6.30 pm: "The ideas received about our brains" interactive conference, Neuro teams INEM and CBM
8:30 pm: "Contribution of cognitive neuroscience to the understanding of the brain that learns" lecture of Prof. Grégoire Borst, director of LaPsyDe, CNRS
The evening will end with a moment of conviviality around a buffet
The virulence genes of pathogenic enterobacteria are concentrated in genomic islands acquired by horizontal transfer during evolution. The expression of these genes outside the infection phase is detrimental to the bacterium and is therefore highly regulated. A major regulatory mechanism relies on the histone-like protein H-NS, which binds to AT-rich sites characteristic of horizontally acquired DNA and forms oligomeric structures that inhibit transcription over extended regions. These regions, however, remain exposed to invasive transcription from neighboring regions or to H-NS repression defects. Our data support a model in which the transcription elongation factor NusG “secures” the inhibition of virulence genes by stimulating the activity of the transcription termination factor Rho in regions silenced by H-NS. Remarkably, NusG changes the specificity of the Rho factor, which alone preferentially targets C-rich regions. The perturbation of this NusG/Rho-dependent mechanism in Salmonella has profound physiological consequences, probably because unstopped transcription in H-NS -targeted regions feeds a feed-forward activation cascade leading to the uncontrolled expression of pathogenicity islands and co-regulated loci.
Keyron Hickman-Lewis, PhD student in the group "Exobiology" will support his thesis entitled "Coupling instrumentation and methodology in the search for traces of life on the early Earth and Mars" Tuesday, October 10, 2019 at 9:30 am at the amphitheater Charles Sadron, delegation ofCNRS, Orleans.