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  • The Ringberg Colloquium on Self-Organization and Morphogenesis in Biological Systems took place between December 3–6, 2006 in a castle near Munich, Germany. Researchers from different areas of cell and developmental biology exchanged ideas about how biological systems are organized and dynamic at the same time. A dominant theme was that local interactions between molecules or cells can generate global order.

    • Benjamin S. Glick
    Meeting Report
  • Studies of how the eukaryotic nucleus is functionally organized have led to the realization that nuclei are incredibly dynamic. Many nuclear structures are actually by products of a large steady-state flux of macromolecules through a given domain. A recent conference in the south of France on Nuclear Structure and Dynamics brought together scientists with diverse perspectives on the nucleus to try to provide a more coherent picture of the nucleus's dynamic organization and how this architecture is entwined with epigenetic control of gene expression.

    • Asifa Akhtar
    • A. Gregory Matera
    Meeting Report
  • A fusion of cutting-edge research in cell biology, developmental biology and immunology made the recent workshop on Membrane Dynamics in Endocytosis an outstanding success. Members of an increasingly diverse community converged upon the small town of Sant Feliu de Guixols on the coast of Spain, between September 17–22, 2005, to discuss common themes emerging from their studies on membrane transport. Organized by Margaret Robinson (Cambridge, UK) and Howard Riezman (Geneva, Switzerland), the meeting covered diverse topics that highlighted essential roles for endocytosis during cell growth, development and parasitic invasion.

    • Barth D. Grant
    • Anjon Audhya
    Meeting Report
  • Research on genome stability and integrity now extends far beyond the biochemistry of DNA repair to encompass signal transduction pathways that span numerous aspects of cellular life. Derailed genomic integrity pathways can result in debilitating genetic disorders, premature ageing, predisposition to cancer and degenerative conditions. Current progress in this rapidly expanding field was the subject of an EMBO workshop, Maintenance of Genomic Integrity, that took place in June 2004 in Galway, Ireland.

    • Yosef Shiloh
    • Alan R. Lehmann
    Meeting Report
  • Chromatin architecture is modulated by a large number of enzymes, resulting in the proper regulation of transcription, replication, cell cycle progression, DNA repair, recombination and chromosome segregation. The structure, regulation and coordination of these enzymatic activities were the main topics of discussion at The Enzymology of Chromatin and Transcription Keystone Symposium held in Santa Fe, NM (March 10–16, 2003).

    • Mariela Jaskelioff
    • Craig L. Peterson
    Meeting Report