable impact at the clinical level, bringing change to real-life patients facing difficult diagnoses. One of the four keynote speakers at the symposium is Professor Kevan Shokat, a biochemist from UCSF/UC Berkeley whose discovery that the RAS oncogene can be targeted by small molecule drugs has now come out of clinical trials and is entering the clinic for the treatment of major cancers including lung and colorectal cancers. Professor Walter Kolch and Professor Boris Kholodenko (the latter of whom is also a keynote speaker), will shed light on the digital twin approaches developed in SBI, which have now led to two clinical trials, one of which aims to tackle notoriously difficult pancreatic cancer prognoses. The discussion and learnings from this event will help shape future research under national initiatives such as Precision Oncology Ireland, a consortium that brings together experts from across academia, industry, cancer charities and patient organisations, to develop new diagnostics and therapeutics for personalised cancer treatment.
The partnership between SBI and QBI is part of a five-year MOU established in 2018. Since then, the two groups have hosted a successful virtual symposium in October 2020, with a viewing audience of 125 people across the globe, as well as a virtual seminar series held during the 2021 – 2022 academic years, which averaged between 30 – 40 attendees per seminar. The organisers’ hope that the upcoming symposium in Dublin will be the next step in fostering further successful scientific collaborations and funding opportunities between Ireland, the US, and beyond.
Further information:
Systems Biology Ireland (SBI) at University College Dublin investigates new therapeutic approaches to disease, with a focus on cancer at a systems level. Researchers in SBI use a combination of traditional “wet” lab and computational modeling approaches to understand cellular signaling networks. SBI has a staff of ~60 group leaders, researchers, students and administrators from all over the world.
For more information, please contact Maryann Kelly, SEA, Administration and Communication, Systems Biology Ireland at 083 061 2997 or sbiadmin@ucd.ie.