Calendar of events, awards and opportunities
Every week, we update this list with new meetings, awards, scholarships and events to help you get your ducks in a row. If you’d like us to feature something that you’re offering to the bioscience community, email us with the subject line “For calendar.” ASBMB members’ offerings take priority, and we do not promote products/services. Learn how to advertise in ASBMB Today.
ASBMB Lipid Research Division Seminar Series
The ASBMB Lipid Research Division features the work of young investigators at noon Eastern on Wednesdays. If you are interested in presenting, please contact John Burke. Register once to access the whole series.
Sept. 9 — Lipids in viral infection
Christine Toelzer, University of Bristol
Zunlong Ke, Medical Research Council Laboratory of ͵ÅÄ͵¿ú Biology
Yohei Ohashi, Medical Research Council Laboratory of ͵ÅÄ͵¿ú Biology
Chunmei Chang, University of California, Berkeley
Yael Alon, University of California, Davis
Roni Levin, The Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto
Sphingolipids in physiology and pathology
Christopher Clarke (Stony Brook Medicine), Giovanni D’Angelo (EPFL) and Liana C. Silva (Universidade de Lisboa) have organized a webinar series focused on sphingolipids, with support from LIPID MAPS and Avanti Polar Lipids. All are scheduled for 11 a.m. Eastern. You can view past webinars .
Sept. 7: "A tug-of-war: Flaviviruses and the hijacking of lipid pathways" by Fikadu Tafesse at Oregon Health & Science University
Sept. 7: "Sphingolipids and the unfolded protein response: The UPR activator ATF6 is activated by binding of dihydrosphingosine and dihydroceramide" by Maho Niwa at the University California, San Diego
Oct. 5: "Homeostatic and pathogenic roles of GM3 ganglioside" by Jin-ichi Inokuchi at Tohoku Medical and Pharmaceutical University
Women in STEM series
The ASBMB student chapter at Texas Weslayan University is running a series of webinars during September and October featuring women in STEM careers. The lineup is as follows.
Sept. 8: Dr. Nancy Street, associate dean at the University of Texas Southwestern Graduate School
Sept. 15: Aditi Sinha, global head of consumer an omnishopper data acquisition at The Nielsen Company
Sept. 22: Kathryn Linkens, research scientists II (synthetic chemistry) at Novartis Institutes for Biomedical Research
Oct. 13: Terri Kane, associate professor of nurse anesthesia and program director at Texas Wesleyan University
Oct 20: Viola Denninger, lead application scientist (clinical) at Fluidic Analytics
Sept. 9–Dec. 9: Webinars about science policy jobs
The University of Cincinnati's student-run science policy group is has invited a bunch of speakers to talk about the work they do. The Sept. 9 speaker will be Chloe McPherson of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers. You can see the rest of the lineup .
Sept. 10: Deadline to apply for 2020 Stanford.Berkeley.UCSF Next Generation Faculty Symposium
Stanford University, the University of California, Berkeley, and the University of California, San Francisco, are teaming up to present by "exceptional early-career scientists in the broad field of quantitative biological and biomedical sciences, with a track record of research productivity and a demonstrated commitment to enhancing diversity, equity, and inclusion." The event was created to put tenure-track job candidates on the radar of hiring committees before faculty searches even begin. Here's how the event website describes it: "Our primary goal with this program is to dramatically increase the number of talented candidates in faculty search pools who not only demonstrate promise to become great scientists but who will also become the next generation of great professors." Postdoctoral researchers and late-stage graduate students are eligible to apply. The deadline for applications is Sept. 10.
Sept. 15: Abstracts due for Society for Glycobiology meeting
The Society for Glycobiology's will be held virtually this year. Regular abstracts are due Sept. 15. Late-breaking abstracts are due Nov. 2. We want to point out one special talk at this meeting: of the Boston University School of Medicine will give the .
Sept. 16–23: Free virtual science festival
Attendees of all ages are invited to SciFest All Access, produced by the organizers of the annual USA Science & Engineering Festival. There will be more than 100 virtual booths and activities, plus performances, recruiters and a scavenger hunt.
Sept. 21–22: FASEB Research Conference
The Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology has a that culminates with "" Sept. 21–22. This conference is being organized by Claus Jorgensen at the University of Manchester, Donita Brady at the University of Pennsylvania and Natalia Jura at the University of California, San Francisco. (Jura recently won the ASBMB's inaugural Early-Career Leadership Award, which was established by the society's Women in Biochemistry and ͵ÅÄ͵¿ú Biology Committee.)
Oct. 1: Deadline for IUBMB fellowships
The International Union of Biochemistry and ͵ÅÄ͵¿ú Biology has — the Wood–Whelan Research Fellowships, the IUBMB Mid-Career Research Fellowships and the Tang Education Fellowships — and . The deadline to apply for all of them is Oct. 1.
Oct. 5: Deadline for microbiology award
The National Academy of Sciences is accepting nominations for the Selman A. Waksman Award, which recognizes significant contributions to the field of microbiology and carries a $20,000 purse.
Oct. 7: Deadline for DOE community college internship
The U.S. Department of Energy's Community College Internship Program places participants at labs at one of 16 agency locations to help kick-start their technical careers. There are three terms: summer, spring and fall. The agency is accepting applications for the spring term through Oct. 7. This is a paid internship.
Call for virtual scientific event proposals
The ASBMB provides members with a virtual platform to share scientific research and accomplishments and to discuss emerging topics and technologies with the BMB community.
The ASBMB will manage the technical aspects, market the event to tens of thousands of contacts and present the digital event live to a remote audience. Additional tools such as polling, Q&A, breakout rooms and post event Twitter chats may be used to facilitate maximum engagement.
Seminars are typically one to two hours long. A workshop or conference might be longer and even span several days.
Prospective organizers may submit proposals at any time. Decisions are usually made within four to six weeks.
Enjoy reading ASBMB Today?
Become a member to receive the print edition four times a year and the digital edition weekly.
Learn moreFeatured jobs
from the
Get the latest from ASBMB Today
Enter your email address, and we’ll send you a weekly email with recent articles, interviews and more.
Latest in Careers
Careers highlights or most popular articles
Upcoming opportunities
Just added: Register for ASBMB's virtual session on thriving in challenging academic or work environments.
Who decides when a grad student graduates?
Ph.D. programs often don’t have a set timeline. Students continue with their research until their thesis is done, which is where variability comes into play.
Upcoming opportunities
Submit an abstract for ASBMB's meeting on ferroptosis!
Join the pioneers of ferroptosis at cell death conference
Meet Brent Stockwell, Xuejun Jiang and Jin Ye — the co-chairs of the ASBMB’s 2025 meeting on metabolic cross talk and biochemical homeostasis research.
A brief history of the performance review
Performance reviews are a widely accepted practice across all industries — including pharma and biotech. Where did the practice come from, and why do companies continue to require them?
Upcoming opportunities
Save the date for ASBMB's in-person conferences on gene expression and O-GlcNAcylation in health and disease.