From chatterjee.n from gmail.com Tue Feb 3 10:57:29 2009 From: chatterjee.n from gmail.com (Nabanita Chatterjee) Date: Tue Feb 3 11:27:38 2009 Subject: [Drosophila] testes acetone powder Message-ID: Salutations to you fly people, I was wondering if any of you had a method for making testes acetone powder,which I am planning to use to preadsorb my antisera for immunofluorescence. would love to hear about it. Many Thanks Nabanita Chatterjee -- "To live and not to know why the cranes fly,why children are born,why the stars are in the sky.Either you know why you're alive or it's all nonsense,it's all dust in the wind" From brancojoana from hotmail.com Tue Feb 3 10:02:11 2009 From: brancojoana from hotmail.com (Joana Branco) Date: Tue Feb 3 17:10:35 2009 Subject: [Drosophila] Fly Traps Message-ID: Hello! I am currently facing the problem of too many flies loose in my lab. We hav= e been changing a lot of stocks=2C so there are many that just escape. Can anyone tell me an efficient way to make fly traps? I am using bottles= =2C with extra yeast paste=2C with a funnel on the top=2C but that doesn=92t solve t= he problem. Can anyone tell me what the best way is? Thank you all=2C Joana=20 _________________________________________________________________ Windows Live=99 Hotmail=AE:=85more than just e-mail.=20 http://windowslive.com/explore?ocid=3DTXT_TAGLM_WL_t2_hm_justgotbetter_expl= ore_012009= From ovef from uni-mainz.de Thu Feb 5 09:44:07 2009 From: ovef from uni-mainz.de (Vef, Dr. Olaf) Date: Thu Feb 5 09:53:15 2009 Subject: [Drosophila] AW: Dros Digest, Vol 46, Issue 2 In-Reply-To: <200902041705.n14H56806147@net.bio.net> References: <200902041705.n14H56806147@net.bio.net> Message-ID: <2CCAE9D34A30B649A1AD248EC2FD7A8FD90D6DA370@EXCHANGE-01.zdv.uni-mainz.de> Hi, we had good results with juice (e.g., grape) or even better wine or sparkling wine. Or you can add some of the yeast to the juice and let it brew. Drosos love alcohol too. The funnels we use were handmade (paper and glue) so we were able to produce a very small opening. good luck, Olaf ________________________________________ Von: dros-bounces@oat.bio.indiana.edu [dros-bounces@oat.bio.indiana.edu] im Auftrag von dros-request@oat.bio.indiana.edu [dros-request@oat.bio.indiana.edu] Gesendet: Mittwoch, 4. Februar 2009 18:05 An: dros@magpie.bio.indiana.edu Betreff: Dros Digest, Vol 46, Issue 2 Send Dros mailing list submissions to dros@net.bio.net To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visit http://www.bio.net/biomail/listinfo/dros or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help' to dros-request@net.bio.net You can reach the person managing the list at dros-owner@net.bio.net When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is more specific than "Re: Contents of Dros digest..." Today's Topics: 1. Fly Traps (Joana Branco) ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Message: 1 Date: Tue, 3 Feb 2009 15:02:11 +0000 From: Joana Branco Subject: [Drosophila] Fly Traps To: Message-ID: Content-Type: text/plain; charset="Windows-1252" Hello! I am currently facing the problem of too many flies loose in my lab. We have been changing a lot of stocks, so there are many that just escape. Can anyone tell me an efficient way to make fly traps? I am using bottles, with extra yeast paste, with a funnel on the top, but that doesn?t solve the problem. Can anyone tell me what the best way is? Thank you all, Joana _________________________________________________________________ Windows Live? Hotmail?:?more than just e-mail. http://windowslive.com/explore?ocid=TXT_TAGLM_WL_t2_hm_justgotbetter_explore_012009 ------------------------------ _______________________________________________ Dros mailing list Dros@net.bio.net http://www.bio.net/biomail/listinfo/dros End of Dros Digest, Vol 46, Issue 2 *********************************** From harveje from kellyservices.co.uk Thu Feb 5 10:04:58 2009 From: harveje from kellyservices.co.uk (James Harvey) Date: Thu Feb 5 10:47:29 2009 Subject: [Drosophila] AW: Dros Digest, Vol 46, Issue 2 In-Reply-To: <2CCAE9D34A30B649A1AD248EC2FD7A8FD90D6DA370@EXCHANGE-01.zdv.uni-mainz.de> Message-ID: Hello all I have found that using a very small net to catch flies with is quite effective, especially if the net has been soaked in gin. Best of! "Vef, Dr. Olaf" To: "dros@oat.bio.indiana.edu" Sent by: cc: dros-bounces@oat.bio. Subject: [Drosophila] AW: Dros Digest, Vol 46, Issue 2 indiana.edu 05/02/2009 14:44 Hi, we had good results with juice (e.g., grape) or even better wine or sparkling wine. Or you can add some of the yeast to the juice and let it brew. Drosos love alcohol too. The funnels we use were handmade (paper and glue) so we were able to produce a very small opening. good luck, Olaf ________________________________________ Von: dros-bounces@oat.bio.indiana.edu [dros-bounces@oat.bio.indiana.edu] im Auftrag von dros-request@oat.bio.indiana.edu [dros-request@oat.bio.indiana.edu] Gesendet: Mittwoch, 4. Februar 2009 18:05 An: dros@magpie.bio.indiana.edu Betreff: Dros Digest, Vol 46, Issue 2 Send Dros mailing list submissions to dros@net.bio.net To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visit http://www.bio.net/biomail/listinfo/dros or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help' to dros-request@net.bio.net You can reach the person managing the list at dros-owner@net.bio.net When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is more specific than "Re: Contents of Dros digest..." Today's Topics: 1. Fly Traps (Joana Branco) ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Message: 1 Date: Tue, 3 Feb 2009 15:02:11 +0000 From: Joana Branco Subject: [Drosophila] Fly Traps To: Message-ID: Content-Type: text/plain; charset="Windows-1252" Hello! I am currently facing the problem of too many flies loose in my lab. We have been changing a lot of stocks, so there are many that just escape. Can anyone tell me an efficient way to make fly traps? I am using bottles, with extra yeast paste, with a funnel on the top, but that doesn?t solve the problem. Can anyone tell me what the best way is? Thank you all, Joana _________________________________________________________________ Windows Live? Hotmail?:?more than just e-mail. http://windowslive.com/explore?ocid=TXT_TAGLM_WL_t2_hm_justgotbetter_explore_012009 ------------------------------ _______________________________________________ Dros mailing list Dros@net.bio.net http://www.bio.net/biomail/listinfo/dros End of Dros Digest, Vol 46, Issue 2 *********************************** _______________________________________________ Dros mailing list Dros@net.bio.net http://www.bio.net/biomail/listinfo/dros Kelly Services... we see work from a People perspective Find out more at www.kellyservices.com About Kelly Services Kelly Services, Inc. (NASDAQ: KELYA, KELYB) is a Fortune 500 company headquartered in Troy, Mich., offering staffing solutions that include temporary staffing services, outsourcing, vendor on-site and full-time placement. Kelly operates in 32 countries and territories. Kelly provides employment to more than 750,000 employees annually, with skills including office services, accounting, engineering, information technology, law, science, marketing, creative services, light industrial, education, and health care. CONFIDENTIAL The information contained in this email and any attachment is confidential. It is intended only for the named addressee(s). If you are not the named addressee(s) please notify the sender immediately and do not disclose, copy or distribute the contents to any other person other than the intended addressee(s) Kelly Services (UK) Ltd. Registered Office: Apple Market House 17 Union Street Kingston upon Thames Surrey KT1 1RR Registered in England and Wales No: 2749906 Please consider the environment before printing From dmerrill from k-state.edu Thu Feb 5 14:29:24 2009 From: dmerrill from k-state.edu (K-State Arthropod Genomics) Date: Thu Feb 5 14:39:35 2009 Subject: [Drosophila] Symposium Registration OPEN-Arthropod Genomics, Kansas City, 6/11-14/09 Message-ID: Frontiers in Arthropod Genomics 3rd ANNUAL ARTHROPOD GENOMICS SYMPOSIUM June 11 ? 