Chairs:
Eugene M. Oltz, Washington Univ. Sch. of Med., AAI Program Committee Chair
Jennifer A. Punt, Univ. of Pennsylvania Sch. of Vet. Med.
Speakers:
This workshop intends to bring a broad audience up-to-date on a few emerging or rapidly changing fields or areas of technological innovation. Expert lecturers will provide an overview of each trending topic with an emphasis on communicating big picture concepts.
Sponsored by the AAI Membership Committee
(Badge and invitation required)
AAI welcomes new Regular, Associate, and Postdoctoral Fellow members to meet each other at a relaxed gathering. Members of the AAI Membership Committee, AAI President Wayne Yokoyama, and fellow Council members and Chairs from various AAI committees will join new members for casual conversation and light refreshments.
Wayne M. Yokoyama
Washington Univ. Sch. of Med., AAI President
50 years (well, almost!) in immunology
Emil R. Unanue, Washington Univ. Sch. of Med.
Introduction
Chair:
Wayne M. Yokoyama, Washington Univ. Sch. of Med., AAI President
Award Recipient:
Laurie H. Glimcher, Dana-Farber Cancer Inst., Harvard Med. Sch.
AAI President Wayne M. Yokoyama will introduce the awardee and present the award prior to the start of the President’s Address.
The AAI Lifetime Achievement Award is the highest honor bestowed by the AAI Council upon an AAI member. This award recognizes a deserving member for a remarkable career of scientific achievement and for contributions to AAI and the field of immunology.
Sponsored by the AAI Committee on Public Affairs
AAI welcomes the 2018-19 AAI Public Policy Fellows to this first meeting with members of the AAI Committee on Public Affairs and the AAI Public Affairs staff. Discussion topics will cover the upcoming program year, including the Fellows’ 2019 Capitol Hill visit to advocate for increased support for biomedical research and the National Institutes of Health.
Chairs:
Amy S. Weinmann, Univ. of Alabama, Birmingham
Boris Reizis, New York Univ. Sch. of Med.
Speakers:
Chairs:
Frederic Geissmann, Mem. Sloan Kettering Cancer Ctr.
Gretchen Diehl, Baylor Col. of Med.
Speakers:
Chairs:
Bernard A. Fox, Earle A. Chiles Res. Inst.
Leisha Emens, Johns Hopkins Univ.
Speakers:
Supported in part by a grant to the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology (FASEB) from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS), National Institutes of Health [FASEB MARC Program: T36-GM008637-21NCE]
Chair:
Mary T. Litzinger, Educ. and Awards Dept., AAI
Speaker:
For anyone seeking a job outside of academe, how you present yourself on paper is critical. A well-prepared résumé can make all the difference in securing that interview. The focus of this session will be on the important elements of a résumé, the differences between a résumé and the standard academic curriculum vitae, and the information needed to make a good impression. In this special career development session, attendees will be instructed in how to transform their CVs into professional résumés. Small breakout sessions for individual consulting will follow. Bring your CV!
Chairs:
Federico Mingozzi, INSERM, Univ. of Pittsburgh Med. Ctr., Genethon
Roland W. Herzog, Univ. of Florida
Speakers:
Chairs:
Federica Sallusto, Inst. for Res. in Biomedicine, Bellinzona
Susan Swain, Univ. of Massachusetts Med. Sch.
Speakers:
Sponsored by the AAI Education Committee
Chairs:
Anil K. Bamezai, Villanova Univ.
David W. Mullins, Dartmouth Col.
Panelists:
Breakout Session Leaders:
Are you looking for new ideas or strategies to enliven and improve your teaching? If so, please join us for this special interest group, which will focus on strategies that instructors can use to successfully convey immunology concepts to students at the undergraduate and graduate level. Topics will include the use of clinical correlations, writing, immediate feedback assessment, and more. The session will end with structured breakout discussion groups on team-based learning, undergraduate/graduate education topics, and medical school teaching topics. Current educators, new faculty, and trainees with an interest in teaching are welcome.
Chair:
Robert J. Binder, Univ. of Pittsburgh; AAI Minority Affairs Committee Chair
Networking skills have never been more crucial to ensure success for early/mid-career scientists, including those traditionally under-represented in biomedical research. At the roundtable, take advantage of the opportunity to meet in small-group format with accomplished, senior immunologists to hear how they have handled the career challenges you now face and learn what they believe will work for you today. Then, practice networking in a relaxed environment offering a structured networking exercise and personalized feedback on communicating your scientific interests/objectives most effectively. Scientists and trainees of all backgrounds are encouraged to attend! Registration Fee: $30 (Includes lunch plus coffee during networking hour.)
