第四届植物-生物互作国际会议通知(第二轮)
在自然界中,植物与生物存在广泛的相互作用,病原生物侵染植物导致的植物病虫害严重制约着作物的高产和优产,对我国及世界的粮食安全造成巨大威胁。为展示国际植物-生物互作研究的最新进展和成果,促进全世界植物-生物互作各相关研究领域的科研人员之间的交流与合作,第四届植物-生物互作国际会议将于2015年8月1-3日在江苏南京召开。会议是在2008年、2011年和2013年在澳大利亚、中国昆明和陕西召开的三次植物-生物互作国际会议的基础上在我国召开的第三次国际学术会议。将涵盖植物病理学、植物-微生物互作、植物-昆虫互作和作物抗病虫分子育种等,为植物病理学相关研究领域的知名学者与青年科技人员专家提供相互交流的平台,共享当前相关领域的前沿热点与最新进展,以促进同行间的相互合作。热诚欢迎国内外相关科研与教学单位的研究人员及学生踊跃投稿并与会交流。
一、会议网站
二、主办单位
作物遗传与种质创新国家重点实验室
南京农业大学
中国植物生理与分子生物学会
中国植物病理学会
三、组委会主席
王源超 教 授 南京农业大学
何祖华 研究员 中国科学院上海生命科学研究院植物生理生态研究所
四、组织委员会主席
何祖华 研究员 中国科学院上海生命科学研究院植物生理生态研究所
王源超 教 授 南京农业大学
王秀娥 教 授 作物遗传与种质创新国家重点实验室
Prof. Brett Tyler 美国俄勒冈州立大学
五、组织委员会委员
周俭民 研究院 中国科学院遗传与发育生物学研究所
彭友良 教 授 中国农业大学
周雪平 教 授 中国农科院植物保护研究所
康振生 教 授 西北农林科技大学
王成树 研究员 中国科学院上海生命科学研究院植物生理生态研究所
魏太云 教 授 福建农林大学
吴益东 教 授 南京农业大学
窦道龙 教 授 南京农业大学
六、会议安排
2015年7月31日,全天报到;
2015年8月1-2日全天、3日上午,会议特邀报告。
本次大会均为“特邀报告”(详见附件的特邀报告目录),最新目录请查阅:
参会者可提交工作摘要并参加海报展示。
七、会议地点与住宿
会议与住宿:南京国际会议大酒店(南京市中山陵四方城2号);
住宿:南京农业大学翰苑大厦(南京市玄武区童卫路20号);
会务组将安排班车进行两地间的接送。
会务组仅负责住宿的预订,请在填写注册表时注明住宿信息;住宿费用需参会人员与酒店结算。
八、会议费用
注册费用“现场现金”支付:
2015年5月1日之前注册:每人2000元,学生1500元;
2015年5月1日之后注册:每人2500元,学生2000元。
上述时间以会务组收到电子邮件的时间为准!
九、参会方法
填写通知所附的注册表(或者通过会议网站“注册”页面下载),连同摘要发送到email至:
附件1:特邀报告目录
附件2:参会人员回执表
附件3:摘要格式
第四届植物-生物互作国际会议会务组
2015年3月15日
附件1:特邀报告目录
Plenary Lectures 大会报告
Regine Kahmann, Max Planck Institute for Terrestrial Microbiology The secreted effector repertoire of smut fungi: new insights into where and how they function Xinnian Dong, Duke University Dynamic regulation of plant immunity Barbara Valent, UC Berkeley Fine-tuning plant innate immuny Bart Thomma, Wageningen University Evolution of virulence in the vascular wilt pathogen Verticillium dahliae Thorsten Nuernberger, University of Tubingen, Center for Plant Molecular Biology LRR receptor protein complexes in Arabidopsis innate immunity Saskia Hogenhout, John Innes Centre Multitasking, how single bacterial virulence proteins modulate plant development and attract insect vectors Jonathan Jones, Sainsbury Lab, Norwich It takes two to tango; resistance gene pairs that recognize and respond to pathogen effectors Shouwei Ding, University of California, Riverside Antiviral RNA silencing in plants and animals Brian Staskawicz, University of California, Berkeley Genomic Strategies for the Durable Control of Plant Diseases Godelieve Gheysen, Ghent University Rice as a model system to compare the interaction of different types of nematodes with their host Ken Shirasu, RIKEN Center for Sustainable Resource Science Vascular hijack by parasitic plants Jianmin Zhou, National Institute of Biological Sciences, China TBD Paul Schulze-Lefert, Max Planck Institute for Plant Breeding Research TBD James Carrington, Donald Danforth Plant Science Center TBD
S1. Plant-bacteria interactions 植物-细菌互作
Cyril Zipfel, The Sainsbury Lab TBD Gitta Coaker, University of California, Davis Unraveling early events in plant NLR perception Libo Shan, Texas A&M University Phosphorylation and ubiquitination in plant immune receptor complex regulation and signaling Mary Beth Mudgett, Stanford University Rewiring of host transcription promotes Xanthomonas euvesicatoria growth and symptom development
Ping He, Texas A&M University From frontline to headquarter: the battlefields of plants and bacteria Gongyou Chen, Shanghai Jiao Tong University Xanthomonas oryzae TALEs in rice Wei Qian, Institute of Microbiology, Chinese Academy of Sciences Role of Ligand-Receptor Histidine Kinase Interactions in Regulating Bacterial Virulence and Cell-Cell Communication James R. Alfano, University of Nebraska Lincoln TBD Sheng Yang He, Michigan State University Apoplastic water, an ancient battle in bacterial pathogenesis?
