11th International BMP Conference

Date: 

Wed - Sun, Oct 26 to Oct 30, 8:00am - 5:00pm

Location: 

Harvard Medical School, Joseph B. Martin Conference Center, 77 Avenue Louis Pasteur, Boston, MA

BMP 2016 is designed to expand our understanding of how the BMP signaling axis (BMP/TGFβ/Activin/GDF) influences development and maintenance of organ systems and seeks to uncover how dysregulation of this control results in disease. We challenge attendees to focus on the interconnected nature of the branches of BMP signaling axis, something that is now being considered for the first time and has tremendous implications for understanding diseases of BMP signaling.

Click here to register for this event.  Visit the event website at:  http://projects.iq.harvard.edu/bmp2016conference_boston

The BMP 2016 Conference will bring together investigators who are leaders in a variety of interconnected and interrelated disciplines essential for a comprehensive and encompassing study and understanding of the BMP signaling axis in development, disease, and regeneration. The scientific presentations, formal and informal discussions, and poster presentations throughout the conference are designed to expand the understanding of the genetic, molecular and cellular mechanisms and processes by which the BMP signaling axis influences development and maintenance of organ systems, and to uncover how dysregulation of this control results in disease. This knowledge is fundamental for our ability to normalize the BMP signaling pathway, returning the body to homeostasis and supporting successful tissue repair and regeneration. BMP 2016 will leverage new and important findings and provide attendees with: a broader appreciation and prospective of the complexity of the BMP signaling axis; tangible and direct examples of therapeutic strategies being tested at the moment; and opportunities for consideration and discussion of future ones. Given its format, the collegial and cooperative atmosphere of the BMP 2016 Conference provides a forum for extended discussions and conversations, interactions, networking, debating of novel hypotheses and prioritization of unmet research needs, and career considerations particularly useful for young investigators and trainees who represent future researchers in this field.

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