SCIENTIFIC PROGRAMME

Summer school programme:

5th of September

10.00 – 10.10 Welcome - Magdalena Kowalewska and Michał Mikula

10.10 – 11.40  Ryszard Konopiński, Damian Garbicz, Daniel Bajerski, Monika Świątek – Nanobody technology as a black horse in contemporary medical science.

11.40 -12.00 From Sample Collection to Actionable Results – automate your workflow with Eppendorf

12.00 – 13.00 lunch

13.00 – 13.30 Tomasz Sarnowski - Nanobody in use – perspectives

13.30 – 14.30 Radosław Zagożdżon - CAR-T technology

14.30-15.00 Leszek Kotula - The power of genetic models to study human cancer

15.00 – 15.20 coffee

15.20- 16.00 Aneta Montano - Is salutogenic oncoimmuno coaching a superior form of psychological support of oncological patients?

6th of September

10.00 – 11.30 Eileen Kennedy, University of Georgia, USA - Chemical biology of kinases

11.30 - 11.45 coffee

11.45- 13.15 Richard Bayliss, University of Leeds, UK- Structural features of the protein kinase domain and targeted binding by small-molecule inhibitors 

13.15- 14.15 lunch

14.15 - 15.45 Josephina Sampson, University of Leeds, UK - Imaging cells and biomolecular condensates

15.45 - 16.45 Alfonso Urbanucci Tampere University, Finland - A take of 15 years of prostate cancer research: from PhD to PI.

16.45- 17.00  Piotr Trzonkowski Medical University of Gdańsk, PolTREG S.A - T regulatory cells - from bench to bedside.


During the days of the conference, speakers and panellists will be available to participants of the Summer School


 

Conference programme:

7th of September

9.10-9.30 Welcome  - Michal Mikula

"Holistic view on patient's care"  Aneta Montano

 

Session 1. Molecular oncology of kinases

Chair: Eileen Kennedy

9.30-10.00      Understanding and targeting oncogenic biomolecular compartments of ALK kinase (Josephina Sampson, University of Leeds, UK)

10.00-10.30   Targeting the G2 phase decatenation checkpoint: an emergent, tumour-specific vulnerability (Tanya Soliman, Barts Cancer Institute, London, UK)  

10.30-10.45   Mixed-Lineage Kinase 4 in breast cancer progression and chemoresistance (Anna Marusiak - IMOL)

10.45-11.00 Coffee break and refreshments

11.00-11.15  Oncogenic PIM kinases support malignant cell survival and regulate their interactions with tumor microenvironment in cHL and PMBL (Maciej Szydłowski, PhD - IHiT)

11.15-11.30 AXL kinase signaling in cancer cell biology (Daria Zdżalik-Bielecka, IIMCB) 

11.30-12.00 Structure, function and pharmacology of oncogenic RET fusions products

 (Ivan Plaza-Menacho, CNIO Madrid, Spain)

 

12.00-13.00 LUNCH 

 

Session 2. Kinase inhibitors in the clinic

Chair: Tanya Soliman

13.00-13.30 Success and limitations of kinase inhibitors in Oncology (Petros Christopoulos, Thoraxklinik, University of Heidelberg, Germany)

13.30-13.50 RNA deregulation affects the interplay between keratinocytes and immune cells modulating susceptibility to skin cancer (Jolant Jura, Jgiellonian University, Cracow, Poland)

13.50-14.20 TKI in haematological malignancies (Martin Dyer, University of Leicester, UK)

14.20- 14.40 Coffee break and refreshments

 

Session 3. Kinase inhibitor discovery

Chair:  Martin Dyer

14.40-15.10 Allosteric targeting of oncologic kinases using constrained peptides

 (Eileen Kennedy, University of Georgia, USA)

15.10-15.20 ALPK1 mutants causing spiradenocarcinoma are activated abnormally by allosteric activators. (T Snelling)

15.20-15.30 Using single-molecule spectroscopy to measure conformational changes in c-Met kinase with clinically arising resistance mutations (TSA Wilcock)

15.30-15.50  Perspective on kinase drug discovery (Richard Bayliss, University of Leeds, UK)

15.50-16.00  Identification of new molecular alterations in clear cell renal cell carcinoma and designing a platform based on VHHs from Alpaca to develop future anticancer therapy (Paweł Ćwiek)

