University of Manitoba


Department of Biochemistry and Medical Genetics

 Current News & Events...
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BMG Weekly Seminars


Monday, November 16, 2009  

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Tuesday, November 17, 2009

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Wednesday, November 18, 2009 
Departmental Seminar – course BGEN 7000 & BGEN 8000
12:15 p.m.
Theatre A – Mezzanine
Basic Medical Sciences Building

Presenter:  Shannon Baxter, PhD Student with Dr. Jeffrey Wigle
 
Title: “PROX1 mediated regulation of the lymphatic endothelial cell cycle”


Learning objectives:
After this session, participants will be able to:
1) identify the different functional domains of PROX1
2) describe the post-translational modifications of PROX1
3) describe two different methods of synchronizing cells in the cell cycle

Abstract:
The homeobox transcription factor PROX1 is the mammalian ortholog of the Drosophila gene prospero.  It is required for lymphatic development as Prox1 null mice lack all lymphatic vasculature.  PROX1 has also been shown to have conflicting roles in the cell cycle that are cell type dependent.  We have previously shown that PROX1 is able to activate the Cyclin E1 promoter via a DNA-binding independent mechanism.  PROX1 activates the expression of the cell cycle inhibitor p57kip2/CDKN1C in the developing lens, which in turn causes cell cycle arrest and lens fiber differentiation.  PROX1 also inhibits the growth of liver hepatocarcinoma cells in vitro.  In contrast, PROX1 promotes a dysplastic phenotype in human colon cancer and promotes cell growth of fetal hepatoblasts.  PROX1 protein levels are increased in the G2 and M phases in proliferating progenitor cells of the developing retina.  We hypothesize that PROX1 functions as a key cell cycle regulator in lymphatic endothelial cells.  We have used western blotting to measure PROX1 protein levels in synchronized primary lymphatic endothelial cells and have observed that PROX1 protein levels are enriched in M phase.  We have also determined that PROX1 is phosphorylated and have established that the majority of the phosphorylation sites are clustered in the conserved Prospero domain 1.  We have deleted the PD1 domain (PD1∆) and used immunocytochemistry, western blotting and luciferase assays to measure the subcellular localization, expression level and activity.  We observed that PD1∆ is consistently localized to both the nucleus and the cytoplasm and that it is expressed as a doublet.  We also observed cell type specific differences in its ability to activate both the 1 kb Cyclin E1 promoter and the 220 bp FGFR-3 promoter between HEK 293 and U2OS cells.  We are the first to demonstrate that PROX1 is phosphorylated and that the PD1 domain regulates the nuclear localization of PROX1.    This event is an accredited group learning activity as defined by the Maintenance of Certification Program of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada.

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Thursday, November 19, 2009
Journal Club
Gordon Chown Room - FE019 Community Services Bldg.
2:00-3:00 pm

After the session, participants should be able to discuss the pros and cons of the following articles:

Coffee B, Keith K, Albizua I, Malone T, Mowrey J, Sherman SL, Warren ST. Incidence of fragile X syndrome by newborn screening for methylated FMR1 DNA. Am J Hum Genet. 2009 Oct;85(4):503-14. PMID: 19804849 Fragile X .pdf
 
Schroth W, Goetz MP, Hamann U, Fasching PA, Schmidt M, Winter S, Fritz P, Simon W, Suman VJ, Ames MM, Safgren SL, Kuffel MJ, Ulmer HU, Boländer J, Strick R, Beckmann MW, Koelbl H, Weinshilboum RM, Ingle JN, Eichelbaum M, Schwab M, Brauch H. Association between CYP2D6 polymorphisms and outcomes among women with early stage breast cancer treated with tamoxifen. JAMA. 2009 Oct 7;302(13):1429-36. PMID: 19809024 Tamoxifen and CYP2D6.pdf

Participants are expected to read the articles in advance

This event is an accredited group learning activity as defined by the Maintenance of Certification Program of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada.

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Friday, November 20, 2009
TeleGRAF
Brodie Center : JBRC777
10:00-11:00 a.m

Topic: TBA

Presenter: TBA (Canadian Down syndrome society)

This event is an accredited group learning activity as defined by the Maintenance of Certification Program of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada. 

