Upcoming events hosted by or involving Genetics Otago will be listed here. Please check back regularly for updates. A calendar of events that may be of interest to our members can be found at the bottom of this page and in the sidebar of other pages on this site, please note that this includes events hosted outside of Genetics Otago.
Calendar of Events
The below is a calendar of events hosted by GO as well as events hosted by others that may be of interest to our members. If you have an event you would like us to include please contact us here.
Associate Professor Elin Gray
Edith Cowan University, Perth
Title TBC.
This special seminar is being held in conjunction with the EUG Symposium to be held on the 13th March.
This event is open to all GO members.
Hosted by Genetics Otago, the 2nd EUG (Epigenetics User Group) Symposium is to be held on 13th March 2020 at the Hutton Theatre in Otago Museum. The Symposium will be preceded by a day of workshops on the 12th of March 2020.
The aim of the Symposium is to bring Epigenetics research and collaboration opportunities to all researchers from students through to principal investigators and as such the Symposium and associated workshops will be free of charge to all delegates.
Key Dates
Abstract Submission Deadline: 17th January 2020
Authors Advised: TBC
Registration Closes: 27th February 2020
More information here
Dr Felicity Newell
QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute, Brisbane
“The genomics of melanoma subtypes”
This special seminar is being held in conjunction with the EUG Symposium to be held on the 13th March.
Please refer to the below pdf for details of speakers each week.
Dr Brad Hurren (Department of Anatomy) “What is the ASERT group all about?” and Mr Tapekaoterangi Hakopa (Department of Anatomy) “Te Mātauranga Māori o te tinana – understanding the human body in te reo Māori/with a Māori world view.”
Professor Graham Wallis
Department of Zoology, University of Otago
Going under down under?
Molecular data provide no evidence for complete inundation of New Zealand during the Oligocene Marine Transgression.
The last 25 years have seen heated debate over whether there was continuous emergent land through the Oligocene “drowning” of current-day NZ some 25–23 million years ago. Such an event would imply that all terrestrial, freshwater and maybe coastal marine lineages must have dispersed here since. A compilation of 248 phylogeographic splits (i.e. molecular estimates of divergence times between NZ lineages and their closest overseas sister groups) follows a smooth exponential over the last 50 Ma or more. ~74 of these lineages appear to have survived the OMT in situ; some of these major lineages comprise multiple additional lineages as a result of autochthonous speciation prior to the OMT. Although extinction of closer
overseas lineages will cause overestimation of some splits, there is no evidence for a deficit of pre-Oligocene lineages, nor an excess of ones arriving just afterwards. Consequently, this large body of molecular data provides no evidence for complete inundation of NZ during the Oligocene.
Please refer to the below pdf for details of speakers each week.
Presented by Professor Birgitta Tomkinson, visiting academic from Uppsala University. The title of her talk will be “Tripeptidyl-peptidase II: An interesting enzyme involved in intracellular protein turnover, antigen presentation, MS and more”,
Please refer to the below pdf for details of speakers each week.