Takayuki Uchihashi, Felix Rico, Jean-Luc Pellequer
{"title":"第十届 AFMBioMed 生命科学与医学原子力显微镜国际会议,2022 年 8 月 30 日至 9 月 2 日,日本名古屋-冈崎:纪念皮埃尔-帕罗(1950-2023 年)。","authors":"Takayuki Uchihashi, Felix Rico, Jean-Luc Pellequer","doi":"10.1002/jmr.3077","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>Founded in June 2006, after a first seminal French-speaking conference held on the topic “Atelier Nanobiosciences: protéines et membranes” in <i>Nîmes</i> in June 2004, the AFMBioMed Conference brings researchers and students from around the world together to discuss the latest scientific results of atomic force microscopy in life sciences and medicine.<span><sup>1, 2</sup></span> A full account of the AFMBioMed history can be found here.<span><sup>3</sup></span> AFMBioMed organized its first international meeting in <i>Barcelona</i>, Spain, in spring 2007<span><sup>4</sup></span> and this was followed, at 18-month intervals, by <i>Monterey</i>, CA, USA, in fall 2008,<span><sup>5</sup></span> <i>Crveni otok</i> (Red Island) near the Adriatic City of Rovinj, Croatia, in spring 2010,<span><sup>6</sup></span> <i>Paris</i> in summer 2011,<span><sup>7</sup></span> <i>Shanghai</i> in spring 2013,<span><sup>8</sup></span> <i>San Diego</i> in fall 2014,<span><sup>9</sup></span> <i>Porto</i> in spring 2016,<span><sup>10</sup></span> <i>Krakow</i> in fall 2017,<span><sup>3</sup></span> and <i>Münster</i> in fall 2019.<span><sup>11</sup></span></p><p>Members of the scientific committee for the tenth edition of the AFMBioMed meeting in Nagoya-Okasaki, Japan, in summer 2022 include past and present organizers <i>Takayuki Uchihashi</i> (Nagoya University, Japan), <i>Hermann Schillers</i> (University of Münster, Germany), <i>Malgorzata Lekka</i> (Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland), <i>Susana R. Sousa</i> (i3S|INEB, Porto, Portugal), <i>Adam Engler</i> (UCSD, San Diego, USA), <i>Jun Hu</i> (SINAP, Shanghai, China), <i>Sanjay Kumar</i> (University of California, Berkeley, USA), <i>Daniel Navajas</i> (Universitat de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain), <i>Simon Scheuring</i> (Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM) U1006, Marseille, France), <i>Vesna Svetlicic</i> (Rudjer Boskovic Institute, Zagreb, Croatia), the original founders of the conference <i>Pierre Parot</i> (IACA) and <i>Jean-Luc Pellequer</i> (CEA/DRF, Institut de Biologie Structurale, Grenoble, France), as well as the four invited chairs: <i>Alice Pyne</i> (Sheffield University, UK), <i>Felix Rico</i> (Aix-Marseille University—INSERM, France), <i>Takaharu Okajima</i> (Hokkaido University, Japan), and <i>Noriyuki Kodera</i> (Kanazawa University, Japan).</p><p>The 10th AFMBioMed was scheduled as a landmark conference. Despite the round number 10, it was the last conference organized with a single AFM sponsor (more below). It should have been the last conference that Pierre Parot, the co-founder of AFMBioMed, would participate in. At the end of the 9th conference in Münster, the 10th AFMBioMed conference was initially planned for spring 2021, the cherry blossom season in Japan. Unfortunately, the COVID-19 pandemic modified our plan. The conference was postponed every 6 months while waiting for the reopening of travel to Japan (as well as other countries). In early 2022, the organizing committee rejected the idea of organizing another online conference and we placed all our hope on the end of summer 2022. Because of the uncertainty of this period, Pierre Parot was not able to attend this conference. It is a sad follow-up to announce that Pierre died in 2023 at the age of 73.</p><p>Pierre Parot (1950–2023) was an unusual researcher. Pierre was recruited as an Engineer at Commissariat à l'Energie Atomique (CEA)-Leti (Grenoble) in 1977, after 2 years as an Assistant at the Université des Sciences et Techniques du Languedoc, where he defended his thesis in Solid State Physics (Montpellier 1976) on the study of Metal-Solvent-Semiconductor structures by thermal stimulation methods, and a post-doctoral stay in Giessen (Germany). Since then, his professional activities focused mainly on medical and scientific instrumentation and fundamental research in biophysics, a field in which Pierre defended a “thèse d'état” (Marseille 1987) on structural and dynamic studies of pigment-protein complexes in photosynthetic bacteria. He continued to work on electron transfer in the bioenergetic chain as his main research topic at CEA-Cadarache (1983–1995). After a sabbatical leave as Associate Professor in a research laboratory at the University of Connecticut at Storrs (USA, 1989–1990), Pierre realized the importance of developing relations between the CEA and the University. He proposed a collaboration in the field of Bioenergetics and created a joint CEA-Université de la Méditerranée laboratory at Luminy (LBTE, 1996–2001). This personal initiative was supported by those who, long after Newton and Pasteur, believe that there are more wall-builders than bridge-builders.