POST-DOCTORAL TRAINING IN CLINICAL CHEMISTRY
UNIVERSITY OF MANITOBA
(posted - September 24, 2009)

Applications are now being invited for a position in a 3-year post-doctoral training program in Clinical Biochemistry (accredited by the Canadian Academy of Clinical Biochemistry) to commence in July 2010.  The program provides an excellent opportunity to learn Clinical Biochemistry and gain exposure to other laboratory medicine disciplines, in preparation for pursuing a career as a Clinical Biochemist.  For more information on careers in Clinical Biochemistry, see http://www.cscc.ca/ and follow links under Academy.

Candidates must have a PhD with a strong background in Biochemistry or related discipline.  Excellent interpersonal and communication skills are required and ability to work effectively and independently is important.  The program is part of Post-Graduate Medical Education at the University of Manitoba.  The majority of training will be provided at two tertiary care teaching hospitals, Health Sciences Centre and St Boniface General Hospital, located in Winnipeg.   All hospital and public clinical laboratories in Manitoba are operated by Diagnostic Services Manitoba (DSM, http://www.dsmanitoba.ca/ ).

A program description may be obtained by contacting the person listed below.

Application is by letter outlining the candidate’s interest and suitability for training as a Clinical Biochemist.  A Curriculum Vitae must accompany the letter of application.  Three letters of reference are required and must be sent directly to the undersigned.

Review of applications will commence November 2, 2009 and will remain open until the position is filled.

Dr Lorne Seargeant
Co-Director, Post-doctoral Training Program
Clinical Biochemistry and Genetics
Diagnostic Services of Manitoba
c/o Health Sciences Centre  MS 543
820 Sherbrook St
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada R3A 1R9
mailto:lseargeant@exchange.hsc.mb.caTelephoneTehephone (204) 787-4531

Fax (204)787-3846


What's been happening in BMG...  

Congratulations to Dr. Jane Evans on her recent retirement and also her appointment as "Senior Scholar"! 



Congratulations to Dr. Trung Le on defending his Ph.D. thesis entitled: “Dlx Homeobox Genes and their Role in Interneuronal Differentiation and Migration in the Developing Forebrain” - Now... just 4th year Med School to finish!
Way to go Trung!



(Oct 20/09) Email received from April Tremblay, the award co-ordinator for STAM (Science Teacher's Association of Manitoba). STAM has decided to present Dr. Francis Amara with a $500 award for his contributions to science teaching in Manitoba. This award will be presented Friday, October 23, 2009 at the science teacher's conference at St.John's Ravenscourt.  Congratulations Francis!


Congratulations to Dr. Lin Li on defending her Ph.D. thesis entitled:  “The Role of SP1 in The Regulation of Estrogen Inducible Genes in Human Breast Cancer Cells"   Way to go Lin!


Congratulations to our faculty members - Gilbert Arthur, Sabine Mai, Aaron Marshall, Leigh Murphy and graduate student - Samantha Pauls on obtaining CIHR funding in the recent announcement. 


Congratulations to Dilshad Khan, Graduate Student with Dr. Jim Davie on tranferrring to our Ph.D. Program.  Way to go Dilshad!

Congratulations to Yi Yan, M.Sc. on defending his thesis entitled:  Investigation of the biological relationship between of SRA/SRAP and Estrogen Receptor β in human breast cancer.  Way to go Yi! Congratulations to Ludivine Coudière, M.Sc. on defending her thesis entitled: Combination of FGF and WNT signaling pathways mediate positional information during the posterior distal tip cell migration in C. elegans hermaphrodite.  Way to go Ludivine!

AND by the way - congratulations on your very recent marriage to Matt Morrison from BMG faculty, staff & students!!


Congratuations to Dr. Ellert Nichols on defending his Ph.D. Thesis entitled:  Capillary Electrophoresis Laser-Induced Fluorescence Investigations of Individual Molecules of Escherichia coli b-Galactosidase.  Way to go Ellert!!

Congratulations to Dr. Teralee Burton on defending her Ph.D. Thesis entitled:  The Role of the Pro-cell Death Bcl-2 Family Member BNIP3 in Regulating GBM Tumor Cell Survival.  Way to go Teralee!!

MHRC 2009 Awards Announcement...
Congratulations to our successful applicants of this year's MHRC awards...