14, 2009, in Kansas City, USA www.k-state.edu/agc/symp2009 Early registration deadline: Friday, March 20. Brochure available at: www.k-state.edu/agc/symp2009 KEYNOTE SPEAKERS: *Fotis C. Kafatos, Imperial College London, ?Evolutionary, functional and population genomics of mosquitoes: The perspective of a malariologist.? *William M. Gelbart, Harvard University, ?Opportunities & Challenges for Arthropod Genomics and Informatics in the NextGen World.? FEATURED SPEAKERS: * Volker Brendel, Iowa State University, ?Opportunities and challenges for automated genome annotation and modeling in a time of unlimited access to sequence data? * Susan J. Brown, Kansas State University, ?Profiling genome transcription during Tribolium development: From egg to eternity? * Jay D. Evans, USDA-ARS Bee Research Lab, Maryland, ?Chasing your honey: Genomic studies of honey bees and their pathogens? * Marian R. Goldsmith, University of Rhode Island, ?The new silk road: From Bombyx to butterflies? * David G. Heckel, Max Planck-Institute for Chemical Ecology, Jena, Germany, ?Insect defenses in chemical co-evolution: Transcriptional responses of the generalist herbivore Helicoverpa armigera to plant defense compounds, phytohormones, and insecticides? * Kristin Michel, Kansas State University, ?Mosquito salivary gland interactions with malaria parasites? * Terence Murphy, National Center for Biotechnology Information/NIH, ?Arthropod genome support at NCBI and the challenges of annotating genomes in the 21st century? * Marcelo Ortigao, Kansas State University, ?Sand fly functional genomics and beyond? * Yoonseong Park, Kansas State University, ?Evolutionary processes of the partnership between neuropeptides and their receptors? * Jos? Ribeiro, Laboratory of Malaria and Vector Research, NIH/NIAID, ?An insight into the spitome of the blood sucking Nematocera? * Denis Tagu, French Nat?l Inst. for Agricultural Research, Rennes, France, ?The pea aphid genome to study phenotypic plasticity? * Doreen Ware, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, ?Annotation and comparative analysis of plant genomes? * Stephen K. Wikel, University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, ?Tick-host-pathogen research in the post-genomic era? POSTER SESSIONS: There will be two poster sessions. A few platform presentations will be chosen from submitted poster abstracts. Deadline: May 15, 2009. SYMPOSIUM PROGRAM: The symposium sessions will begin Thursday evening, June 11, and continue on Friday and Saturday, with additional events on Saturday evening and Sunday morning. Speakers will present new insights from genomic approaches in arthropods and describe the development of tools for genomic analysis. Workshops will be held Thursday prior to the Symposium and Friday evening. Activities will conclude by noon on Sunday, June 14. ROUNDTABLE DISCUSSION: Sunday morning will highlight a roundtable discussion led by members of the ArthropodBase Consortium regarding the generation of integrated arthropod genome databases and tools for genome projects. Symposium attendees are invited to join the fun as we share our progress by providing feedback on these projects and proposing new possibilities. REGISTRATION: The early registration fee is $295 ($150 for graduate and undergraduate students) on or before March 20, and will include a welcome reception Thursday evening, breakfast and lunch on Friday and Saturday, and breakfast on Sunday. VENUE: The symposium will take place at the historic Marriott Hotel in downtown Kansas City. Participants are invited to stay Saturday night for an optional evening of jazz and KC barbeque. INFORMATION: Visit our website, www.k-state.edu/agc/symp2009, for complete details and brochure. Add your name to the Symposium mailing list, by sending your contact information to dmerrill@k-state.edu. QUESTIONS: Contact us at (785) 532-3482 or dmerrill@ksu.edu. Please share this announcement with colleagues and students! SPONSOR: Center for Genomic Studies on Arthropods Affecting Human, Animal and Plant Health, Kansas