</p><p>After a serious assessment of this enriching adventure, Pierre decided that the experiment, though successful, should not be prolonged. He returned to the CEA Valrhô, at Marcoule, as part of a new scientific project. He joined the Service de Biochimie post-génomique et Toxicologie Nucléaire (SBTN), a new scientific venture of CEA in which a research unit was built from the ground up. During the installation phase, Pierre created a biophysics group specializing in near-field microscopy: Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM) for biological studies. At the time, AFM had a very poor image among decision-makers, disillusioned by unsuccessful prior attempts in life sciences in the 1990s. However, results in late 1990s obtained on native membranes of purple bacteria—a field in which Pierre had worked for a long time—convinced us (PP + JLP) of the extraordinary potential of this instrument. We quickly set ourselves the dual objective of obtaining images of isolated single molecules and understanding the mechanisms of protein–protein interactions, and most importantly protein–metal interactions, one of the priority objectives of the CEA nuclear toxicology program. With the creation of institutes of the CEA Life Sciences division (DSV) in January 2007, the group became the Molecular Interactions and Recognition Laboratory (LIRM), headed by JLP. Pierre Parot was a cornerstone of both the AFMBioMed conferences and summer schools. His contribution to the success of AFMBioMed and beyond will be remembered.\n </p><p>Bruker had been the platinum sponsor of the AFMBioMed conference since 2007. The 10th conference was the last episode in this series. We are grateful for this long-term support from Bruker and their belief that AFM in life sciences is an important contribution to the field of Scanning Probe Microscopies. Among the Bruker-JPK's local organizers in the 2022 conference, we would like to acknowledge <i>Carmen Petterson</i> and <i>Oilibhe Pabsch</i>, as well as the congress office, namely, <i>Nao Morihashi</i> and <i>Tetsunari Kawaguchi</i>.</p><p>Other financial contributions from Wiley and Nagoya University are gratefully acknowledged.</p><p>The 2022 program featured three keynote and eight invited lectures by internationally renowned speakers, 58 oral presentations, and 28 poster presentations, with a total of 114 participants. The 2022 program also featured geographic diversity, with presentations from 18 countries on three continents!</p><p>Specialists from diverse fields, including cell biology, medicine, materials science, and physics, convened for both oral and poster presentations. These discussions centered on the latest technological advances and applications of AFM in areas such as Cell and Tissue Mechanics, Imaging and Force Measurement, and Novel Technology and Theory. Notable contributions included keynote lectures from <i>Simon Scheuring</i> (Cornell University, USA) and <i>Hirofumi Yamada</i> (Kyoto University, Japan). Invited talks were presented by <i>Roderick Lim</i> (University of Basel, Switzerland), <i>Adam J. Engler</i> (University of California, San Diego, USA), <i>Thomas Perkins</i> (JILA, NIST, University of Colorado, USA), and <i>Florence Tama</i> (Nagoya University, RIKEN, Japan). The sessions were chaired by <i>Takaharu Okajima</i> (Hokkaido University, Japan), <i>Felix Rico</i> (Aix-Marseille University, CNRS, INSERM, LAI, France), <i>Noriyuki Kodera</i> (Kanazawa University, Japan), and <i>Alice L.B. Pyne</i> (University of Sheffield, UK), who also gave a chairperson's lecture.</p><p>A special feature of the meeting was an online keynote lecture by <i>Cyrus Mody</i> (Maastricht University, the Netherlands), who discussed the state of scientific meetings in the post-COVID era. The keynote was followed by a fruitful discussion based on a questionnaire collected in advance from all participants.