Establishment Grants
- Dr. Mojgan Rastegar

Co-ordinated Fellowships - Funding partners for these awards include CancerCare Man Fdn., MICH, St. Boniface Res. Fdn.
- Dr. Mohammad Sabbir

Co-ordinated Studentships - Funding partners for these awards include: CancerCare Man Fdn., HSC Fdn., MICH, St. Boniface Hosp & Res Fdn., The Lung Assoc of Man., The Man Medical College Fdn., UofM Graduate Fellowship.

BMG takes it again (3rd year in a row!) – congratulations to Teralee Burton, this year’s recipient of the Drewry Award for excellence in Research. Teralee was also awarded the Apotex Fermentation Molecular Biology Award

Congratulations to Yueqin Zhou, recipient of the Health Sciences Graduate Student Award and Evan Booy, Pamela Miller and Teralee Burton, recipients of the Manitoba Medical Sciences Foundation Poster Award.

Honorable Mentions went to:  Evan Booy, Shilpa Chooniedass, and Yi Yan (Manitoba & CIHR Research Poster Competition) and Trung Le for Translational Research in the MD/PhD competition.\

You all make our Department proud!!

Please join me to give a warm welcome to Dr. Kirk McManus, Assistant Professor to BMG.  Dr. McManus' office/lab will be located at MICB!  Welcome Kirk!
Key to rare genetic disorder found
Posted Friday, May 29, 2009  

Barbara Triggs-Raine with Carl Kleinsasser and his daughter Mackenzie. Kleinsasser lost a child to BCS.



Results from the 2009 Canadian Student's Research Forum are in!!!


Scientists at the University of Manitoba and Manitoba Institute of Child Health have discovered that a small change in a gene (EMG1) that is involved in cell growth is the cause of Bowen-Conradi Syndrome (BCS). Their findings were published in the online edition of the American Journal of Human Genetics and will be published in the print edition next month.

BCS is an inherited disorder that affects children, preventing them from growing and developing. Affected children typically die at birth or in early childhood. It occurs quite frequently among Hutterites of the Canadian Prairies and U.S. Great Plains. Knowing the genetic cause of this disorder is very important to this population as it provides a clear tool for diagnosing the condition and at the same time offers hope for a treatment in the future.

The Manitoba-led multidisciplinary group was made up of researchers in the Departments of Biochemistry and Medical Genetics, Microbiology, Pediatrics & Child Health, Physiology and the Centre for Investigation of Genetic Disease at the Manitoba Institute of Child Health. The research also included an international team from the Excellence Center at the Institute for Molecular Biosciences, Johann Wolfgang Goethe University in Frankfurt, Germany. Their team had been working with the same gene in yeast, where it was found that if it wasn’t present the yeast would die. This work hinted at the importance of the gene and encouraged the Manitoba team to move forward with their studies of the equivalent human gene.

The team in Manitoba localized the gene to human chromosome 12 in 2006. They have searched through a region containing 59 genes on this chromosome, spanning a region of approximately 2 million nucleotides, to find the one change that causes Bowen Conradi Syndrome.

“Identifying the gene was like searching for a needle in a haystack. Although we knew approximately where to look in the haystack, the needle was camouflaged to look like the surrounding hay,” said Dr.Barbara Triggs-Raine. “The experiments we performed to make sure that we had the needle, and not the hay, were what showed EMG1 to be the right gene.”

Start-up funding from the Manitoba Institute of Child Health and subsequent funding from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research and the Winnipeg Rh Institute Foundation, together with strong cooperation from the local Hutterite community, were central to the success of the research team.

The gene that is affected is involved in making ribosomes, large molecules essential for making proteins that are required for cells to grow. Genes involved in synthesizing ribosomes have been identified to be defective in several genetic disorders such as Shwachman-Diamond Syndrome and Diamond-Blackfan Anemia.

The Manitoba Institute of Child Health is the research division of The Children’s Hospital Foundation. The Institute is dedicated to excellence in pediatric research. At the Institute, more than 220 world-class pediatric medical researchers, technical staff, students and support staff are involved in over $8 million of research and clinical trial activities each year. For more detailed information, visit http://www.mich.ca/.

Department Grad Student Seminars are now complete - will start up again in October 2009!
Have a safe, happy & healthy summer!


