2019 Metals in Biology Gordon Research Conference
and
2019 Gordon Research Seminar in Bioinorganic
Chemistry
Applicant/Institution: Gordon Research Conferences
512 Liberty Lane, West Kingston, RI, 02892-1502
Principal Investigator: Joseph Martin Bollinger,
Jr.
Department of Chemistry
The Pennsylvania State University
This application seeks funds to support the Metals
in Biology Gordon Research Conference (MIB GRC) and the associated Graduate
Research Seminar in Bioinorganic Chemistry (BIC GRS), to be held January 27 – Feb 1, 2019. Gordon Research Conferences are widely recognized within
the scientific community as being the most effective meetings for exchange of cutting-edge
ideas and formulation of new research directions. The Metals in Biology Gordon Research
Conference (MIB GRC) is a regularly oversubscribed, annual meeting held in
Ventura, CA at the end of January. It is one of the most successfulof GRC's
hundreds of meetings. In 1996, the MIB GRC community founded the first Graduate
Research Seminar (the Bioinorganic Gordon Research Seminar or BIC GRS), to
allow the large block of developing young scientists who were annually turned
away from the MIB GRC to profit from the experience of the field's premier
meeting. The BIC GRS is unique among GRSs in overlapping with its parent GRC (MIB)
in a joint Thursday evening session. The networking opportunities that this
schedule creates for young scientists are unparalleled. Although the MIB GRC
and BIC GRS are both annual, each edition of each is a unique event: even the
most prominent members of the field are rarely asked to speak more frequently
than every third year, and session topics are always rotated, as each chair
strives for a unique synthesis of the most important concepts in the field. The
2019 MIB GRC will have four broad themes – earth's element
and energy economies, biosynthesis of nature's vast repertoire of bioactive
natural products and their most interesting functional groups, metal
trafficking and cofactor assembly, and human use of abiological metals in
chemical and biological applications. Featured speakers of interest to DOE BES
will present (1) the discovery of methane production by iron-only nitrogenase
(Caroline Harwood), (2) the identification of a primordial, membrane-imbedded
hydrogen-respiring enzyme in a hyperthermophilic archaeon (Michael Adams'
group), (3) the development of nickel-utilizing CO2 reduction
catalysts in simple protein architectures (Hannah Shafaat), (4,5) the
structural characterization of new intermediates in catalysis
by vanadium-iron nitrogenase (Oliver Einsle) and assembly of
the iron cofactor of hydrogenase (R. David Britt), and (6) the biosynthesis of
a copper-acquiring molecule (the
"chalcophore" methanobactin) in aerobic methanotrophic bacteria
(Amy Rosenzweig). Themes of the BIC GRS will include metals in materials,
cellular metal homoeostasis, role of metals in evolution of
biochemical pathways, and spectroscopic methods to
study metalloenzyme structure and function. Support from DOE BES is sought for this
exciting pair of events, and if awarded, will be used to provide grants to
student and postdoctoral scholars who might not otherwise be
able to attend. Aided by this support, we will thus ensure the
broadest possible participation and highest quality programs.