Allosteric inhibition of Anaplastic Lymphoma Kinase (ALK) by single-domain antibodies (Nan Zhang)

16.00-16.30 Panel discussion all invited speakers

 

16.30- 17.30 ** Poster session **  together with coffee break and refreshments

 

Session 4. CAR-T technology

Chair: Radosław Zagożdżon and Grzegorz Basak

17.30 – 17. 50 Driving of CARs to the new directions- locally produced CART cells for the treatment of plasma cell dyscrasia ( Polina Stepensky: Hadassah Medical Center, Israel)

17.50 – 18.20 Recent development in CAR-T therapy in NHL (Grzegorz Basak: Warsaw Medical University, Poland)

18.20- 18.40 Challenges and solutions for CAR-based strategies against solid tumors (Radosław Zagożdżon:Warsaw Medical University, Poland )

18.40 – Dinner

 

8th of September

Session 1. Gene expression control in cancer

Chairs: Tomasz Sarnowski and Agata Starosta

9.00 – 9.20 Novel aspects of Cathepsin S hyperactivity in cancer (Johannes Hildebrand, LMU,  Germany)

9.20-9.40 Inhibition of RNA polymerase III augments the anti-cancer properties of TNF-alpha (Damian Graczyk, IBB PAS, Warsaw, Poland)

9.40-10.00 Cellular metabolome of cancer line HT 1080 in response to external conditions (Piotr Młynarz, Wrocław University of Science and Technology, Wrocław, Poland)

10.00-10.20 The crosstalk of NF-κB and p53 transcription factors in irradiated cancer cells (Piotr Widłak, MSCNRIO, Gliwice, GUMED. Gdańsk, Poland)

 

10.20-10.20 coffee break

 

Session 2. Prostate Cancer translational research 

Chairs: Alfonso Urbanucci and  Paweł Wiechno

10.30-10.55   “Role of ABI1 in prostate cancer” (Leszek Kotula, Upstate Medical University, USA)

10.55-11.20  “An overview of clinical trials in the Nordics in urological cancers”  ( Teemu Murtola, Tampere University, Finland).

11.20- 11.45 Strategies to improve radiotherapy for prostate cancer patients: the radio-oncology perspectiv (Wolfgang Lilleby, Oslo University Hospital, Norway)

11.45-12.00  Prostate Cancer - Is Treating Earlier Always Better? (including a summary of the session) (Paweł Wiechno: MSCNRIO, Poland)

 

12.00 -13.00 – lunch

 

Session 3. Immunooncology

Chairs:  Jadwiga Jabłońska and Natalia Marek-Trzonkowska

13.00-13.20 Potential and limitations of neutrophils as valid cancer biomarkers (Jadwiga Jabłońska, University Hospital Essen, Germany)

13.20-13.35 Choosing the Optimal Therapy for Renal Cell Carcinoma. How to combine clinical and basic science approach? (Jakub Kucharz, MSCNRIO, Warsaw, Poland)

13.35-14.50 panel discussion: Holistic approach to cancer immunotherapy.

chaired by Jadwiga Jabłońska and Natalia Marek-Trzonkowska; 

panelists: Piotr Trzonkowski, Maciej Chałubiński, Richard Bayliss, Jakub Kucharz, Petros Christopoulos, Radoslaw Zagozdżon, Martin Dyer

 

14.50- 15.00 Coffee break

 

Session 4. Gliwice session: New perspectives in anticancer therapy

Chairs: Tomasz Cichoń and Ryszard Smolarczyk

15.00-15.20 Advances in molecular diagnostics and therapy of pancreatic cancer - state of the art and perspectives (Ujjwal Mukund Mahajan: LMU University Hospital, Munich, Germany

15.20-15.40 Endoscopic Ultrasound-Guided Local Therapies for Pancreatic Neoplasms - New Hope or Dead End? (Michał Żorniak: MSCNRIO, Gliwice, Poland)

15.40-16.00 Repositioning of drugs in in vitro studies as a potential direction of searching for new form of pharmacotherapy (Artur Beberok: Medical University of Silesia)

16.00 - 16.20 Combination of auranofin and syrosingopine  as a new anticancer therapy (Tomasz Cichoń: MSCNRIO, Gliwice, Poland; Jerzy Gubernator: University of Wrocław; Wiesław Szeja; Ryszard Smolarczyk: MSCNRIO, Gliwice)

16.20 closing remarks