Axelrod Symposium: Phosphoproteomic Analysis of G Protein-Coupled Pathways
Sunday April 07, 2019
3:00 pm
-
5:00 pm
Eastern Time (ET)
Room W205 BC
BEH
CVP
MP
Chair :
Joe Beavo
University of Washington
Mark von Zastrow
University of California, San Francisco
This symposium will address some of the newer methods of unbiased, phosphoproteomic approaches to the analysis of physiological and pharmacological regulation of G-protein coupled receptor pathways. Several different G-protein coupled pathways will be discussed and compared. Data will be presented about how specific compartmentalization of pathways can be dissected using changes in phosphoproteomic profiles in the presence and absence of pathway selective drugs. There will also be a discussion of how phosphoproteomic analyses can be used in conjunction with cellular imaging techniques to analyze compartmentalized signaling.
Supported by the John V. Croker Fund
Speakers
Mark Knepper
- National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute
Phosphoproteomic Identification of Vasopressin V2 Receptor-Dependent Signaling
Kjetil Taskén
- Oslo University Hospital
High-resolution Mapping and Systems Analysis of the Prostanoid E Receptor 1-4 (EP1-4) Signaling Network in T Cell Subsets by Quantitative Phosphoproteomics and Phosphoflow Cytometry
Manuela Zaccolo
- University of Oxford
Defining a Cellular map of cAMP Nanodomains Using Real-time Imaging and Mass Spectrometry
Mark von Zastrow
- University of California, San Francisco
Proteomic Approaches GPCR Signaling and Regulation