State University Susan J. Brown, Professor Director, Center for Genomic Studies on Arthropods Affecting Human, Animal and Plant Health and Robin E. Denell, Distinguished Professor Chair, AGC Symposium Organizing Committee by Doris Merrill, Program Coordinator K-State Arthropod Genomics Center Division of Biology, Kansas State University 116 Ackert Hall, Manhattan, KS 66506-4901 (785) 532-3482, dmerrill@k-state.edu www.k-state.edu/agc From nsatkinson from gmail.com Thu Feb 5 19:05:00 2009 From: nsatkinson from gmail.com (Nigel Atkinson) Date: Fri Feb 6 09:48:24 2009 Subject: [Drosophila] AW: Dros Digest, Vol 46, Issue 2 In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: <685774A5-A662-4CAE-AFAA-DB9B5E0A8CCC@gmail.com> I use Victor Fly Catcher. It is the old style fly paper that comes in little tubes. You put a thumbtack into the ceiling and pull and turn the tube. Out comes paper covered with sticky. No insecticide. I have found that it works extremely well for Drosophila. It works far less well for Musca domestica. I buy it at Home Depot. They only carry it in the Spring. Buy a case, its cheap and it keeps. Nigel On Feb 5, 2009, at 9:04 AM, James Harvey wrote: > Hello all > > I have found that using a very small net to catch flies with is quite > effective, especially if the net has been soaked in gin. > > Best of! > > > > > > > "Vef, Dr. Olaf" > To: "dros@oat.bio.indiana.edu > " > Sent by: cc: > dros-bounces@oat.bio. Subject: > [Drosophila] AW: Dros Digest, Vol 46, Issue 2 > indiana.edu > > > 05/02/2009 14:44 > > > > > > Hi, > we had good results with juice (e.g., grape) or even better wine or > sparkling wine. Or you can add some of the yeast to the juice and > let it > brew. Drosos love alcohol too. The funnels we use were handmade > (paper and > glue) so we were able to produce a very small opening. > > good luck, > Olaf > ________________________________________ > Von: dros-bounces@oat.bio.indiana.edu [dros-bounces@oat.bio.indiana.edu > ] im > Auftrag von dros-request@oat.bio.indiana.edu > [dros-request@oat.bio.indiana.edu] > Gesendet: Mittwoch, 4. Februar 2009 18:05 > An: dros@magpie.bio.indiana.edu > Betreff: Dros Digest, Vol 46, Issue 2 > > Send Dros mailing list submissions to > dros@net.bio.net > > To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visit > http://www.bio.net/biomail/listinfo/dros > or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help' to > dros-request@net.bio.net > > You can reach the person managing the list at > dros-owner@net.bio.net > > When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is more specific > than "Re: Contents of Dros digest..." > > > Today's Topics: > > 1. Fly Traps (Joana Branco) > > > ---------------------------------------------------------------------- > > Message: 1 > Date: Tue, 3 Feb 2009 15:02:11 +0000 > From: Joana Branco > Subject: [Drosophila] Fly Traps > To: > Message-ID: > Content-Type: text/plain; charset="Windows-1252" > > > > > Hello! > > > > I am currently facing the problem of too many flies loose in my lab. > We > have > been changing a lot of stocks, so there are many that just escape. > > Can anyone tell me an efficient way to make fly traps? I am using > bottles, > with > extra yeast paste, with a funnel on the top, but that doesn?t solve > the > problem. > > Can anyone tell me what the best way is? > > > > Thank you all, > > Joana > > > > > _________________________________________________________________ > Windows Live? Hotmail?:?more than just e-mail. > http://windowslive.com/explore?ocid=TXT_TAGLM_WL_t2_hm_justgotbetter_explore_012009 > > > ------------------------------ > > _______________________________________________ > Dros mailing list > Dros@net.bio.net > http://www.bio.net/biomail/listinfo/dros > > End of Dros Digest, Vol 46, Issue 2 > *********************************** > > _______________________________________________ > Dros mailing list > Dros@net.bio.net > http://www.bio.net/biomail/listinfo/dros > > > Kelly Services... we see work from a People perspective > > Find out more at www.kellyservices.com > > About