SCP2022

June 15 - 16, 2022   |   Boston, USA

 

The 5th Single Cell Proteomics Conference (SCP2022) will be in Boston, USA. It will include virtual components via Zoom and a YouTube broadcast.

  • The in-person meeting will be at Northeastern University in the John D. O’Bryant building, 1st floor (40 Leon Street). To cover the expenses for meals, it charges a registration fee. Attendance is limited to 100 participants.
  • The virtual components are free of charge but require a registration. The Zoom attendance is limited to 250 attendees and the YoutTube broadcast is unlimited.



Program

Location: The talks will be at the Cabral Center within the John D. O’Bryant African-American Institute and online via Zoom. The last column (Your local time) shows the time of each talk for your time zone.



Wednesday June 15


The day will start with a workshop covering technological innovations, including an accessible primer and overview of single-cell proteomics. Then we will transition to talks and discussions. As usual for the meeting, we will have ample time for formal and informal discussions.

Breakfast and lunch will be provided on site. All attendees are welcome to dinner.


Speaker Title ET GMT Your local time
Registration and breakfast 8:30 12:30
Nikolai Slavov, Northeastern University Opening remarks 9:00 13:00
Nikolai Slavov, Northeastern University Primer to single-cell proteomics by mass-spectrometry 9:15 13:15
Discussion 9:35 13:35
Andrew Leduc, Northeastern University Sample preparation for single-cell proteomics 9:50 13:50
Discussion 10:10 14:10
General discussion & Coffee Break 10:20 14:20
Andrew Webb, Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research Liquid chromatography for sensitive proteomics 11:00 15:00
Discussion 11:20 15:20
Christoph Krisp, Bruker Daltonics Inc Using trapped ion mobility spectrometry for single-cell proteomics 11:30 15:30
Discussion 11:50 15:50
Lunch Break & Poster Session 12:00 16:00
Ryan Kelly, Brigham Young University Going deeper with label-free single-cell proteomics 1:30 17:30
Discussion 2:00 18:00
Peter Nemes, University of Maryland Scalable single-cell mass spectrometry for functional biology: the nervous system 2:15 18:15
Discussion 2:45 18:45
General discussion & Coffee Break 3:00 19:00
Trang Le, Stanford University and Scilifelab, Sweden Analysis of the Human Protein Atlas Weakly-Supervised Single Cell Classification Competition 3:30 19:30
Discussion 3:50 19:50
David Perlman, Merck Exploratory Sciences Center Single-Cell Proteomics Inroads in Biopharma R&D: Advances in Methodologies and Operationalization 4:00 20:00
Discussion 4:20 20:20
General discussion & Break 4:30 20:30
Henry Brinkerhoff, TU Delft Single-molecule protein reading at single-amino-acid resolution with nanopores 5:00 21:00
Discussion 5:20 21:20
Jeff Nivala, University of Washington Routes to nanopore proteomics: from reading peptide barcodes to full-length proteins 5:30 21:30
Discussion 5:50 21:50
Nikolai Slavov, Northeastern University Overcoming the dynamic-range challenge of the human proteome 6:00 22:00
Discussion 6:20 22:20
Dinner Banquet at the Faculty Club, 716 Columbus Place, 6th floor 7:00 23:00

 

 

Thursday June 16


A full day of talks and discussions. As usual for the meeting, we will have ample time for formal and informal discussions.

Breakfast and lunch will be provided on site. All attendees are welcome to dinner.


Speaker Title ET GMT Your local time
Registration and breakfast 8:30 12:30
Theodore Alexandrov, EMBL Spatial single-cell metabolomics reveals metabolic cell states 9:00 13:00
Discussion 9:30 13:15
Panel Panel Discussion 9:45 13:45
Coffee Break 10:15 14:30
Nikolai Slavov, Northeastern University Exploring functional protein covariation across single cells 10:45 14:45
Discussion 11:15 15:15
Aleksandra Petelski, Northeastern University Proteome asymmetry in mouse and human embryos before fate specification 11:30 15:45
Discussion 11:50 16:00
Lunch Break & Poster Session 12:00 16:00
John Yates, The Scripps Research Institute Patch-Clamp/Single Cell Proteomics: a multiplexed approach for determining changes in amygdala neurons after chronic ethanol exposure 1:30 17:30
Discussion 2:00 18:00
Erwin Schoof, Technical University of Denmark Leveraging latest-generation data acquisition and MS instrument architecture for improving single cell proteomics experiments 2:15 18:15
Discussion 2:45 18:45
General discussion & Coffee Break 3:00 19:00
Blandine Chazarin, ACBRI, Cedars Sinai Medical Center Single Cell Proteomics applied to better characterize cardiac cell proteome with a label-free approach 3:30 19:30
Discussion 3:50 19:50
Savas Tay, University of Chicago Proximity sequencing for highly multiplexed quantification of proteins, protein complexes, and mRNA in single cells 4:00 20:00
Discussion 4:30 20:20
General discussion & Break 4:30 20:30
Alexey Nesvizhskii, University of Michigan Analysis of single-cell proteomics data using FragPipe computational platform 5:00 21:00
Discussion 5:30 21:30
Alexander Ivanov, Northeastern University Probing bottom-up and top-down proteomic and glycomic profiling of small cell populations and single cells. 5:40 21:40
Discussion 6:00 22:00
Camille Lombard-Banek, Astrazeneca Microcapillary sampling of embryonic cells enables multiomic analysis in live frog embryos 6:10 22:10
Discussion 6:30 22:30
Nikolai Slavov, Northeastern University Closing Remarks 6:40 22:40
Dinner Banquet at Joe's 7:30 23:30

 

 


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