Schedule of Events - April 12th, 2013 |
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8:00 a.m. | Registration & Continental Breakfast Keeneland Room, W.T. Young Library |
8:45 a.m. | Welcome Dr. Eli Capilouto, University of Kentucky President Auditorium, W.T. Young Library |
9:00 a.m. | Dr. Robert Hazen Genesis: The Scientific Quest for Life’s Origins Auditorium, W.T. Young Library |
10:00 a.m. | Break (refreshments available) Keeneland Room, W.T. Young Library |
10:30 a.m. | Dr. Ramanarayanan Krishnamurthy In Search of Alternatives to Understand the Emergence of RNA Auditorium, W.T. Young Library |
11:30 a.m. | Lunch |
1:30 p.m. | Poster Session Gallery, W.T. Young Library |
2:30 p.m. | Dr. Ada Yonath Origins of life: from prebiotic peptide bond formation to the contemporary ribosome Auditorium, W.T. Young Library |
4:00 p.m. | Award Ceremony |
Genesis: The Scientific Quest for Life’s Origins 9:00am, Auditorium of the W.T. Young Library Abstract: Is life’s origin a cosmic imperative manifest throughout the cosmos, or is life an improbable accident, restricted to a few planets (or only one)? Lacking observations of ecosystems beyond our own world, scientists seek experimental and theoretical frameworks to deduce the origin of life. In this context the concept of emergent systems provides a unifying approach. Natural systems with many interacting components, such as molecules, cells or organisms, often display complex behavior not associated with their individual components. The origin of life can be modeled as a sequence of emergent events – the synthesis of biomolecules, the selection and organization of those small molecules into functional macromolecules, the emergence of self-replicating molecular systems, and the initiation of molecular natural selection – which transformed the lifeless geochemical world of oceans, atmosphere and rocks into a living planet. This framework guides origin experiments, which can be designed to focus on each emergent step.
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In Search of Alternatives to Understand the Emergence of RNA 10:30am, Auditorium of the W.T. Young Library Abstract: Though the emergence of RNA is viewed as a critical step in the origins of life field, our understanding of how (and why) RNA emerged in Nature is equivocal and continues to engage, intrigue and fascinate the imagination. From a purely chemical point of view the questions, in this context, are
The lecture will present our attempts towards an understanding gained by comparing the properties of RNA to its potentially (generationally simpler) natural alternatives. Such an approach not only discloses unconventional informational systems, novel chemical reactivity and reaction pathways, but – more importantly – provides an appreciation for the uniqueness of the structure and function of RNA in the context of chemical evolution. Bio: Ramanarayanan Krishnamurthy is an Associate Professor of Chemistry at the Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla, and a member of the NSF-NASA sponsored Center for Chemical Evolution. He received his B.S. from University of Madras in 1984, M.S. from the Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay in 1986 working with Professor K. D. Deodhar, and Ph.D. from the Ohio State University in 1992 under Professor David Hart. After graduate work at Ohio State University, he was a postdoctoral fellow at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH) with Professor Albert Eschemoser, where he remained until 1994. He then moved to La Jolla for a second postdoctoral experience at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography working with Professor Gustaf Arrhenius. He became a Senior Research Associate of the Skaggs Institute for Chemical Biology (1996-1997) and an Investigator (2005-2009). He joined the chemistry faculty of the Scripps Research Institute in 1998 as an Assistant Professor. His research is focused on the use of synthetic organic chemistry and methodology to experimentally address questions concerning the origins of life, as well as to develop tools for molecular bio-mimicry and chemical therapeutics. He has received the ISSOL Fellow Award (2011) and is a member of the NASA Astrobiology Science and Technology Instrument Development Review Panel since 2006, and the NASA Exobiology and Planetary Protection Research Review Panel since 2002.
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Origins of Life: From Prebiotic Peptide Bond Formation to the Contemporary Ribosome 2:30pm, Auditorium of the W.T. Young Library Abstract: Ribosomes possess spectacular architecture accompanied by inherent mobility, allowing for their smooth performance as polymerases of amino acids. Peptide bond are formed and elongated within a universal semi-symmetrical region connecting all of the remote ribosomal features involved in nascent chain creation and elongation. The elaborate architecture of this region positions ribosomal substrates in appropriates stereochemistry for peptide bond formation, substrate-mediated catalysis, substrate translocation and nascent chain insertion into their exit tunnel. The high conservation of this region implies its existence irrespective of environmental conditions implying that it may represent an ancient RNA apparatus with bonding capabilities, which turned into peptide bond maker, thus capable of creating oligopeptides. Those oligopeptides that were found useful survived and triggered the formation of the genetic code, which was optimized simultaneously with the optimization of the bonding apparatus, namely the ribosome, as well as of the genetic code, its molecular tools and its products: the mature proteins.
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2013 Naff Committee Members:
Professor Marcelo Guzman (Chair, Chemistry)
Professor Jason DeRouchey (Chemistry)
Professor Chris Richards (Chemistry)
Professor Anne-Francis Miller (Chemistry)
Professor Vincent Cassone (Biology)
For more information, contact Dr. Marcelo Guzman.