S2. Plant-fungus/oomycete interactions 植物-真菌/卵菌互作
Sophien Kamoun, The Sainsbury Lab Pathogen Effectors as Probes to Study Plant Processes Zhensheng Kang, Northwest A&F University TBD John McDowell, Virginia Tech Translating genome information into new tools for control of soybean root and stem rot Daohong Jiang, Huazhong Agricultural University Interaction between Plasmodiophora brassicae and host Weihua Tang, Institute of Plant Physiology and Ecology, SIBS, CAS The necrotrophic strategies for the pathogen Fusarium graminearum infecting wheat coleoptiles and maize stalks unraveled Francine Govers, Wageningen University - Laboratory of Phytopathology Phytophthora infestans RXLR effector AVR1 and its host target Sec5 Jinrong Xu, Purdue University Two Cdc2 Kinase Genes with Distinct Functions in Vegetative and Infectious Hyphae in Fusarium graminearum Bo Liu, University of California at Davis Regulation of hyphal growth and conidiation by microtubules in Aspergillus nidulans Paul Birch, University of Dundee The late blight pathogen Phytophthora infestans targets susceptibility factors Brett Tyler, Oregon State University Combining genomics and effector biology to develop new ways to combat Phytophthora pathogens Barbara Baker, Kansas State University Effector dynamics during biotrophic invasion by the rice blast fungus, Magnaporthe oryzae Hailing Jin, University of California, Riverside Small RNAs in Plant-Fungal Interaction Didier Tharreau, CIRAD Genetic and phenotypic insights in the adaptation of Magnaporthe oryzae to rice Kim Hammond-Kosack, Rothamsted Research The role of small secreted effectors in the Fusarium - wheat floral interaction Wenbo Ma, University of California Phytophthora effectors promote infection by suppressing plant RNA silencing Martin Dickman, Texas A&M University Tipping the Balance: Cell Death Control in Plant-Pathogen Interactions
S3. Plant-virus interactions 植物-病毒互作
Aimin Wang, Southern Crop Protection and Food Research Centre, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada The SUMOylation Pathway Plays an Essential Role in Potyvirus Infection Biao Ding, The Ohio State University Genome-wide analysis of 3D motif structures and functions for a viroid Juan Jose Lopez-Moya, Centre for Research in Agricultural Genomics, Barcelona, Spain Mixed infections of viruses transmitted by whiteflies and aphids in different plant pathosystems Ming-Bo Wang, CSIRO Agriculture DNA demethylases interact with small RNAs to regulate plant defense genes in Arabidopsis Huishan Guo, Institute of Microbiology TBD Juan Antonio Garcia, Centro Nacional de Biotecnologia (CNB-CSIC) Unravelling plant-virus interactions in Plum pox virus infection
S4. Plant-insect/nematode/Plant parasite interactions 植物-昆虫/线虫/寄生植物互作
Isgouhi Kaloshian, University of California, Riverside TBD Ke Dong, Michigan State University Identification of olfactory receptors for the repellency of the botanical insecticide pyrethrum Nannan Liu, Auburn University Interaction of Blood Feeding Insects with Semiochemicals and Human Odorants Bent Andrew, University of Wisconsin - Madison Mechanistic Dissection of Novel Rhg1-Mediated SCN Disease Resistance
S5. Rhizobium and mycorrhizal symbiosis根瘤菌和菌根共生