Discussion topics and table leaders:
Support in part provided by the American Association of Veterinary Immunologists
Chairs:
Crystal Loving, Natl. Animal Dis. Ctr., ARS, USDA; AAI Veterinary Immunology Committee Chair
Renukaradhya Gourapura, Ohio State Univ. Col. of Vet. Med.
Speakers:
This symposium will emphasize factors impacting neonatal immune development and protection against disease across various animal systems. Whereas transitioning from a sterile environment to a world with a multitude of microbes makes a neonate vulnerable to infection, exposure to the microbial world is important for immune maturation, but poses a risk to neonatal health. Maternal-derived immune factors can provide protection during the vulnerable neonatal period, and various methods are being utilized to exploit maternal immunity or enhance neonatal acquired immunity. This symposium will highlight factors that can improve or impede neonatal health, identifying commonalities relevant to both human and animal health.
Chair:
Tina McIntyre, CSR, NIH
Panelists:
This workshop will provide participants with an overview of NIH grant submission, assignment, review, and funding opportunities. Emphasis will be given to identification of the most appropriate funding agencies and mechanisms available through NIH, how to make an application “reviewer friendly,” and other strategies that contribute to applications that succeed in obtaining research funding. The workshop will also provide information on how to understand the peer review system, which is essential to competing successfully for funding, with a focus on recent changes to the review process. NIH review and program staff will provide a broad array of expertise and encourage questions from seminar participants. This workshop is open to anyone interested in learning more about preparing an NIH grant application and obtaining NIH funding. Trainees and independent investigators are welcome.
Chairs:
Peter Heeger, Icahn Sch. of Med., Mount Sinai
Maria-Lusia Alegre, Univ. of Chicago
Speakers:
Chairs:
Hans-Gustaf Ljunggren, Karolinska Inst.
Katy Rezvani, MD Anderson Cancer Ctr.
Speakers:
Chair:
M. Michele Hogan, AAI, Executive Director
AAI reports on the “state of the association” to its members at every AAI annual meeting. Members will hear from the Executive Director, the Secretary-Treasurer, the Editors-in-Chief of AAI journals (The Journal of Immunology and ImmunoHorizons), and the Chair of the Committee on Public Affairs on the financial standing of AAI and other matters of importance to the membership. Selected 2018 AAI awards will also be presented during this session.
AAI Distinguished Service Award
For enduring and exemplary service to AAI and the immunology community
Wendy L. Havran, Scripps Res. Inst.
AAI annually provides more than 700 AAI meeting travel awards and grants to recognize the promise and promote the professional development of investigators of all career stages. Travel award and grant presentations and acknowledgments at the business meeting will include:
Pfizer-Showell Travel Award
To recognize the professional promise of an early-career investigator
Jakob von Moltke, Ph.D., Assistant Professor, Univ. of Washington
Chambers-Thermo Fisher Scientific Memorial Award
To advance the career of an early-career scientist who attends the AAI annual meeting and presents an outstanding abstract specifically in the area of cancer biology
Weiyi Peng, M.D., Ph.D., Assistant Professor, Univ. of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Ctr.
Lefrançois-BioLegend Memorial Award
To advance the career of a trainee who attends the AAI annual meeting and presents an outstanding abstract specifically in the area of mucosal immunology
Neil Surana, M.D., Ph.D., Postdoctoral Fellow, Boston Children’s Hosp.
AAI-Thermo Fisher Trainee Achievement Awards
To recognize promising trainees in the field of immunology
Munir Akkaya, M.D., D.Phil., Postdoctoral Fellow, NIAID, NIH
Yuefeng Huang, Ph.D., Postdoctoral Fellow, NIAID, NIH
Jessica Kotov, Graduate Student, Univ. of Minnesota
Stephen Mok, Ph.D., Postdoctoral Fellow, Univ. of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Ctr.
Spencer C. Wei, Ph.D., Postdoctoral Fellow, Univ. of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Ctr.
Qifan Zhu, Graduate Student, Univ. of Tennessee Hlth. Sci. Ctr., St. Jude Children’s Res. Hosp.
Acknowledgments
Chair:
M. Michele Hogan, AAI
Award Recipient:
Wendy L. Havran, Scripps Res. Inst.
AAI Executive Director M. Michele Hogan will introduce the awardee and present the award during the AAI Business Meeting.
The AAI Distinguished Service Award recognizes Dr. Havran for enduring and exemplary service to AAI and the immunology community.
