Title - Ontogenic Shifts in Cellular Fate in Normal Development and Leukemia are Linked to Proteotype Changes in Blood Progenitor Cells
I have a Master of Science in Biotechnology and am now a final-year PhD student in the group of Jenny Hansson at Lund University. My research is focused on delineating ontogenic changes in the proteome and function of blood stem and progenitor cells in order to understand why children and adults show differential susceptibility to different subtypes of acute leukemia.
All Sessions by Maria Jassinskaja
October 20, 2020
14:00
PhD Poster Competition Session
14:00 - 15:00 UTC
Chair: Giuseppe Palmisano, Brazil Finalists: Precision Mapping of O Linked N Acetylglucosamine Sites in Proteins Using Ultraviolet Photodissociation Mass Spectrometry, Edwin Escobar, United States A Versatile Isobaric Tag Enables Proteome Quantification in Data Dependent and Data Independent Acquisition Mode, Xiaobo Tian, The Netherlands Ion Mobility Separation in a TIMS-TOF PASEF Acquisition Method Decreases Spectral Complexity, Joshua Charkow, Canada Protein Context Shapes the Specificity of Domain-Peptide Interactions in Vivo, Ugo Dionne, Canada Spatially Resolved Proteome Profiling of FFPE Tissues, Andikan Nwosu, United States Dissecting the Ontogenic Remodeling of the Proteomic Landscape and Functionality of Hematopoietic Progenitor Cells in Normal Development and Leukemia, Maria Jassinskaja, Sweden Identification of Autoantigens with Diagnostic Ability of Colorectal Cancer by Immunoprecipitation Coupled to Mass Spectrometry, Ana Montero Calle, Spain Preservation of Trypsin Activity at Elevated Temperatures for Optimized Proteome Digestion, Jessica Nickerson, Canada
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Maria Jassinskaja
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