Caroline Gutjahr, University of Munich (LMU) Arbuscular mycorrhiza development Dong Wang, University of Massachusetts Targeted protein secretion in the nitrogen-fixing symbiosis Florian Frugier, IPS2 / CNRS Local and systemic pathways integrating root system development and environmental responses in legumes Martin Parniske, University of Munich Signal transduction in plant root symbiosis Michael Udvardi, The Samuel Roberts Noble Foundation Development and differentiation of the M.truncatula x S. meliloti symbiosis Ertao Wang, Chinese Academy of Sciences TBD
S6. Plant resistance and crop molecular design植物抗性和作物分子设计
Fumiaki Katagiri, University of Minnesota Signaling mechanisms underlying the properties of the plant immune signaling network Heribert Hirt, Center for Desert Agriculture, KAUST Novel strategies to engineer plant stress tolerance in crops Shunyuan Xiao, University of Maryland College Park Dual and opposing roles of xanthine dehydrogenase in defense-associated reactive oxygen species metabolism in Arabidopsis Pradeep Kachroo, University of Kentucky Chemical- and lipid-mediated systemic acquired resistance in plants Haitao Cui, Max Planck Institute for Plant Breeding Research EDS1 negatively regulates the jasmonic acid pathway by targeting MYC transcription factors Zuhua He, Institute of Plant Physiology and Ecology, SIBS, CAS, China Rice Disease Resistance: Novel Mechanisms and New Breeding Tools Jian Hua, Cornell University Modulation of plant immunity by cell cycle regulation Jinlong Qiu, Institute of Microbiology, Chinese Academy of Sciences Genome editing of bread wheat for heritable resistance to powdery mildew Shunping Yan, Huazhong Agricultural University TBD Jijie Chai, Tsinghua University Structural insight into activation of plant pattern recognition receptors
Others 其它
Xiaofeng Cui, Molecular Plant, Shanghai Institutes for Biological Sciences, CAS TBD Jun Lyu, Nature Publishing Group How to publish at Nature in Nature Journals
附件2:参会人员注册回执
The 4th International Conference on Biotic Plant Interactions (ICBPI) |
- Registration Form for Participants - |
|
Description |
Your information |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Status A. Students and Postdocs Before May 1: $250 or ¥1500 After May 1: $320 or ¥2000 B. Faculty and Professionals Before May 1: $320 or ¥2000 After May 1: $400 or ¥2500 |
A/B |
|
|
Title |
Dr. / Miss / Mr. / Mrs. / Ms. / Prof. |
|
|
First (Given) Name |
|
|
|
Middle Name |
|
|
|
Last (Family) Name |
|
|
|
Affiliation / Institute / Organization |
|
|
|
E-Mail Address |
@ |
|
|
Accommodation - two choice: A. One person one room; B. Share with a designated person C. No need to arrange Room type: only room with two beds |
A/B(name of your roommate)/C |
|
|
Arrival and departure dates (if determined) |
July ##, Aug ## |
|
|
Poster presentation title |
|
|
|
|
|
|
附件3:摘要格式(请使用英文准备,篇幅不超过一张A4纸)
Abstract Title (Times New Roman, 14pt, bold, centered)
a Department1, Institution1, Address, City1, Country1 (Times New Roman, 10pt, italic)
b Department2, Institution2, Address, City2, Country2 (Times New Roman, 10pt, italic)
E-mail of presenting author
Please prepare your abstract in English language within one page.
Times New Roman, 11 pt, 1.5 spaced, justified, should be used for the main text.
Acknowledgement: optional
References:
References should be indicated as consecutive numbers placed in square brackets, e.g. [1] and [2,3], etc., and referenced as in the example below.
[1] A.B. Smith, C.D. Brown (Year). Journal, Vol, Initial page. (Times New Roman 10pt)
|