日本語

National Institutes of Natural Sciences

National Institute for Basic Biology

International Cooperation

NIBB Conferences - Conference

The 14th NIBB Conference "Molecular Mechanisms of Cell Specialization in Development III"

Organizers Yoshiaki Suzuki
Venue National Institute for Basic Biology, Okazaki , 444-8585, Japan
Date Mar. 14-16, 1985
Program
Program
Welcome Address (Chairperson: Yoshiaki Suzuki)
T. S. Okada, the Director General of the NIBB
   
1. Physical and chemical differences between X- and Y-bearing sperm.
  Hideo Mohri1, Shigeru Oshio2, Satoru Kaneko, and Rihachi iizuka (Univ. of Tokyo1 and Keio Univ.2)
2. Meiosis-inducing substance in the Amago salmon; identification and synthetic control by gonadotropin.
  Yoshitaka Nagahama (NIBB)
3. A cytoplasmic factor inducing pole cells in Drosophila embryos.
  Masukichi Okada and Satoru Kobayashi (Univ. of Tsukuba)
4. Subcellular mechanisms of cell specialization in mosaic eggs.
  Noriyuki Sato, T. Deno, H. Nishida, I. Miyazawa, T. Nishitaka, and K. Makabe (Kyoto Univ.)
5. Cell diviissiions in relation to blastocyst formation in mammals.
  Yoshihiro Kato (Mitsubishi-Kasei Inst. of Life Sciences)
6 The effects of disaggregation and dispersion on the activity of genes expressed in Xenopus laevis.
  Tom  Sargent, M. Jamrich, E. Jonas, J. Winkles, S. Miyatani, and Igor B. Dawid (NIH)
7. Ammonium ion and regulation of rDNA expression in Xenopus embryogenesis.
  K. Shiokawa et al. (Kyushu Univ.)
8. Monoclonal antibodies which have high affinity to embryonic tissues of Xenopus laevis.
  Harumasa Okamoto and Shohei Mitani (Univ. of Tokyo)
9. Cloning and in situ analysis of the transcripts of the genes in Antennapedia complex of Drosophila melanogaster.
  Atsushi Kuroiwa1, W. McGinnis2, E. Hafen3, and Walter J. Gehring3 (Metropolitan Inst. for Neuroscieuces1, Yale Univ.2, and Basel Univ.3)
10. Hemoglobin switching in rats.
  J.W.O. Tam and Chi-chung Hui (Univ. of Hong Kong)
11. Molecular cloning and characterization of cDNA for neuronspecific enolase and non-neuronal enolase mRNA.
  Kenji Sakimura, Etsuko Kushiya, Masuo Obinata1, and Yasuo Takahashi (Niigata Univ. and Univ. of Tokyo1)
12. In vitro transcription of immunoglobulin gene.
  Yoshiro Yaoita and Tasuku Honjo (Kyoto Univ.)
13. Analysis of the cellular factors· involved in immunoglobulin gene expression.
  Takeshi Watanabe (Saga Medical College)
14. Gene regulation for interferons and interleukins.
  Tadatsugu Taniguchi (Osaka Univ.)
15. Dual regulation of δ-crystallin expression as revealed by xenogenic gene transfer.
  Hisato Kondoh (Kyoto Univ.)
16. Structure and regulation of vitellogenin genes.
  Walter Wahli (Univ. of Lausanne)
17. A new way to think about tRNA gene control.
  E.T. Wilson, Lisa S. Young, and Karen U. Sprague (Univ. of Oregon)
18. Enhanced transcription of fibroin gene in vitro on covalently closed circular templates.
  Susumu Hirose, Masaaki Tsuda, and Yoshiaki Suzuki (NIBB)
19. Transcriptional regulatory signals of adenovirus early region IV gene.
  Hiroshi Handa (Univ. of Tokyo)
20. Possible role of the upstream region of the fibroin gene in the formation of transcription complexes in vitro.
  Masaaki Tsuda, S. Hirose, and Yoshiaki Suzuki (NIBB)
21. Molecular mechanisms of transcription initiation by RNA polymerase I.
  Masami Muramatsu et al. (Univ. of Tokyo)
22. On the mechanism of expression of vitellogenin gene.
  Tatsuo Nakayama (Miyazaki Medical College)
23. Differential transcription of fibroin gene and chorion gene in cell-free systems.
  Yoshiaki Suzuki, Chi-chung Hui, Shigeharu Takiya, Masaaki Tsuda, and Satoko Adachi (NIBB)
24. Mechanisms of the recognition of the splice junctions in mRNA precursors: Possible recongnition factors.
  Yasumi Ohshima (Univ. of Tsukuba)
25. DNA polymorphisms of the HLA class II antigen genes and differential splicing.
  H. Inoko, A. Ando, M. Kimura, M. Ito, and K. Tsuji (Tokai Univ.)
26. Tissue-Specific expression of three mRNA species transcribed from a single aldolase A gene.
  Tsunehiro Mukai, Keiichiro Joh, Yuji Arai, and Katsuji Hori (Saga Medical College)
27. Unusual transcripts of 26K casein gene present in nonlactating mouse mammary glands.
  Hiroyasu Satow, Senkiti Sakai, and Masuo Obinata (Univ. of Tokyo)
28. Induction of hepatocytes in the pancreas of adult rats: a transdifferentiation model.
  Janardan K. Reddy (Northwestern Univ.)
29. A unique in vitro system of pigmented epitherial cells for studying molecular mechanisms of transdifferentiation.
  Goro Eguchi, Y. Itho and K. Agata (NIBB and Aichi Medical College)
30. The expression of chicken cryrtallin genes introduced into mouse teratocarcinoma cells is defferentiation-dependent but not lens-specific.
  Tokindo S. Okada (NIBB and Kyoto Univ.)
31. Cell-type specific and regulated expression of a human γl immunoglobulin gene in transgenic mouse.
  Ken-ichi Yamamura (Osaka Univ.)
32. Cloned yolk polypeptide genes integrated into Drosophila chromosomes  by P-element mediated gene transfer are regulated normally during  development.
  Toshiki Tamura, C. Kunert, and J. Postlethwait (Univ. of Oregon)
33. Drosophila actin mutants which cause constitutive syntheses of heat shock proteins.
  Yoshiki Hotta, Yasushi Hiromi, Hitoshi Okamoto, and Etsuko Ishikawa (Univ. of Tokyo)
   
Closing Remarks
Yoshiaki Suzuki (NIBB)

Conference