Friday, October 12
8:30-8:45 |
Welcome and opening remarks Hong Tang, Institut Pasteur of Shanghai, Chinese Academy of Sciences Nonia Pariente, Nature Microbiology |
Keynote talks |
8:45-9:45 9:45-10:45 |
Eva Harris, UC Berkeley, USA The double-edged sword: Dengue and Zika virus pathogenesis and immunity Gary Kobinger, CHU de Québec-Université Laval Research Center, Canada Novel approaches to vaccination |
10:45-11:15 |
Coffee Break |
Session I: Emerging pathogens: from discovery to epidemiology |
11:15-11:45 11:45-12:15 12:15-12:45 |
Scott Weaver, University of Texas Medical Branch, USA Emerging Arboviral Pathogens: from Discovery to Epidemiology to Prevention Oliver Pybus, University of Oxford, UK Zika, yellow fever, and pathogen X: analysing emerging epidemics in the genomic era Yongzhen Zhang, National Institute for Communicable Disease Control and Prevention, China CDC, China Discovery of more unrecognized viruses will help us to understand virosphere |
12:45-15:00 |
Lunch and Poster Session I |
Session II: Trans-kingdom interactions in the microbiota: from homeostasis to pathology |
15:00-15:30 15:30-16:00 |
Rick Bushman, University of Pennsylvania, USA Origin of the human gut virome in early life Stefanie Karst, University of Florida, USA Microbiota-driven changes in norovirus tropism mediated by bile acid biotransformation and type III interferon |
16:00-16:30 |
Coffee Break |
16:30-17:00 17:00-17:30 |
Paul Turner, Yale University, USA Using phage to select for evolution of reduced virulence in pathogenic bacteria Danny Douek, National Institutes of Health, USA Impact of the microbiome on systemic inflammation during the treatment of HIV infection |
Saturday, October 13
Session III: Pathogenesis of emerging viruses |
9:00-9:30 9:30-10:00 |
Shomyseh Sanjabi, Gladstone Institutes, USA Route Determines the Outcome of Mucosal Viral Infections Yoshi Kawaoka, University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA/University of Tokyo, Japan Flu-vision: total imaging systems for analyzing influenza virus infection |
10:00-10:30 |
Coffee Break |
10:30-11:00 11:00-11:30 |
Stan Perlman, University of Iowa, USA Role of host immune responses in protection and in immunopathological disease in patients and mice infected with MERS-CoV Ana Fernandez-Sesma, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, USA Modulation of Innate Immune Responses by Dengue Viruses (DENV): Beyond the Sting |
11:30-13:15 |
Lunch and Poster Session II |
Session IV - Intrinsic and innate antiviral defense |
13:15-13:45 13:45-14:15 14:15-14:45 14:45-15:15 |
Christian Munz, University of Zurich, Switzerland Infection and immune control of human oncogenic g-herpesviruses in vivo Adolfo Garcia-Sastre, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, USA Influenza virus-host interactions Judy Lieberman, Harvard Medical School, USA Sounding the Alarm and Putting Out the Fire: New Mechanistic Insights into Inflammatory Cell Death Jonathan Miner, Washington University School of Medicine, USA Host-virus interactions in a monogenic interferonopathy |
15:15-15:45 |
Coffee Break |
Session V - Adaptive immune response to viral infection |
15:45-16:15 16:15-16:45 16:45-17:15 17:15-17:45 |
Laurence Eisenlohr, University of Pennsylvania, USA The Complex MHC Class II Processing Network Revealed by Viral Antigens Sujan Shresta, La Jolla Institute for Allergy and Immunology,USA The impact of prior dengue immunity on subsequent Zika infection and vice versa: A tale of T cells and antibodies Kathrine Kedzierska, University of Melbourne, Australia Universal cross-reactive CD8+ T cell immunity across influenza A, B and C viruses Galit Alter, Harvard Medical School, USA IFN-g independent immunity to Mtb |
Sunday, October 14
Poster talks |
9:00-9:15 9:15-9:30 |
Baidong Hou Pathogen-like Nanoparticle antigen induces CD4+ T cell responses via a dendritic cell-independent but B cell-dependent pathway Xu Tan Proteomic profiling of HIV infection of human CD4 T cells identifies PSGL-1 as an HIV restriction factor |
Session VI - Prevention and therapy |
9:30-10:00 |
Erica O. Saphire, Scripps Research Institute, USA Toward broad and potent neutralization of ebolaviruses and Lassa virus: insights from structure |
10:00-10:30 |
Coffee Break |
10:30-11:00 11:00-11:30 |
Michel Nussenzweig, Rockefeller University, USA The HIV Problem Ren Sun, UCLA, USA Functional map of viral genome at single nucleotide resolution |
11:30 |
Closing remarks Hong Tang, Institut Pasteur of Shanghai, Chinese Academy of Sciences Andrew Jermy, Nature Microbiology |
|