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This Course is intended for advanced graduate
students, postdoctoral scholars, and professional scientists. It will
continue for 10 intense days and will comprise morning lectures
followed by workshop discussions; afternoon computer practicals leading
to student projects; and wet lab demonstrations of gene regulatory
perturbation analysis in vivo. Lectures will provide in depth
analyses of well studied gene regulatory networks (GRNs) in both
embryonic and post embryonic developmental systems; a comprehensive
theory of developmental GRN structure and of the explanatory value of
GRNs; and discussion of the rapidly growing area of GRN evolution. The
practicals will include introduction and use of BioTapestry, the
leading computational platform for representation of GRNs; outlines of
kinetic analysis and GRN modeling, and relevant special topics in gene
regulation as they pertain to development and evolution.
This course is supported with funds provided by
Howard
Hughes Medical Institute
NIH / National Institute of Child Health & Human Development
Society
for
Developmental
Biology
2013 Course Faculty James Briscoe, MRC National Institute for Medical Research, London
Marianne Bronner, Caltech
Arthur Lander, University of California Irvine
Bill Longabaugh, Institute for Systems Biology
Rob Phillips, Caltech
Ellen Rothenberg, Caltech
Harinder Singh, Genentech
Steve Small, New York University
Gary Stormo, Washington University School of Medicine
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