Chairs:
Thomas F. Gajewski, Univ. of Chicago Med. Ctr.; AAI Clinical Immunology Committee Chair
Megan Sykes, Columbia Univ.
Speakers:
While translational research has traditionally moved basic immunology knowledge forward into clinical application, varying clinical presentations of human immune-related disease processes, as well as variability in therapeutic outcomes, have provided opportunities for discovery of novel mechanistic hypotheses directly from patients. These types of investigations have been enabled by key technologies, including single-cell assays, high-throughput genomic sequencing, and improved bioinformatic algorithms. Tissues being sampled include biopsy material from target organs, peripheral blood cells and serum/plasma, germline DNA, and stool for microbiota analysis. Such work is accelerating therapeutic advances in autoimmunity, solid organ transplantation, and cancer immunotherapy. A sampling of presentations will highlight opportunities in reverse translational immunology research.
Chairs:
Sarah L. Gaffen, Univ. of Pittsburgh
Shao-Cong Sun, MD Anderson Cancer Ctr.
Speakers:
Chairs:
Woong-Kyung Suh, Montreal Clin. Res. Inst.
Je-Min Choi, Hanyang Univ.
Speakers:
Generously supported by BD Biosciences
Chair:
Wayne M. Yokoyama, Washington Univ. Sch. of Med., AAI President
Award Recipient:
Hai Qi, Tsinghua Univ., China
T-B interactions and the germinal center response
AAI President Wayne M. Yokoyama and Robert Balderas, Vice President of Biological Sciences, BD Biosciences, will introduce the awardee and present the award immediately prior to Dr. Qi’s lecture.
The AAI-BD Biosciences Investigator Award recognizes an investigator for early-career achievement in immunology research.
Jeffrey A. Bluestone
Univ. of California, San Francisco
Treg-mediated immune tolerance in health and disease
Chair:
Eugene M. Oltz, Washington Univ. Sch. of Med., AAI Program Committee Chair
Sponsored by the AAI Education Committee
Chair:
Kerry A. Casey, MedImmune
Panelists:
Many opportunities exist in industry for scientists with advanced degrees. There are positions in laboratory research, program management, business development, regulatory affairs, clinical trials oversight, medical liaison, and more. This panel features scientists employed in a variety of positions in industry discussing their career paths and the skills required for success in each. Following the panel discussion, enjoy casual conversation with the speakers and other scientists from industry at a networking reception.
Generously sponsored by Sheridan Journal Services
Editorial Board members meet to discuss items of interest and concern regarding The JI and IH specifically, and scientific publishing in general.
Chairs:
Bana Jabri, Univ. of Chicago
Michael J. Lenardo, NIAID, NIH
Speakers:
Chairs:
Carla V. Rothlin, Yale Sch. of Med.
Andrew A. Oberst, Univ. of Washington
Speakers:
Chairs:
Rebecca A. Fuldner, NIA, NIH
Ken Dorshkind, Univ. of California, Los Angeles
Speakers:
Chair:
Courtney R. Pinard, Education and Awards Dept., AAI
Speaker:
Postdoctoral training is the time to develop the research skills you will need to succeed as an independent scientist. It is, however, just as important to realize that you need to develop your professional skills to prepare you for your career path at the same time. This session will highlight ways of getting the most out of your postdoctoral training, relating successfully with your mentor, and understanding how to use the resources available to you to ensure that your training prepares you for the transition into the next phase of your career.
Chair:
Beth A. Garvy, Professor, Univ. of Kentucky; AAI Committee on Public Affairs Chair
Speakers:
The current funding environment has raised serious concerns about the long-term viability of the biomedical research enterprise, as securing NIH grants has become increasingly difficult for scientists early in their careers. To address this issue, NIH launched the Next Generation Researchers Initiative (NGRI) in June 2017 to increase support for meritorious Early Stage Investigators (ESIs) and Early Established Investigators (EEIs). Despite the Initiative’s laudable goals, many questions remain, including how NIH Institutes and Centers will reprioritize funds to support these early and mid-career investigators, and how it will impact those who are not targeted by the program. Speakers will discuss NIH implementation of the Initiative; provide a variety of perspectives on its progress, challenges, and future directions; answer audience questions; and listen to attendees’ feedback.
Supported in part by a grant to the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology (FASEB) from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS), National Institutes of Health [FASEB MARC Program: T36-GM008637-21NCE]
Chair:
Mary T. Litzinger, Educ. and Awards Dept., AAI
Speaker:
This session will be focused on tips and techniques to help you successfully navigate the interview process. Emphasis will be on how you can present yourself in the best possible light. You will also learn how to respond to unexpected questions. This session is open to anyone but is especially intended for student and postdoctoral attendees.
