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  • 25 Jul 2023 11:23 AM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    HUPO Early Career Researcher (ECR) Online Panel Webinar

    DATE:  Wednesday, August 9, 2023
    TIME:  9 am CEST (Central European Summer Time)
    LOCATION:  Zoom
    SPEAKERS:  Reudi Abersold (Co-founder of Biognosys) and Jarrod Sandow (Director and Senior Scientist at IonOpticks)

    Want to learn about turning science into a business? Join us for the coming online panel discussion taking place on August 9 at 9 am CEST. This panel is part of a seminar series organized by the HUPO Early Career Researcher Committee and The Young Proteomics Investigators Club (YPIC). These seminars offer a space to foster professional development by engaging with the community. During this one-hour panel, we will hear on thoughts and views from experienced researchers on their involvement and trajectory in the establishment of successful biotechs! 

    REGISTER HERE

  • 06 Jul 2023 5:35 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    DATE: Thursday, July 20, 2023
    TIME: 11 am - 1330 pm EDT
    LOCATION: Zoom

    Exciting B/D-HPP webinar on aging and disease coming up. Join us and listen to diverse topics in aging and disease proteomics including cancer, Alzheimer’s disease, geroscience, and others.

    PLEASE NOTE: All times listed below are Eastern Daylight Time (EDT).

    1100 am EDT - ROGER REDDELL - Progress Towards Utilisation of Tissue Proteomics in the Cancer Clinic

    1130 am EDT - RENA ROBINSON - High-throughput Proteomics Applications in Aging & Alzheimer’s Disease

    1200 pm EDT - MAGGIE LAM - Post-transcriptional Regulation of Aging and Diseases

    1230 pm EDT - BIRGIT SCHILLING - TBA

    1300 pm EDT - NATHAN BASISTY - Leveraging Proteomics for Translational Geroscience

    1330 pm EDT - Closing Remarks

    REGISTER HERE

  • 04 Jul 2023 4:57 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    The July HUPOST is now available.  Lots of great info including the HUPO Council Slate of Candidates, 2023 HUPO Awardees, congress updates, ECR and ETC activities....and much more!


  • 29 Jun 2023 4:26 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    The manuscript competition is a unique opportunity for early career researchers to gain visibility in the proteomics community for their outstanding work. It serves as a platform to highlight the important contributions that postdoctoral fellows, young clinicians and junior faculty members make to the proteomics field.

    Three finalists have been selected to present their publications in a dedicated plenary session at HUPO 2023 (in Busan), where an expert committee will evaluate the oral presentations to determine the “Proteomics Highlight of the Year”.

    Congratulations to:

    • Hong Wang, Institute of Hematology, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, Tianjin, China
    • Pavel Sinitcyn, Morgridge Institute for Research, Madison, Wisconsin
    • Johannes Mueller, Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry, Munich, Germany

    The selection of exceptional manuscripts was a challenging task amongst many impressive submissions. The ECR would like to thank the careful evaluation and dedication from the judges: Wei Wu, Tiannan Guo, Jochen Schwenk, Ho Jeong Kwon, Concha Gil, Jennifer Geddes-McAlister, Yu-Ju Chen, Christian Moritz, Benjamin Garcia, Peter Hoffmann, Tadashi Kondo, Teck Yew Low, Fabio Nogueira, Stephen Pennington, Chantragan Phiphobmongkol, Anthony Purcell, Paola Roncada, Luis Manuel Teran, Olga Vitek, Juan Antonio Vizcaino, Marc Wilkins, Bernd Wollscheid, Shamshad Zarina and Qian Zhao! Thank you!

  • 29 Jun 2023 10:57 AM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Open data practices in proteomics: the why, the how and the what for?

    The goal of the ETC Auditorium "Stylish Academic Writing" professional development webinar series is to help students and trainees improve their scientific writing skills. The 5th webinar featured Dr. Juan Antonio Vizcaino, Proteomics Team Leader at the European Bioinformatics Institute (EMBL-EBI), as the lecturer. The discussion focused on the latest trends in open data practices in proteomics. Dr. Deepti Jaiswal Kundu, a Scientific Curator at the PRIDE database (EMBL-EBI) served as the host and Dr. Tiannan Guo, a Tenured Associate Professor at Westlake University, participated as a panelist.

    This webinar focused on the advantages of open data sharing in proteomics and its potential to drive research, collaboration, and innovation. Dr. Vizcaino highlighted the importance of data repositories, such as PRIDE, MassIVE, JPOST, iProX, and Panorama, in facilitating open data sharing. The webinar emphasized the FAIR data principles (Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, and Re-usable) and encouraged researchers to contribute their proteomics data and promote collaboration within the scientific community. Inspiring examples of data re-use were showcased, along with the bottlenecks associated with utilizing public proteomics data, such as data complexity and lack of metadata annotation. The webinar stressed the significance of proper metadata documentation and introduced the Sample Description and Result Format (SDRF) file format to improve metadata annotation and enable meaningful re-use of proteomics data. Lastly, the challenges of data privacy, intellectual property rights, data standardization, and data curation were addressed, with strategies and recommendations provided to promote responsible and effective sharing of proteomics data.

    Dr. Vizcaino also addressed some live questions (Q & A):

    1.     Q:  How do you envision the future of the data repositories, knowing that data sets are now containing more and more samples, like single cells or instruments producing large data?

    A:  It’s a continuous struggle that usually happens. We keep on innovating in terms of infrastructure in terms of keeping and dealing with large data. We take the experience /suggestions from other EBI repositories (e.g. those devoted to DNA/RNA sequencing data) about how they manage large datasets.

    2.     Q:  The availability of sample metadata is crucial for identifying samples which are an important aspect of open data practices. A single large amount of data in PRIDE have metadata missing in them. So, what are your suggestions for the submitters in PRIDE.

