Program


Tuesday09.02.202712:00 – 19:00

12:00 – 12:30
Registration & Welcome Coffee for Young Scientists' Satellite

Auditorium A

Registration will remain open until 16:00

12:30 – 12:35
Welcome Address
12:35 – 12:40
Introduction from YSS Chairs
12:40 – 13:00
YSS Keynote Lecture I
13:05 – 13:25
YSS Keynote Lecture II
13:25 – 13:55
Coffee Break
13:55 – 15:15
Scientific Symposium
15:15 – 15:45
Coffee Break
15:45 – 16:00
Introducing: LS2-supported Student Prize Winners

Sofia Surace & Emma Louisa Stöckli (Sonderpreis)
Alea Ducret, Lukas Müller, Benjamin Meyer and Arthur Petrov (Biologie Olympiade)
tba (Geneva Chemistry and Biochemistry days)

16:10 – 17:55
Workshop/Panel Discussion
17:55 – 18:00
Closing Remarks
18:00 – 19:00
YSS Networking Apéro


Wednesday10.02.202708:15 – 19:20

08:15 – 09:00
Registration & Welcome Coffee

Registration will remain open until 17:00

09:00 – 09:10
Welcome Address
09:10 – 09:45
The EMBO Keynote Lecture
Georg Erich WINTER
AITHYRA – Research Institute for Biomedical Artificial Intelligence
Visit Winter's Lab Page

More about Georg Erich Winter and this Talk

09:45 – 10:15
Lelio Orci 2026 Award Lecture

Introduction by Pierre Cosson

Winner will be announced in late 2026/early 2027. 

 

10:15 – 10:45
Coffee Break & Industry Exhibition
10:45 – 12:00
Special Plenary Session: The PIs of Tomorrow

PIOT finalists will be announced in late 2026. 

12:00 – 12:30
Prix Schläfli Award Ceremony and Lecture

Introduction by SCNAT

12:30 – 13:30
Lunch Break & Industry Exhibition

Catering for industry representatives will be open from 12:00

13:30 – 14:30
Poster Session I

All posters from Parallel Symposia Session I will be exhibited

13:30 – 15:00
Closed Feedback Session for PIs of Tommorow

Finalists and jury only

14:30 – 16:15
Parallel Symposia Session I
From Proteome to Mechanism: In Vivo Insights into Cellular Biology
Gender Health in Biomedical Research: Advancing Precision Therapeutics
Mini-symposium: From Cells to Systems: Integrating the 3Rs into Multiscale Biological Research
Mini-symposium: AI-enabled Exploration of Biological Interactions and Networks
16:15 – 16:45
Coffee Break & Industry Exhibition
16:45 – 17:20
The FEBS National Lecture

Chemical Rewiring of Biological Circuits for Cancer Therapy

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Cancer therapies have traditionally focused on inhibiting disease-driving proteins. An emerging alternative is to reprogram cellular circuitry by chemically rewiring protein function, interactions, localization, and fate. In this lecture, I will discuss recent advances in induced-proximity pharmacology and chemical biology that enable the rational manipulation of biological networks beyond conventional inhibition. Drawing on examples from targeted protein degradation, molecular glue discovery, transcriptional reprogramming, and chemically induced post-translational modifications, I will illustrate how small molecules can redirect endogenous cellular machinery to create new therapeutic mechanisms. These studies reveal opportunities to convert previously undruggable cancer dependencies into tractable therapeutic targets and suggest a broader framework in which medicines act not merely as inhibitors, but as programmable agents that rewire biological circuits. Together, these approaches point towards the possibility of re-imagining cancer therapy.  

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17:20 – 19:20
Industry Exhibition
17:45 – 19:20
Networking Apéro


Thursday11.02.202708:30 – 17:15

08:30 – 09:00
Registration & Welcome Coffee

Registration will remain open until 16:00

09:00 – 09:05
Welcome Address
09:05 – 09:40
Keynote Lecture I
Magdalena GÖTZ
Institute of Stem Cell Research, Helmholtz Zentrum München and Physiological Genomics, Biomedical Center, Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich
Visit Götz's Lab Page

More about Magdalena Götz and this Talk

Novel mechanisms of neurogenesis and neural repair

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Organelles such as centrosomes, nucleoli or mitochondria perform well-known common functions in all cell types. However, we found a surprisingly large degree of differences in composition in the context of development, disease and direct reprogramming. For example, the centrosome of human neural stem cells differs by more than half of its proteome from the one in neurons (O’Neill et al., Science 2022). Such cell type-specific composition also explains why some ubiquitous proteins have organ-specific defects, when mutated in patients, as they are only at a specific organelle in specific cell types. I will explain this for the splicing protein PRPF6 that plays specific roles at the centrosome in neural stem cells which is relevant for the disease periventricular heterotopia. I will then turn to organellar heterogeneity in direct neuronal reprogramming and discuss the role of mitochondria heterogeneity in this process and how to overcome hurdles in this conversion process due to late change of the mitochondrial proteome to a neuronal identity. I will then talk briefly about nucleolar heterogeneity, before turning to the cytoskeleton in the nucleus. I will talk about the discovery of a large number of microtubule-associated proteins in the nucleus, and discuss how the nuclear role of one of them affects neural stem cell fate and causes disease when mutated in patients. Taken together, these data highlight the concept of multiplying protein function with different roles at different organelles or cell compartments with relevance in development, disease and repair.

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09:40 – 10:20
Coffee Break & Industry Exhibition
10:20 – 12:05
Parallel Symposia Session II
Neuronal Circuit Vulnerability Underlying Neurodegeneration
Self-assembly Across Scales: from Cells to Ecosystems
Mini-symposium: Advanced Multicellular Models in Cardiac, Vascular and Lung Research
Mini-symposium: The Ryanodine Receptor – an Important Regulator of Physiological and Pathological Calcium Homeostasis and Skeletal and Cardiac Muscle Function
12:05 – 13:05
Lunch Break & Industry Exhibition
12:05 – 13:05
Physiology Section Board Meeting
12:05 – 13:05
SSEP Council Meeting
12:05 – 13:05
MCB Section Board Meeting
13:05 – 14:05
Poster Session II

All posters from Parallel Symposia Sessions II and III will be exhibited.

14:05 – 15:50
Parallel Symposia Session III
The Extracellular Matrix: A Nexus of Biological Interactions — From Molecular Networks to Tissue Function
Diving Inside Molecules of Cells and Tissues by Cryo-CLEM and Cryo-electron Tomography
Mini-symposium: Decoding Multicellular Self-Organization
Mini-symposium: Prions, Mnemons and Amyloids: Properties, Functions and Applications
15:50 – 16:10
Coffee Break & Industry Exhibition
16:10 – 16:40
Friedrich Miescher 2026 Award Lecture

Introduction by Daniel Legler

The winner will be announced in late 2026/early 2027.

16:40 – 17:10
Award Ceremony

PIOT, Poster and Exhibition Lottery Awards

17:10 – 17:15
Closing Remarks