Chairs:
Jenny Ting, Univ. of North Carolina
Kuo-I Lin, Genomics Res. Ctr., Academia Sinica
Speakers:
Chairs:
Gerald V. Denis, Boston Univ. Sch. of Med.
Neil M. Iyengar, Mem. Sloan Kettering Cancer Ctr.
Speakers:
Chair:
Laura A. Solt, Scripps Res. Inst.; AAI Committee on the Status of Women Chair
At this popular session, attendees will have the opportunity to meet with experienced scientists to explore specific career issues important to men and women in science today. Gain insights into issues you are confronting in your own careers. Topics include international opportunities in science, succeeding in graduate school, participating in NIH Study Sections, considerations for scientists in M.D.-Ph.D. careers, and exciting careers outside of the bench. There are also table discussions on navigating work-life issues, such as balancing careers with family and transitioning from specific career stages, that may be relevant to any work environment (academic research, biotech industry, governmental agencies, non-profit). Don’t miss this great networking opportunity! Registration Fee: $30 (Lunch included.)
Discussion topics and table leaders:
Generously supported by BioLegend
Chair:
Wayne M. Yokoyama, Washington Univ. Sch. of Med., AAI President
Award Recipient:
Jason G. Cyster, HHMI, Univ. of California, San Francisco
Deciphering the guidance cue code for B cell immunity
AAI President Wayne M. Yokoyama and Gene Lay, President and CEO, BioLegend, will introduce the awardee and present the award immediately prior to Dr. Cyster’s lecture.
The AAI-BioLegend Herzenberg Award recognizes outstanding research contributions to the field of immunology in the area of B cell biology.
Chairs:
Brian D. Evavold, Univ. of Utah; AAI Publications Committee Chair
Pamela J. Fink, Univ. of Washington Sch. of Med.; Editor-in-Chief, The Journal of Immunology
Speakers:
In this session sponsored by the AAI Publications Committee, experienced editors will provide valuable insights to the processes of preparing a manuscript and responding to reviewers’ comments.
Panelists will address questions such as: When writing a manuscript, what steps can an author take to enhance its impact on editors, reviewers and, if accepted for publication, on readers? What are recommended practices for responding to reviewers’ comments? How can authors enhance the presentation of data in figures? In addition, the Editor-in-Chief of The Journal of Immunology will speak on how to avoid possible ethical missteps in scientific publishing.
Chairs:
Michael C. Humble, NIEHS, NIH
Andrij Holian, Univ. of Montana
Speakers:
Chairs:
Alison Deckhut Augustine, NIAID, NIH
Gil Mor, Yale Univ.
Speakers:
Chairs:
Bing Sun, Shanghai Inst. of Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Leslie Berg, Univ. of Massachusetts Med. Ctr.
Speakers:
Chairs:
Viviana P. Ferreira, Univ. of Toledo Col. of Med .
Rick Wetsel, Univ. of Texas Hlth. Sci. Ctr., Houston
Speakers:
Generously supported by Thermo Fisher Scientific
Chair:
Wayne M. Yokoyama, Washington Univ. Sch. of Med., AAI President
Award Recipient:
Akiko Iwasaki, HHMI, Yale Sch. of Med.
Learning immunology from viruses
AAI President Wayne M. Yokoyama and Christoph Hergersberg, Vice President of Research and Development, Thermo Fisher Scientific, will introduce the awardee and present the award immediately prior to Dr. Iwasaki’s lecture.
The AAI-Thermo Fisher Meritorious Career Award recognizes a mid-career scientist for exceptional research contributions to the field of immunology.
Pamela J. Fink
Univ. of Washington Sch. of Med.
Educating T cells from the cradle through adolescence
Chair:
Eugene M. Oltz, Washington Univ. Sch. of Med., AAI Program Committee Chair
Generously sponsored by BioLegend
(Badge and invitation required)
AAI honors the dedicated member volunteers of the association—committee members, editors, abstract programming chairs, and others—who work on the membership’s behalf throughout the year by giving generously of their time in support of the AAI mission. Open (by invitation only) to 2017-2018 AAI volunteers.
Chairs:
Robert D. Schreiber, Washington Univ. Sch. of Med.
Nina Bhardwaj, Icahn Sch. of Med. at Mount Sinai
Speakers:
Chairs:
Janelle S. Ayres, Salk Inst.
