
For Immediate Release
Yvonne M. Psaila
Director of Marketing & Communications
Keystone Symposia on Molecular & Cellular
Biology
(970) 262-2676
Keystone Symposia Announces
New Three-Year Grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation,
Includes Efforts to
Bring in New Ideas, Expertise from Developing-Country Scientists
SILVERTHORNE,
CO – November 5, 2009 – Keystone Symposia on Molecular and Cellular Biology is pleased
to announce that it has received a second grant from the Bill & Melinda
Gates Foundation to fund conferences on infectious disease in its “Keystone
Symposia Global Health Series.” In 2006, the Colorado, USA-based nonprofit
organization received its first three-year grant; the funding for that ended with
the October 20-25, 2009 conference on “Overcoming the Crisis of TB and AIDS” in
Arusha, Tanzania. The new grant provides $2.7 million over three years – or
approximately $900,000 per year.
A
significant portion of the grant is used to fund Global Health Travel Awards
for scientists, graduate students and postdoctoral fellows from developing
countries where the health issue of the meeting topic is of particular
relevance. Without these awards, most of these individuals would not be able to
attend the conferences and acquire the valuable knowledge and collaborations
that result. In its 2008-2009 season, Keystone Symposia provided 260 such
awards to researchers from 43 developing countries.
The
2010 Keystone Symposia Global Health series consists of a conference on “HIV Biology and Pathogenesis” in Santa
Fe, New Mexico in January 2010; a conference on “Antibiotics and Drug Resistance: Challenges and Solutions” in Santa
Fe, New Mexico in January 2010; an “HIV
Vaccines” meeting in Banff, Canada in March 2010; and concurrent meetings
on “Malaria: New Approaches to
Understanding Host-Parasite Interactions” and “Molecular Targets for Control of Vector-Borne Diseases: Bridging Lab
and Field Research” scheduled for Copper Mountain, Colorado in April 2010.
To
catalyze new thinking and approaches, the “HIV
Vaccines” meeting, traditionally paired with the “HIV Biology and Pathogenesis” meeting, will instead be paired with
a “Viral Immunity” meeting. Since an HIV vaccine is proving to be a particularly
recalcitrant problem, the goal is to bring together virologists studying many
other diseases and thereby facilitate a wider cross-fertilization of ideas.
In
total, Keystone Symposia will feature 52 conferences in a diverse array of
disciplines in its 39th meeting season, which runs from October 2009
through June 2010. Additional conference topics in 2010 include meetings on
aging, autism, biochemistry, cancer, cardiovascular disease, development, drug design, diabetes/metabolic disease,
genetics/genomics/epigenetics, immunology, stem cells, plant biology and
structural biology.
Brand
new topics in the 2010 series include meetings on “Antibiotics and Resistance: Challenges and Solutions,” “Biomolecular
Interaction Networks: Function and Disease,” “Cilia, Signaling and Human
Disease,” “Metabolism and Cancer Progression,” “New Directions in Small
Molecule Drug Discovery,” “RNA Silencing Mechanisms in Plants” and “Triglycerides and Triglyceride-Rich
Particles in Health and Disease.”
Additionally,
a number of new locations will be featured in the line-up, including Arusha,
Tanzania (for the Global Health meeting on TB and AIDS in October 2009);
Ashmore, Australia (for a meeting on “Telomere
Biology and DNA Repair” in October 2009); Trinity College in Dublin,
Ireland (for a June 2010 meeting on “Innate
Immunity”); and Kyoto, Japan (for a June 2010 meeting on “Bioactive Lipids: Biochemistry and
Diseases”).
Seven Nobel Prize winners are scheduled to present during the 2010 meeting
season, including one of the winners of this year’s Nobel Prize in Chemistry,
Thomas A. Steitz, who will present at the “Antibiotics
and Resistance” conference. Additionally, one of the winners of the 2009 Lasker
Basic Medical Research Award, Dr. Shinya Yamanaka, will co-organize and speak
at the “Stem Cells Differentiation and
Dedifferentiation” conference, and one of the winners of the Lasker~Debakey
Clinical Medical Research Award, Dr. Charles L. Sawyers, will speak at the “Nuclear Receptors: Signaling, Gene
Regulation and Cancer” conference.
In
spite of the recent downturn in the global economy, Keystone Symposia
conferences remain popular and well attended. In its 2008-2009 season, the organization set a new record for total attendance with nearly
14,000 participants at 57 symposia. According to James W. Aiken, Ph.D.,
Keystone Symposia’s Chief Executive Officer, “The potential financial
consequences to us of the world economic situation reinforced the critical
importance of making our conferences the most valuable of the ones scientists
might choose to attend.”
Keystone
Symposia aims to make its conferences open, accessible and affordable to all. Discounted
registration fees are offered to students. Rates are the same for attendees
from both industry and academia, and discounted lodging packages have been
negotiated for most locations. Registration fees include participation in all
plenary and poster sessions plus workshops when available, the meeting
program/abstract book and a number of meals (usually breakfasts and evening
receptions).
Conferences
are typically three to four full days in length. Many afternoons are free for
unstructured leisure and networking activities. Submission of an abstract is
not required, but it is encouraged as organizers typically select short talk
speakers based on abstract submission. This presents a means for early-career
scientists to be featured on the programs along with established experts. Abstracts
and posters represent an ideal opportunity to gain exposure for one’s research.
The
conferences are planned based on a rigorous peer-review process more than 18
months in advance, tapping into the expertise of a Scientific Advisory Board
comprised of more than 60 leading life scientists from around the world and
supplemented by the input of Programming Consultants. Some topics such as HIV
recur annually, while others are offered every two years.
Some
meetings are held jointly with another to stimulate a greater
cross-fertilization of ideas. Two to four scientists are asked to volunteer as
each meeting’s program organizers, and there is a deliberate attempt to vary
these from one occurrence of the meeting to the next, as well as to include
female and underrepresented minority scientists, to encourage diversity and a
broader perspective.
Further financial assistance is available to graduate
students, postdoctoral fellows and those from less developed countries. In
2010, Keystone Symposia hopes to award a record number of scholarships. In the
2009 meeting series, it awarded 635 scholarships and 46 underrepresented
minority scholarships in addition to the 260 Global Health Travel Awards. These
scholarships and awards make attendance possible for many who would otherwise
not be able to attend and are generously supported by corporate, foundation,
government and individual donors.
Those
interested in attending a Keystone Symposia conference should keep in mind that
scholarship application and abstract submission deadlines typically precede a
meeting by four months, late-breaking abstract deadlines by three months and
early registration deadlines by two months. Signing up by the early
registration deadline saves US$100 on the later registration fee.
About Keystone
Symposia
Keystone
Symposia on Molecular and Cellular Biology, a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization,
has been conducting internationally renowned, open scientific conferences since
1972 and has been headquartered in Summit County, Colorado since 1990, when the
organization left the University of California at Los Angeles. Annually, Keystone Symposia holds more than
50 meetings involving more than 13,000 scientists from around the world. Registration
fees are supplemented by generous monetary support from corporate, foundation
and individual donors as well as government grants.
More
information on Keystone Symposia can be found at www.keystonesymposia.org, and full details
on the 2010 meeting series can be viewed at www.keystonesymposia.org/2010meetings.