</p><p>The following three individuals were selected in the order mentioned below for the Best Poster Presentation Awards and were presented with prizes from Bruker: <i>Shigetaka Nishiguchi</i> (Exploratory Research Center on Life and Living Systems, National Institutes of Natural Sciences, Japan), <i>Sabrina Horn</i> (Institute of Molecular Pathology (IMP), Austria), and <i>Irma Custovic</i> (Université Bourgogne Franche-Comté, France).</p><p>The best oral presentation award was selected from each session and the AFMBioMed-JMR Young Investigator Awards were presented to: <i>Kenichi Umeda</i> (Kanazawa University, Japan), <i>Nelmary Roas-Escalona</i> (Aalto University, Finland), <i>Constanca Caldeira Junior</i> (The Barcelona Institute of Science and Technology, Spain), and <i>Christian Ganser</i> (Exploratory Research Center on Life and Living Systems, National Institutes of Natural Sciences, Japan).</p><p>In addition, in order to encourage young researchers to participate in the conference, a “Young Researcher Travel Award” was established to provide up to 500 USD per person for travel expenses, which was awarded to the following nine researchers: <i>Irma Custovic</i> (Université Bourgogne Franche-Comté, France), <i>You-Rong Lin</i> (Kanazawa University, Japan), <i>Nelmary Roas-Escalona</i> (Aalto University, Finland), <i>Klara Strobl</i> (Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Spain), <i>Misato Iwashita</i> (Korea Brain Research Institute, Republic of Korea), <i>Yuzhen Feng</i> (Zernike Instituut, Rijksuniversiteit Groningen, the Netherlands), <i>Samuel Leitao</i> (EPFL, Switzerland), <i>Jonathan Roth</i> (The State University of New Jersey, USA), and <i>Xiaobin Yao</i> (Friedrich Schiller University Jena, Germany).</p><p>The conference also featured a half-day pre-conference Bruker Workshop and Training Day at AFM BioMed Conference 2022. A highlight of the conference was a visit to Gamagori City, located adjacent to Okazaki City. Attendees explored Takeshima, known as a spiritual spot, and strolled along the coastline, culminating in a banquet dinner at the historical Gamagori Classic Hotel. Bruker also sponsored a dinner at the restaurant “AQUA GARDEN GEIHINKAN OKAZAKI” on the second night as a Bruker Dinner.</p><p>We wish to thank all the contributors to this Special Collection and more particularly the reviewers that participated in the rigorous peer review of the submitted manuscripts. We are glad to announce that the 11th AFM BioMed Conference will take place in Barcelona. The location is reminiscent of the birthplace of the conference in 2007 and, indeed, what better choice for a complete regeneration of the conference with a totally renewed organizational concept. We are looking forward to seeing you in Barcelona in spring 2025!</p><p>Takayuki Uchihashi: writing-review and editing (equal). Felix Rico: writing-review and editing (supporting). Jean-Luc Pellequer: writing-review and editing (lead).</p><p>The authors declare no conflicts of interest.</p>","PeriodicalId":16531,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Molecular Recognition","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":2.3000,"publicationDate":"2024-02-27","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1002/jmr.3077","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Tenth International AFMBioMed Conference on AFM in Life Sciences and Medicine, August 30–September 2, 2022, Nagoya-Okasaki, Japan\",\"authors\":\"Takayuki Uchihashi, Felix Rico, Jean-Luc Pellequer\",\"doi\":\"10.1002/jmr.3077\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p>Founded in June 2006, after a first seminal French-speaking conference held on the topic “Atelier Nanobiosciences: protéines et membranes” in <i>Nîmes</i> in June 2004, the AFMBioMed Conference brings researchers and students from around the world together to discuss the latest scientific results of atomic force microscopy in life sciences and medicine.<span><sup>1, 2</sup></span> A full account of the AFMBioMed history can be found here.<span><sup>3</sup></span> AFMBioMed organized its first international meeting in <i>Barcelona</i>, Spain, in spring 2007<span><sup>4</sup></span> and this was followed, at 18-month intervals, by <i>Monterey</i>, CA, USA, in fall 2008,<span><sup>5</sup></span> <i>Crveni otok</i> (Red Island) near the Adriatic City of Rovinj, Croatia, in spring 2010,<span><sup>6</sup></span> <i>Paris</i> in summer 2011,<span><sup>7</sup></span> <i>Shanghai</i> in spring 2013,<span><sup>8</sup></span> <i>San Diego</i> in fall 2014,<span><sup>9</sup></span> <i>Porto</i> in spring 2016,<span><sup>10</sup></span> <i>Krakow</i> in fall 2017,<span><sup>3</sup></span> and <i>Münster</i> in fall 2019.<span><sup>11</sup></span></p><p>Members of the scientific committee for the tenth edition of the AFMBioMed meeting in Nagoya-Okasaki, Japan, in summer 2022 include past and present organizers <i>Takayuki Uchihashi</i> (Nagoya University, Japan), <i>Hermann Schillers</i> (University of Münster, Germany), <i>Malgorzata Lekka</i> (Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland), <i>Susana R. Sousa</i> (i3S|INEB, Porto, Portugal), <i>Adam Engler</i> (UCSD, San Diego, USA), <i>Jun Hu</i> (SINAP, Shanghai, China), <i>Sanjay Kumar</i> (University of California, Berkeley, USA), <i>Daniel Navajas</i> (Universitat de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain), <i>Simon Scheuring</i> (Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM) U1006, Marseille, France), <i>Vesna Svetlicic</i> (Rudjer Boskovic Institute, Zagreb, Croatia), the original founders of the conference <i>Pierre Parot</i> (IACA) and <i>Jean-Luc Pellequer</i> (CEA/DRF, Institut de Biologie Structurale, Grenoble, France), as well as the four invited chairs: <i>Alice Pyne</i> (Sheffield University, UK), <i>Felix Rico</i> (Aix-Marseille University—INSERM, France), <i>Takaharu Okajima</i> (Hokkaido University, Japan), and <i>Noriyuki Kodera</i> (Kanazawa University, Japan).</p><p>The 10th AFMBioMed was scheduled as a landmark conference. Despite the round number 10, it was the last conference organized with a single AFM sponsor (more below). It should have been the last conference that Pierre Parot, the co-founder of AFMBioMed, would participate in. At the end of the 9th conference in Münster, the 10th AFMBioMed conference was initially planned for spring 2021, the cherry blossom season in Japan. Unfortunately, the COVID-19 pandemic modified our plan. The conference was postponed every 6 months while waiting for the reopening of travel to Japan (as well as other countries). In early 2022, the organizing committee rejected the idea of organizing another online conference and we placed all our hope on the end of summer 2022. Because of the uncertainty of this period, Pierre Parot was not able to attend this conference. It is a sad follow-up to announce that Pierre died in 2023 at the age of 73.</p><p>Pierre Parot (1950–2023) was an unusual researcher. Pierre was recruited as an Engineer at Commissariat à l'Energie Atomique (CEA)-Leti (Grenoble) in 1977, after 2 years as an Assistant at the Université des Sciences et Techniques du Languedoc, where he defended his thesis in Solid State Physics (Montpellier 1976) on the study of Metal-Solvent-Semiconductor structures by thermal stimulation methods, and a post-doctoral stay in Giessen (Germany). Since then, his professional activities focused mainly on medical and scientific instrumentation and fundamental research in biophysics, a field in which Pierre defended a “thèse d'état” (Marseille 1987) on structural and dynamic studies of pigment-protein complexes in photosynthetic bacteria. He continued to work on electron transfer in the bioenergetic chain as his main research topic at CEA-Cadarache (1983–1995). After a sabbatical leave as Associate Professor in a research laboratory at the University of Connecticut at Storrs (USA, 1989–1990), Pierre realized the importance of developing relations between the CEA and the University. He proposed a collaboration in the field of Bioenergetics and created a joint CEA-Université de la Méditerranée laboratory at Luminy (LBTE, 1996–2001). This personal initiative was supported by those who, long after Newton and Pasteur, believe that there are more wall-builders than bridge-builders.</p><p>After a serious assessment of this enriching adventure, Pierre decided that the experiment, though successful, should not be prolonged. He returned to the CEA Valrhô, at Marcoule, as part of a new scientific project. He joined the Service de Biochimie post-génomique et Toxicologie Nucléaire (SBTN), a new scientific venture of CEA in which a research unit was built from the ground up. During the installation phase, Pierre created a biophysics group specializing in near-field microscopy: Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM) for biological studies. At the time, AFM had a very poor image among decision-makers, disillusioned by unsuccessful prior attempts in life sciences in the 1990s. However, results in late 1990s obtained on native membranes of purple bacteria—a field in which Pierre had worked for a long time—convinced us (PP + JLP) of the extraordinary potential of this instrument. We quickly set ourselves the dual objective of obtaining images of isolated single molecules and understanding the mechanisms of protein–protein interactions, and most importantly protein–metal interactions, one of the priority objectives of the CEA nuclear toxicology program. With the creation of institutes of the CEA Life Sciences division (DSV) in January 2007, the group became the Molecular Interactions and Recognition Laboratory (LIRM), headed by JLP. Pierre Parot was a cornerstone of both the AFMBioMed conferences and summer schools. His contribution to the success of AFMBioMed and beyond will be remembered.\\n </p><p>Bruker had been the platinum sponsor of the AFMBioMed conference since 2007. The 10th conference was the last episode in this series. We are grateful for this long-term support from Bruker and their belief that AFM in life sciences is an important contribution to the field of Scanning Probe Microscopies. Among the Bruker-JPK's local organizers in the 2022 conference, we would like to acknowledge <i>Carmen Petterson</i> and <i>Oilibhe Pabsch</i>, as well as the congress office, namely, <i>Nao Morihashi</i> and <i>Tetsunari Kawaguchi</i>.</p><p>Other financial contributions from Wiley and Nagoya University are gratefully acknowledged.</p><p>The 2022 program featured three keynote and eight invited lectures by internationally renowned speakers, 58 oral presentations, and 28 poster presentations, with a total of 114 participants. The 2022 program also featured geographic diversity, with presentations from 18 countries on three continents!</p><p>Specialists from diverse fields, including cell biology, medicine, materials science, and physics, convened for both oral and poster presentations. These discussions centered on the latest technological advances and applications of AFM in areas such as Cell and Tissue Mechanics, Imaging and Force Measurement, and Novel Technology and Theory. Notable contributions included keynote lectures from <i>Simon Scheuring</i> (Cornell University, USA) and <i>Hirofumi Yamada</i> (Kyoto University, Japan). Invited talks were presented by <i>Roderick Lim</i> (University of Basel, Switzerland), <i>Adam J. Engler</i> (University of California, San Diego, USA), <i>Thomas Perkins</i> (JILA, NIST, University of Colorado, USA), and <i>Florence Tama</i> (Nagoya University, RIKEN, Japan). The sessions were chaired by <i>Takaharu Okajima</i> (Hokkaido University, Japan), <i>Felix Rico</i> (Aix-Marseille University, CNRS, INSERM, LAI, France), <i>Noriyuki Kodera</i> (Kanazawa University, Japan), and <i>Alice L.B. Pyne</i> (University of Sheffield, UK), who also gave a chairperson's lecture.</p><p>A special feature of the meeting was an online keynote lecture by <i>Cyrus Mody</i> (Maastricht University, the Netherlands), who discussed the state of scientific meetings in the post-COVID era. The keynote was followed by a fruitful discussion based on a questionnaire collected in advance from all participants.</p><p>The following three individuals were selected in the order mentioned below for the Best Poster Presentation Awards and were presented with prizes from Bruker: <i>Shigetaka Nishiguchi</i> (Exploratory Research Center on Life and Living Systems, National Institutes of Natural Sciences, Japan), <i>Sabrina Horn</i> (Institute of Molecular Pathology (IMP), Austria), and <i>Irma Custovic</i> (Université Bourgogne Franche-Comté, France).</p><p>The best oral presentation award was selected from each session and the AFMBioMed-JMR Young Investigator Awards were presented to: <i>Kenichi Umeda</i> (Kanazawa University, Japan), <i>Nelmary Roas-Escalona</i> (Aalto University, Finland), <i>Constanca Caldeira Junior</i> (The Barcelona Institute of Science and Technology, Spain), and <i>Christian Ganser</i> (Exploratory Research Center on Life and Living Systems, National Institutes of Natural Sciences, Japan).</p><p>In addition, in order to encourage young researchers to participate in the conference, a “Young Researcher Travel Award” was established to provide up to 500 USD per person for travel expenses, which was awarded to the following nine researchers: <i>Irma Custovic</i> (Université Bourgogne Franche-Comté, France), <i>You-Rong Lin</i> (Kanazawa University, Japan), <i>Nelmary Roas-Escalona</i> (Aalto University, Finland), <i>Klara Strobl</i> (Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Spain), <i>Misato Iwashita</i> (Korea Brain Research Institute, Republic of Korea), <i>Yuzhen Feng</i> (Zernike Instituut, Rijksuniversiteit Groningen, the Netherlands), <i>Samuel Leitao</i> (EPFL, Switzerland), <i>Jonathan Roth</i> (The State University of New Jersey, USA), and <i>Xiaobin Yao</i> (Friedrich Schiller University Jena, Germany).</p><p>The conference also featured a half-day pre-conference Bruker Workshop and Training Day at AFM BioMed Conference 2022. A highlight of the conference was a visit to Gamagori City, located adjacent to Okazaki City. Attendees explored Takeshima, known as a spiritual spot, and strolled along the coastline, culminating in a banquet dinner at the historical Gamagori Classic Hotel. Bruker also sponsored a dinner at the restaurant “AQUA GARDEN GEIHINKAN OKAZAKI” on the second night as a Bruker Dinner.</p><p>We wish to thank all the contributors to this Special Collection and more particularly the reviewers that participated in the rigorous peer review of the submitted manuscripts. We are glad to announce that the 11th AFM BioMed Conference will take place in Barcelona. The location is reminiscent of the birthplace of the conference in 2007 and, indeed, what better choice for a complete regeneration of the conference with a totally renewed organizational concept. We are looking forward to seeing you in Barcelona in spring 2025!</p><p>Takayuki Uchihashi: writing-review and editing (equal). Felix Rico: writing-review and editing (supporting). Jean-Luc Pellequer: writing-review and editing (lead).</p><p>The authors declare no conflicts of interest.</p>\",\"PeriodicalId\":16531,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"Journal of Molecular Recognition\",\"volume\":null,\"pages\":null},\"PeriodicalIF\":2.3000,\"publicationDate\":\"2024-02-27\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1002/jmr.3077\",\"citationCount\":\"0\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"Journal of Molecular Recognition\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"99\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/jmr.3077\",\"RegionNum\":4,\"RegionCategory\":\"生物学\",\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"Q3\",\"JCRName\":\"BIOCHEMISTRY & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Molecular Recognition","FirstCategoryId":"99","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/jmr.3077","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"生物学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"BIOCHEMISTRY & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY","Score":null,"Total":0}
Tenth International AFMBioMed Conference on AFM in Life Sciences and Medicine, August 30–September 2, 2022, Nagoya-Okasaki, Japan
Founded in June 2006, after a first seminal French-speaking conference held on the topic “Atelier Nanobiosciences: protéines et membranes” in Nîmes in June 2004, the AFMBioMed Conference brings researchers and students from around the world together to discuss the latest scientific results of atomic force microscopy in life sciences and medicine.1, 2 A full account of the AFMBioMed history can be found here.3 AFMBioMed organized its first international meeting in Barcelona, Spain, in spring 20074 and this was followed, at 18-month intervals, by Monterey, CA, USA, in fall 2008,5Crveni otok (Red Island) near the Adriatic City of Rovinj, Croatia, in spring 2010,6Paris in summer 2011,7Shanghai in spring 2013,8San Diego in fall 2014,9Porto in spring 2016,10Krakow in fall 2017,3 and Münster in fall 2019.11
Members of the scientific committee for the tenth edition of the AFMBioMed meeting in Nagoya-Okasaki, Japan, in summer 2022 include past and present organizers Takayuki Uchihashi (Nagoya University, Japan), Hermann Schillers (University of Münster, Germany), Malgorzata Lekka (Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland), Susana R. Sousa (i3S|INEB, Porto, Portugal), Adam Engler (UCSD, San Diego, USA), Jun Hu (SINAP, Shanghai, China), Sanjay Kumar (University of California, Berkeley, USA), Daniel Navajas (Universitat de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain), Simon Scheuring (Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM) U1006, Marseille, France), Vesna Svetlicic (Rudjer Boskovic Institute, Zagreb, Croatia), the original founders of the conference Pierre Parot (IACA) and Jean-Luc Pellequer (CEA/DRF, Institut de Biologie Structurale, Grenoble, France), as well as the four invited chairs: Alice Pyne (Sheffield University, UK), Felix Rico (Aix-Marseille University—INSERM, France), Takaharu Okajima (Hokkaido University, Japan), and Noriyuki Kodera (Kanazawa University, Japan).
The 10th AFMBioMed was scheduled as a landmark conference. Despite the round number 10, it was the last conference organized with a single AFM sponsor (more below). It should have been the last conference that Pierre Parot, the co-founder of AFMBioMed, would participate in. At the end of the 9th conference in Münster, the 10th AFMBioMed conference was initially planned for spring 2021, the cherry blossom season in Japan. Unfortunately, the COVID-19 pandemic modified our plan. The conference was postponed every 6 months while waiting for the reopening of travel to Japan (as well as other countries). In early 2022, the organizing committee rejected the idea of organizing another online conference and we placed all our hope on the end of summer 2022. Because of the uncertainty of this period, Pierre Parot was not able to attend this conference. It is a sad follow-up to announce that Pierre died in 2023 at the age of 73.
Pierre Parot (1950–2023) was an unusual researcher. Pierre was recruited as an Engineer at Commissariat à l'Energie Atomique (CEA)-Leti (Grenoble) in 1977, after 2 years as an Assistant at the Université des Sciences et Techniques du Languedoc, where he defended his thesis in Solid State Physics (Montpellier 1976) on the study of Metal-Solvent-Semiconductor structures by thermal stimulation methods, and a post-doctoral stay in Giessen (Germany). Since then, his professional activities focused mainly on medical and scientific instrumentation and fundamental research in biophysics, a field in which Pierre defended a “thèse d'état” (Marseille 1987) on structural and dynamic studies of pigment-protein complexes in photosynthetic bacteria. He continued to work on electron transfer in the bioenergetic chain as his main research topic at CEA-Cadarache (1983–1995). After a sabbatical leave as Associate Professor in a research laboratory at the University of Connecticut at Storrs (USA, 1989–1990), Pierre realized the importance of developing relations between the CEA and the University. He proposed a collaboration in the field of Bioenergetics and created a joint CEA-Université de la Méditerranée laboratory at Luminy (LBTE, 1996–2001). This personal initiative was supported by those who, long after Newton and Pasteur, believe that there are more wall-builders than bridge-builders.
After a serious assessment of this enriching adventure, Pierre decided that the experiment, though successful, should not be prolonged. He returned to the CEA Valrhô, at Marcoule, as part of a new scientific project. He joined the Service de Biochimie post-génomique et Toxicologie Nucléaire (SBTN), a new scientific venture of CEA in which a research unit was built from the ground up. During the installation phase, Pierre created a biophysics group specializing in near-field microscopy: Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM) for biological studies. At the time, AFM had a very poor image among decision-makers, disillusioned by unsuccessful prior attempts in life sciences in the 1990s. However, results in late 1990s obtained on native membranes of purple bacteria—a field in which Pierre had worked for a long time—convinced us (PP + JLP) of the extraordinary potential of this instrument. We quickly set ourselves the dual objective of obtaining images of isolated single molecules and understanding the mechanisms of protein–protein interactions, and most importantly protein–metal interactions, one of the priority objectives of the CEA nuclear toxicology program. With the creation of institutes of the CEA Life Sciences division (DSV) in January 2007, the group became the Molecular Interactions and Recognition Laboratory (LIRM), headed by JLP. Pierre Parot was a cornerstone of both the AFMBioMed conferences and summer schools. His contribution to the success of AFMBioMed and beyond will be remembered.
Bruker had been the platinum sponsor of the AFMBioMed conference since 2007. The 10th conference was the last episode in this series. We are grateful for this long-term support from Bruker and their belief that AFM in life sciences is an important contribution to the field of Scanning Probe Microscopies. Among the Bruker-JPK's local organizers in the 2022 conference, we would like to acknowledge Carmen Petterson and Oilibhe Pabsch, as well as the congress office, namely, Nao Morihashi and Tetsunari Kawaguchi.
Other financial contributions from Wiley and Nagoya University are gratefully acknowledged.
The 2022 program featured three keynote and eight invited lectures by internationally renowned speakers, 58 oral presentations, and 28 poster presentations, with a total of 114 participants. The 2022 program also featured geographic diversity, with presentations from 18 countries on three continents!
Specialists from diverse fields, including cell biology, medicine, materials science, and physics, convened for both oral and poster presentations. These discussions centered on the latest technological advances and applications of AFM in areas such as Cell and Tissue Mechanics, Imaging and Force Measurement, and Novel Technology and Theory. Notable contributions included keynote lectures from Simon Scheuring (Cornell University, USA) and Hirofumi Yamada (Kyoto University, Japan). Invited talks were presented by Roderick Lim (University of Basel, Switzerland), Adam J. Engler (University of California, San Diego, USA), Thomas Perkins (JILA, NIST, University of Colorado, USA), and Florence Tama (Nagoya University, RIKEN, Japan). The sessions were chaired by Takaharu Okajima (Hokkaido University, Japan), Felix Rico (Aix-Marseille University, CNRS, INSERM, LAI, France), Noriyuki Kodera (Kanazawa University, Japan), and Alice L.B. Pyne (University of Sheffield, UK), who also gave a chairperson's lecture.
A special feature of the meeting was an online keynote lecture by Cyrus Mody (Maastricht University, the Netherlands), who discussed the state of scientific meetings in the post-COVID era. The keynote was followed by a fruitful discussion based on a questionnaire collected in advance from all participants.
The following three individuals were selected in the order mentioned below for the Best Poster Presentation Awards and were presented with prizes from Bruker: Shigetaka Nishiguchi (Exploratory Research Center on Life and Living Systems, National Institutes of Natural Sciences, Japan), Sabrina Horn (Institute of Molecular Pathology (IMP), Austria), and Irma Custovic (Université Bourgogne Franche-Comté, France).
The best oral presentation award was selected from each session and the AFMBioMed-JMR Young Investigator Awards were presented to: Kenichi Umeda (Kanazawa University, Japan), Nelmary Roas-Escalona (Aalto University, Finland), Constanca Caldeira Junior (The Barcelona Institute of Science and Technology, Spain), and Christian Ganser (Exploratory Research Center on Life and Living Systems, National Institutes of Natural Sciences, Japan).
In addition, in order to encourage young researchers to participate in the conference, a “Young Researcher Travel Award” was established to provide up to 500 USD per person for travel expenses, which was awarded to the following nine researchers: Irma Custovic (Université Bourgogne Franche-Comté, France), You-Rong Lin (Kanazawa University, Japan), Nelmary Roas-Escalona (Aalto University, Finland), Klara Strobl (Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Spain), Misato Iwashita (Korea Brain Research Institute, Republic of Korea), Yuzhen Feng (Zernike Instituut, Rijksuniversiteit Groningen, the Netherlands), Samuel Leitao (EPFL, Switzerland), Jonathan Roth (The State University of New Jersey, USA), and Xiaobin Yao (Friedrich Schiller University Jena, Germany).
The conference also featured a half-day pre-conference Bruker Workshop and Training Day at AFM BioMed Conference 2022. A highlight of the conference was a visit to Gamagori City, located adjacent to Okazaki City. Attendees explored Takeshima, known as a spiritual spot, and strolled along the coastline, culminating in a banquet dinner at the historical Gamagori Classic Hotel. Bruker also sponsored a dinner at the restaurant “AQUA GARDEN GEIHINKAN OKAZAKI” on the second night as a Bruker Dinner.
We wish to thank all the contributors to this Special Collection and more particularly the reviewers that participated in the rigorous peer review of the submitted manuscripts. We are glad to announce that the 11th AFM BioMed Conference will take place in Barcelona. The location is reminiscent of the birthplace of the conference in 2007 and, indeed, what better choice for a complete regeneration of the conference with a totally renewed organizational concept. We are looking forward to seeing you in Barcelona in spring 2025!
Takayuki Uchihashi: writing-review and editing (equal). Felix Rico: writing-review and editing (supporting). Jean-Luc Pellequer: writing-review and editing (lead).
期刊介绍:
Journal of Molecular Recognition (JMR) publishes original research papers and reviews describing substantial advances in our understanding of molecular recognition phenomena in life sciences, covering all aspects from biochemistry, molecular biology, medicine, and biophysics. The research may employ experimental, theoretical and/or computational approaches.
The focus of the journal is on recognition phenomena involving biomolecules and their biological / biochemical partners rather than on the recognition of metal ions or inorganic compounds. Molecular recognition involves non-covalent specific interactions between two or more biological molecules, molecular aggregates, cellular modules or organelles, as exemplified by receptor-ligand, antigen-antibody, nucleic acid-protein, sugar-lectin, to mention just a few of the possible interactions. The journal invites manuscripts that aim to achieve a complete description of molecular recognition mechanisms between well-characterized biomolecules in terms of structure, dynamics and biological activity. Such studies may help the future development of new drugs and vaccines, although the experimental testing of new drugs and vaccines falls outside the scope of the journal. Manuscripts that describe the application of standard approaches and techniques to design or model new molecular entities or to describe interactions between biomolecules, but do not provide new insights into molecular recognition processes will not be considered. Similarly, manuscripts involving biomolecules uncharacterized at the sequence level (e.g. calf thymus DNA) will not be considered.