Lisa Osborne, Univ. of British Columbia, Canada
Speakers:
Chairs:
Christine Peterson, Univ. of Iowa
Noah Butler, Univ. of Iowa
Speakers:
P’ng Loke, New York Univ., Alternatively activated macrophages during helminth infection
Emma Wilson, Univ. of California, Riverside, The neuroimmunological niche of Toxoplasma infection
Tiffany Borbon, Univ. of Iowa, Bacterial co-infection in murine cutaneous leishmaniasis
Angela Minassian, Oxford, Safety and immunogenicity of the novel Plasmodium falciparum blood stage vaccine RH5.1/AS01B in a phase 1/11a clinical trial
Chair:
Hans-Martin Jäck, Univ. of Erlangen-Nürnberg, Germany
Panelists:
Anne Hosmalin, Inst. Cochin, France
Christopher J. Paige, Princess Margaret Cancer Ctr., Canada
Bing Sun, Chinese Acad. of Sci., China
Winfried F. Pickl, Med. Univ. of Vienna, Austria
Working as a scientist outside of the U.S. requires curiosity, adaptability, and open-mindedness, which are valuable qualities important for success in any career. Given the international reach of science, this new session will help immunologists learn about opportunities to gain professional experience beyond the U.S. This panel features scientists employed at academic or research institutions around the globe. Panelists will discuss the postdoctoral fellowship and grant application process; the benefits of international training and employment; the challenges in finding science-related jobs outside of the U.S.; and the process of moving your lab to another country. This session is open to anyone.
Chairs:
Diana Dudziak, Univ. Hosp. Erlangen
Bjӧrn Clausen, Univ. Med. Ctr. of the Johannes Gutenberg Univ. Inst. for Molec. Med.
Speakers:
Chairs:
Robert A. Clark, Univ. of Texas Hlth. Sci. Ctr, San Antonio
Larry Schlesinger, Texas Biomed
Speakers:
Chairs:
Lauren A. Zenewicz, Univ. of Oklahoma Hlth. Sci. Ctr.
Nobuhiko Kamada, Univ. of Michigan
Speakers:
Sponsored by AAI Minority Affairs Committee
Chair:
Robert J. Binder, Univ. of Pittsburgh; AAI Minority Affairs Committee Chair
Speaker:
Since 2003, the AAI meeting has featured a scientific lecture presented by an AAI member who is an underrepresented minority investigator noted for scientific achievement and exemplary career success.
Chair:
Wayne M. Yokoyama, Washington Univ. Sch. of Med., AAI President
Speakers:
Chair:
Wayne M. Yokoyama, Washington Univ. Sch. of Med., AAI President
Award Recipient:
Marc K. Jenkins, Univ. of Minnesota Med. Sch.
AAI President Wayne M. Yokoyama, Stephen J. McSorley, Univ. of California, Davis, and Marion Pepper, Univ. of Washington, will introduce the awardee and present the award prior to the start of the President’s Symposium.
The AAI Excellence in Mentoring Award recognizes exemplary career contributions to a future generation of scientists.
Chairs:
Kelly McNagny, Univ. of British Columbia
Arthur Mortha, Univ. of Toronto
Speakers:
Chair:
Wayne M. Yokoyama, Washington Univ. Sch. of Med., AAI President
Award Recipient:
John J. O’Shea, NIAMS, NIH
Cytokine signaling: translational advances, future opportunities and challenges
AAI President Wayne M. Yokoyama will introduce the awardee and present the award immediately prior to Dr. O’Shea’s lecture.
The AAI-Steinman Award for Human Immunology Research recognizes an individual for significant, sustained achievement in immunology research pertinent to human disease pathogenesis, prevention, or therapy.
Randolph J. Noelle
Dartmouth Geisel Sch. of Med.
A panoramic VISTA of the immune system
Chair:
Eugene M. Oltz, Washington Univ. Sch. of Med., AAI Program Committee Chair
Generously sponsored by BioLegend
Stubb’s Bar-B-Q
801 Red River St.,
Austin, TX
This year’s Gala will be held at the Stubb’s Bar-B-Q, Austin’s premier indoor/outdoor music venue. Unwind with your colleagues for a boot stompin’ good time! Enjoy an authentic Texas style BBQ buffet with all the trimmings (vegetarian options provided), and dance to the music of The Nightowls, dubbed Austin’s “Soul Royalty.”
Chairs:
Jennifer L. Gommerman, Univ. of Toronto, Canada
Speakers:
Chairs:
Kevin J. Tracey, Feinstein Inst. for Med. Res.
Tajie H. Harris, Univ. of Virginia
Speakers: