Titel: 61. Mosbacher Kolloquium: "The Biology of Aging: Mechanisms and Intervention"
Termin:
8.4.2010
Veranstaltungsort:
Alte Bergsteige 7
74821 Mosbach
Weitere Informationen:
http://www.mosbacher-kolloquium.org/
What is aging and how can the process be understood?
Aging is certainly congenitally determined and most likely dependent on multiple genes. There are strong evolutionary arguments why aging is not programmed, like development, but is rather caused by an inevitable decline in cellular repair and maintenance functions accompanied by stochastic accumulation of damage and decline in function.
To bring together leading experts in the field, to discuss the open questions and to help junior scientists enter the field are the main aims of the upcoming Mosbacher Kolloquium in April 2010. The meetings headline is “The Biology of Aging: Mechanisms and Intervention”.
It is a long lasting tradition that the German Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology (GBM) is organizing its spring meeting in the picturesque town of Mosbach in Baden/Germany. For the event in 2010, they accepted the “Cologne Excellence Cluster on Cellular Stress Responses in Aging-associated diseases (CECAD Cologne)” as a partner.
We are glad to welcome you in Mosbach and are looking forward to an interesting meeting.
Kontakt:
Gabriele Holz, Tino Apel, Manfred Braun
GBM Head Office
German Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
Mörfelder Landstr. 125
60598 Frankfurt/Main
Germany
Tel.:
+49 - (0)69 - 6 60 56 70
Fax: +49 - (0)69 - 66 05 67 22
info@gbm-online.de
http://www.gbm-online.de/
Veranstalter: Gesellschaft für Biochemie und Molekularbilogie e.V.
Schlagworte: Embryonale Stammzellen, Embryonenforschung, Forschungsethik, Forschungsrecht, Fortpflanzungsmedizin, Genetische Tests/Beratung, Genforschung/-technik, Gesundheitswesen, Hirnforschung, Humangenetik, Krankheit, Lebensende, Lebensverlängerung, Medizinische Ethik