  Congratulations to Dr. Emoke Szathmary on receiving the honorary degree of "President Emeritus" with the UofM recently at spring convocation, and also being named a director with the Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation.  The Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation promotes outstanding research in the humanities and social sciences, and fosters a fruitful dialogue between scholars and policymakers in the arts community, business, government, the professions, and the voluntary sector.      Congratulation Dr. Szathmary!!        posted May/09 
                                                                

Congratulations to Dr. Patrick Choy for recently receiving the Dr. and Mrs. D.R. Campbell Outreach Award.  The Dr. and Mrs. D.R. Campbell Outreach Award is given to university staff who consistently spend countless hours of their own time sharing their professional and scholarly experience in community service.        Congratulations Dr. Choy!!  
posted May/09

Congratulations to Dr. Francis Amara, for the excellent article "Inner City Science Centre Brings Group Together" published in the Winnipeg Foundation's Spring 2009 magazine! The full magazine can be read online... click here                                                              posted April 21/09

Congratulations to Dr. Spencer Gibson on being approved for full Professor! Way to go Spencer!!        
posted April 16/09

Congratulations to Dr. Jim Davie who has been re-appointed as Editor of Biochemistry and Cell Biology for another five-year term ending 31 August 2014!                           (posted Mar. 18, 2009)

HE DID IT... Dr. Francis Amara has been voted as one of the top 25 Canadian Immigrants for 2009!  Dr. Amara would like to extend a sincere thank you to all University of Manitoba members who voted for him to win this honor!  Congrats Francis!!   http://www.canadianimmigrant.ca/top25

Dr. Francis Amara was recently nominated for Canadian Immigrant's Top 25 Canadian Immigrants Awards of 2009. Hundreds of nominations were received and Dr. Amara has been selected as a finalist by the panel of judges. “Congratulations and we're very honoured to have you as a finalist – you truly are an inspiring immigrant who has made their Canadian dreams a reality!”
Signed:  Varun Munjal  http://www.canadianimmigrant.ca/             Congratulations Francis!     

What is the Top 25 Canadian Immigrants Awards?

This is the first Canadian national awards program for immigrants - people's choice award that recognizes people who've made a difference since they arrived in Canada. Whether it's a community advocate or volunteer, a successful entrepreneur or a cultural icon, we're looking for Canada to tell us who are the Top 25 Canadian Immigrants.  Finalists have now been chosen among hundreds of nominations and  will be announced soon. 


  Dr. Francis Amara
 

We'll call on all Canadians to vote for Canada's Top 25 Immigrants at www.canadianimmigrant.ca/top25.  (voting is now closed). 

Please logon to the Canadian Immigrant Awards website & support Dr. Francis Amara’s work both within the University of Manitoba, Faculty of Medicine, Biochemistry and Medical Genetics, and the City of Winnipeg!

The Top 25 winners will be "officially" announced in May, 2009.

**NEW** (posted May, 2009)
2008 Department of Biochemistry & Medical Genetics Annual Report  (pdf file - size 3.4mb)

2007 Department of Biochemistry & Medical Genetics Annual Report 
(pdf file - size 3mb)


 Department Mail/Courier Address:

University of Manitoba
Biochemistry and Medical Genetics
Room 336 - Basic Medical Sciences Bulding
745 Bannatyne Avenue
Winnipeg, Manitoba  R3E 0J9  Canada

Telephone # (204) 789-3593
 Fax # (204) 789-3900 





Graduate Studies Inquiries - please email to:  sarkar@cc.umanitoba.ca  DO NOT send emails to this site!  
Thank you!
 

- Joy Armistead, Ph.D. student with Dr. Barb Triggs-Raine
- Shannon Baxter, Ph.D. student with Dr. Jeff Wigle
- Sara Beiggi, Ph.D. student with Dr. Spencer Gibson
- Cordula Buse, M.Sc. student with Dr. Mike Mowat
- MD Zinnatun Nabi, M.Sc. student with Dr. Hao Ding
- Ezgi Ogutcen, M.Sc. student with Dr. Jeff Wigle
- Samantha Pauls, M.Sc. student with Dr. Arron Marshall
- Yi Yan, M.Sc. student with Dr. Etienne Leygue
- Robby Zachariah, M.Sc. student with Dr. Mojgan Rastegar






Department of Biochemistry and Medical Genetics
Rm 336 - 745 Bannatyne Avenue - Basic Medical Sciences Building - Bannatyne Campus
University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, MB  R3E 0J9 Canada