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The Drosophila Research Conference, informally known as "the fly meeting", is an annual meeting of Drosophila researchers held in North America since 1958. [1] It is the principal research gathering for "Drosophilists", and is international in scope, drawing 1500 participants in a typical year. [1]
Drosophila Research Conference; E. European Conference on Computational Biology; European Congress of Conservation Biology; I. Intelligent Systems for Molecular Biology;
The Larry Sandler Memorial Award is a prestigious international award given for research in the Drosophila community. The award is given for the best dissertation of the preceding year, and is given at the annual Drosophila Research Conference. Awardees may be nominated only by their graduate advisors.
Research on invertebrates is the foundation for current understanding of the genetics of animal development. C. elegans is especially valuable as the precise lineage of all the organism's 959 somatic cells is known, giving a complete picture of how this organism goes from a single cell in a fertilized egg, to an adult animal. [3]
In 2007 the Vienna Drosophila RNAi Center (VDRC) opened, in collaboration with the Research Institute of Molecular Pathology. In 2018, Josef Penninger was appointed as director of the Life Science Institute of the University of British Columbia [ 23 ] and Jürgen Knoblich took the position as interim director of IMBA.
FlyBase is an online bioinformatics database and the primary repository of genetic and molecular data for the insect family Drosophilidae. [1] For the most extensively studied species and model organism, Drosophila melanogaster, a wide range of data are presented in different formats.
The first Drosophila Research Conference was hosted by his parents in 1958. Baker attended high school in Chicago. Baker attended high school in Chicago. He enrolled at Reed College before graduating and earned his bachelor's degree in 1966.
The Drosophila Interactions Database (DroID) is an online database of Drosophila gene and protein interactions. [1] It was developed by Russell L. Finley's laboratory at Wayne State University School of Medicine in 2008 and has been funded by the National Human Genome Research Institute, National Institutes of Health's National Center for Research Resources, Michigan Proteome Consortium, and ...