CRUK CI Annual International Symposium 2013
Ralph DeBerardinisChildren’s Medical Center Research Institute at UT Southwestern
Introduction of the Chair by Kevin Brindle
Ralph DeBerardinisUT SouthwesternCancer metabolism – basic biology and translational approaches
John GriffithsCancer Research UK Cambridge InstituteImaging metabolism: Carbonic anhydrase IX acts as the tumour extracellular pH and links the Warburg effect with
Robert GilliesMoffitt Cancer CenterTargeting hypoxia in pancreatic cancer
Selected talk from submitted abstracts
Tiago RodriguesCancer Research UK Cambridge InstituteMagnetic resonance imaging of tumour glycolysis using hyperpolarized 13C-labelled glucose
Markus SchwaigerTechnische Universität MünchenMetabolic biomarkers in cancer
Sarah NelsonUniversity of California, San Francisco1H and 13C MR metabolic imaging of cancer patients
12.25–13.10 “Unanswered Questions” panel discussion introduced by
Lunch and poster session (S1, 2, 4: 13.10-14.00, S3: 14.00-14.50)
CRUK CI Annual International Symposium 2013
Adrian HarrisUniversity of OxfordInduced essentiality of hypoxic metabolism provides new ways to enhance antiangiogenic therapy
Randall JohnsonUniversity of CambridgeThe relationship between hypoxic response, HIF isoforms, and metastatic success
Navdeep ChandelNorthwestern UniversityMitochondria ROS regulate cancer
Selected talk from submitted abstracts
Ming YangUniversity of OxfordThe emerging role of fumarate as an oncometabolite
Michael LisantiUniversity of ManchesterTwo-compartment tumour metabolism: Implications for personalised cancer diagnosis and therapy
Richard MithenInstitute of Food ResearchRe-tuning metabolism to reduce risk of cancer progression
“Unanswered Questions” panel discussion introduced by
Buffet dinner at the CRUK Cambridge Institute
CRUK CI Annual International Symposium 2013
Light breakfast at the CRUK Cambridge Institute
Introduction of the Chair by Christian Frezza
Eytan RuppinTel Aviv UniversityGenome scale modelling of cancer metabolism
Eyal GottliebCancer Research UK Beatson InstituteMetabolic networks in fumarate hydratase-deficient cancer
Joshua RabinowitzPrinceton UniversityNADPH in cancer metabolism
Selected talk from submitted abstracts
Paolo PorporatoUniversity of Louvain, BelgiumA mitochondrial switch promotes tumor metastasis
Almut SchulzeCancer Research UK London Research InstituteMetabolic reprogramming in cancer supports cell growth and survival
Markus RalserUniversity of CambridgeFrom early origins of metabolism to the dynamics of metabolic networks in modern organisms
12.50–13.35 “Unanswered Questions” panel discussion introduced by
CRUK CI Annual International Symposium 2013
Lewis CantleyWeill Cornell Medical College
Introduction of the Chair by Masashi Narita
Lewis CantleyWeill Cornell Medical CollegePI3K and cancer metabolism
Matthew Vander HeidenKoch InstituteRegulation of metabolism to support cancer growth and progression
William KaelinHarvard UniversityThe von Hippel-Lindau tumor suppressor protein: Insights into oxygen sensing and cancer metabolism
Selected talk from submitted abstracts
Thorsten CramerCharité, BerlinFunctional integrity of tumor-specific glutamine metabolism is determined by a novel interaction of HIF-1 and Annexin A1
Chi Van DangUniversity of PennsylvaniaTargeting Myc-mediated cancer metabolism
Clemens SchmittMax-Delbrück-Center for Molecular MedicineExploiting senescence-associated hypermetabolism as a cancer vulnerability
“Unanswered Questions” panel discussion introduced by
Lewis CantleyWeill Cornell Medical College
Announcement of poster prize winners and symposium close
Symposium reception at Jesus College; dinner at 19.30
The Management of Premature Ejaculation: A Patient’s Guide How does ejaculation occur? Ejaculation, control ed by the central nervous system, happens when friction on the genitalia and other forms of sexual stimulation provide impulses that are sent up the spinal cord and into the brain. Ejaculation has two phases: PHase i: emission The vas deferens (the tubes that store and transport