The online conference and school of young scientists “Scanning Probe Microscopy for Biological Systems — 2020” (BioSPM — 2020)

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The online conference and school of young scientists “Scanning Probe Microscopy for Biological Systems — 2020” (BioSPM — 2020), which will be held on December 11 and 14, is intended for researchers involved in the development of SPM methods, as well as users of scanning probe microscopes from all scientific and industrial disciplines such as biology, pharmaceuticals, materials science, fundamental physics, life sciences, semiconductor industry and energy.

BioSPM — 2020 is aimed at identifying and analyzing important problems associated with modern technologies and functional visualization of nanostructures using various modes of scanning probe microscopy, the latest achievements and opportunities for new research topics.

The goal of BioSPM — 2020 is to improve the communication network in the field of life sciences and to unite researchers with a common interest in the role of SPM in explaining new biological, physical and chemical phenomena.

We welcome to attend this conference to following topics:

High resolution imaging of live cells bacteria and viruses

SPM for Neuroscience

  • Nanosensors
  • Nanomechanics
  • Correlative/Combined Imaging
  • Chemical Imaging
  • SPM for Cardiology
  • Cellular mechanics
  • Nanostructures for biomedicine
  • FRET microscopy and electrophysiology in living cells
  • Combined scanning probe & fluorescence microscope
  • SPM in Biology and Medicine
  • High Speed AFM

Registration

Program of the conference

December 11

11:45

Sergey Salikhov, first vice rector of NUST “MISiS”

Opening of the conference

12:00

Pavel Novak, PhD, NUST “MISiS”

Measuring nanoscale mechanics with SICM: The issue

of inclined sample surface

12:40

Andrew Shevchuk, PhD, Imperial College London, UK

Assembly and release of single HIV VLPs by correlative and high-speed SICM-FCM

13:20

Svetlana Pleskova, Professor, State University of Nizhny Novgorod, Russia

Investigation of morphological changes in neutrophils in different mechanisms of cell death

14:00 — 14:30

Lunch

14:30

Ivan Liashkovich, PhD, University of Münster, Germany

Nuclear envelope permeability barrier as a fast-response intracellular mechanostat

15:10

Tilman Schäffer, Professor, University of Tubingen, Germany

15:50

Viktor Bykov, Professor, NT-MDT Spectrum Instruments

Scanning probe microscopy for biological applications

December 14

12:00

Yuri Korchev, Professor, Imperial College London, UK

Scanning ion conductance microscopy for biomedical applications

12:30

Paolo Actis, PhD, University of Leeds, UK

Single molecule nano-injection

13:00

Alexander Erofeev, PhD, NUST “MISiS”, Russia

Biosensor applications of scanning ion conductance microscopy

13:30

Evgeniy Dubrovin, PhD, MSU, Russia

Studying Fibrinogen Unfolding and Aggregation

14:00 — 14:30

Lunch

14:30

Julia Gorelik, Professor, Imperial College London, UK

Functional imagining of nanodomains in cardiomyocytes

15:00

Pamela Swiatlowska, PhD, Imperial College London, UK

Studying cardiomyocyte nanomechanics using mechanoSICM

15:30

Igor Yaminsky, Professor, MSU, Russia

Bioimaging using combined high resolution scanning probe and ultrafast microlens microscopy

16:00

Petr Gorelkin, PhD, NUST “MISiS”, Russia

Directly examining of cellular mechanics with scanning ion conductance microscopy (SICM)