    A:  When ProteomeXchange started on that time the emphasis was put on data provision. But now it is more and more clear the necessity of more metadata. And that’s why the SDRF annotation has been proposed which is now promoted by PRIDE to submitters.

    3.     Q:  Many journals have dedicated data availability sections where accessions are mentioned. Have you considered using these top detect publications with PRIDE id?

    A:  We do that. We check the abstract of the publication and the full text (in the case of open-access journals).

    4.     Q:  Are there any options in PRIDE to keep the RAW data private even if the article is public?

    A:  The policy of ProteomeXchange is as soon as publication is out, the data needs to be public. There are some exceptional cases when data is sensitive like clinical data. We do not have any mechanism yet for the controlled access data but in the future, we might have to include it.

    5.  Q:  Some data can be re-used, do you have suggestions on what type of data has been re-used?

    A:  Datasets that are re-used the most are the ones that are more scientifically relevant, e.g. those published in high-profile journals. A second criterium includes those which are annotated better, where people don’t have to work on those.

    A full video recording of the session including the talk and Q&A session is available on the HUPO YouTube channel website (https://www.hupo.org/Webinars-and-Virtual-Presentations).

    For those with no access to YouTube, an alternative link is: https://www.bilibili.com/video/BV1Ph411c7ij/?spm_id_from=333.788.recommend_more_video.-1&vd_source=052ff6e1ca06b197e00a9a80affeda05.

  • 01 Jun 2023 1:58 PM | Anonymous

    The June HUPOST is now available.  Many updates this month, including important upcoming congress deadlines, ECR updates, ETC news....and much more!

  • 29 May 2023 7:34 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    The C-HPP is holding a workshop prior to the HUPO 2023 Congress in Busan, Korea at the Centum Premier Hotel in the "Chelsea and Liverpool rooms" on Sunday, 17th September, 09:30 –15:00.

    Those who would like to be present are asked to register for free - the sign up sheet is here.

    Please pass this onto your students and colleagues who might be attending.

    Agenda

    09:30 Meet and Greet coffee/tea

    10:00-12:00 Session 1 

    Welcome, quick Chromosome Team updates:

    • neXtProt, human proteome numbers from the 2023-04-18 release (Lydie Lane, Eric Deutsch, Nuno Banderia),
    • HPP (Cecilia Lindskog)
    • JPR Special Issue (Chris Overall)
    • Other business from matters arising from the PIC.
    • Special presentation on “Chemoproteomics as an enabling technology for the aims of the C-HPP for PTM, MPs or CP50 research” by Ho Jeong Kwon, Director, Chemical Genomics Leader Research Initiative, Yonsei University, President-Elect, Korean Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology (KSBMB).

    12:00 - 13:00 Lunch

    13:00 Session 2: Future Aims and plans for the C-HPP/HPP and neXtProt

    Discussions will include new directions for the C-HPP with an action plan for Human Proteome PTM, MPs, and CP50 (as part of the Grand Challenge) incorporating neXtProt.

    15:00 Meeting closes

    (15:30 HUPO Council)

  • 29 May 2023 2:04 PM | Anonymous

    Deadline extended to June 1st

    The clock is ticking, and this is your last chance to seize the spotlight and share your ground-breaking work! The 3-Minute Thesis Competition challenges you to condense your research findings into a compelling and concise presentation, delivering it in just three minutes using a single static slide.

    Whether you're investigating novel biomarkers, unraveling complex protein interactions, or developing cutting-edge analytical techniques, your research deserves to be heard and celebrated. The 3-Minute Thesis Competition allows you to distill your work to its essence and effectively communicate its significance to a non-specialist audience.

    Selected finalists will have the exciting opportunity to compete in the final showdown, to be held during a dedicated session at HUPO 2023 Busan (September 17-21). To participate, simply submit a lay abstract via the HUPO 2023 abstract submission portal without scientific jargon that describes your Ph.D. thesis research topic for a general, non-expert audience. Abstract text should not exceed 300 words and entrants must be enrolled in a Ph.D. program.

    Submit your abstract here.

  • 29 May 2023 1:55 PM | Anonymous

    Deadline extended to June 1st

    Last call to participate in the HUPO 2023 Poster Competition! This is your chance to showcase your research findings, innovative methodologies, and exciting discoveries to a global audience. All graduate students (Master’s and Ph.D.), as well as postdocs, are encouraged to participate in the HUPO 2023 poster competition taking place on September 17-21, 2023 in Busan, South Korea.

    This competition provides a platform for you to present your work in a visually engaging format, fostering discussions and collaborations with fellow researchers. Presenting a poster allows you to highlight the significance and impact of your research while fostering meaningful interactions with colleagues from around the world. To participate, simply indicate your interest in the competition while submitting your abstract by checking the appropriate box. A set of posters will be selected as finalists and will be evaluated during the conference by a jury. Winners in both categories (graduate students and postdocs) will each receive cash prizes.

    Submit you abstract here today!

  • 29 May 2023 12:54 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    The Journal of Proteome Research is preparing to publish its 11th annual special issue dedicated to highlighting the progress made on the HUPO Human Proteome Project (HPP). The editorial team invites you to submit a manuscript for consideration by August 15, 2023.

    For this special issue, the editorial team will consider research papers encompassing the HUPO HPP Grand Challenge, Chromosome-Centric Human Proteome Project (C-HPP) and the Biology and Disease Human Proteome Project (B/D-HPP), as well from the HPP Resource Pillars (Antibody, MS, Pathology, and Knowledgebase), and short definitive reports, submitted in the Letters format, on the discovery of a missing protein(s).

    More details are available at the JPR website.



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