Kelly Services > Kelly Services, Inc. (NASDAQ: KELYA, KELYB) is a Fortune 500 > company headquartered in Troy, Mich., offering staffing solutions > that include temporary staffing services, outsourcing, vendor > on-site and full-time placement. Kelly operates in 32 countries and > territories. Kelly provides employment to more than 750,000 > employees annually, with skills including office services, > accounting, engineering, information technology, law, science, > marketing, creative services, light industrial, education, and > health care. > > CONFIDENTIAL > The information contained in this email and any attachment is > confidential. It is intended only for the named addressee(s). If > you are not the named addressee(s) please notify the sender > immediately and do not disclose, copy or distribute the contents to > any other person other than the intended addressee(s) > > Kelly Services (UK) Ltd. > Registered Office: > Apple Market House > 17 Union Street Kingston upon Thames > Surrey > KT1 1RR > Registered in England and Wales No: 2749906 > > Please consider the environment before printing > > _______________________________________________ > Dros mailing list > Dros@net.bio.net > http://www.bio.net/biomail/listinfo/dros From chatterjee.n from gmail.com Fri Feb 6 10:35:15 2009 From: chatterjee.n from gmail.com (Nabanita Chatterjee) Date: Fri Feb 6 10:46:15 2009 Subject: [Drosophila] protein expression Message-ID: Hi, I am trying to express a putative 12 transmembrane neurotransmitter transporter like drosophila protein in bacterial cells, for future antibody production,can anybody help me with choosing a correct vector? I tried with pet28b+ ,my BL21 cells are dying. also I would like some advice as how to tag my protein with GFP/RFP. Many thanks Nabanita -- "To live and not to know why the cranes fly,why children are born,why the stars are in the sky.Either you know why you're alive or it's all nonsense,it's all dust in the wind" From v.chintapalli from bio.gla.ac.uk Fri Feb 6 10:20:37 2009 From: v.chintapalli from bio.gla.ac.uk (Venkateswara Chintapalli) Date: Fri Feb 6 10:46:44 2009 Subject: [Drosophila] Protocol for Drosophila Hemocyte extraction Message-ID: <2B9DE69543FDE44FBD798FF119FD212F16745C@exchange-be6.centre.ad.gla.ac.uk> Hi Everyone, If anyone has a protocol to extract hemocytes from adult and larval Drosophila, it would be grately appreciated if you could send it to me. Thanks in advance. Venkat Chintapalli@WWW.FLYATLAS.ORG From JAP416 from bham.ac.uk Wed Feb 11 10:29:08 2009 From: JAP416 from bham.ac.uk (Jennifer Pennack) Date: Wed Feb 11 11:44:00 2009 Subject: [Drosophila] calcium imaging Message-ID: <15DA507ECBEA35439B21561CC27A28A86003E5@BIOEX2.adf.bham.ac.uk> If there is anyone in the UK who is doing calcium imaging I would be very grateful if they could get in touch- I am trying to set up calcium imaging with Drosophila larvae and it would be very helpful to be able to watch someone who knows what they are doing! Thanks, Jenny Pennack From jatdow from gmail.com Thu Feb 12 03:44:44 2009 From: jatdow from gmail.com (jatdow@gmail.com) Date: Thu Feb 12 09:18:25 2009 Subject: [Drosophila] Re: calcium imaging References: Message-ID: On Feb 11, 3:29?pm, Jennifer Pennack wrote: > If there is anyone in the UK who is doing calcium imaging Happy to help if needed- we were the first group to make an animal transgenic for a calcium reporter, and we use both luminescent and fluorescent reporters. We're based in Glasgow. regards, Julian Dow From allen_church from hms.harvard.edu Fri Feb 13 11:20:15 2009 From: allen_church from hms.harvard.edu (Allen Church) Date: Fri Feb 13 14:16:30 2009 Subject: [Drosophila] Red Pupae Message-ID: We are seeing dead red pupae in some of our stocks and I am wondering if anyone has seen this before? Thanks in advance Allen Church From manuscript.jpvb from acadjourn.org Wed Feb 18 04:50:13 2009 From: manuscript.jpvb from acadjourn.org (Journal of Parasitology and Vector Biology) Date: Wed Feb 18 08:49:42 2009 Subject: [Drosophila] Call for papers/Reviewers Message-ID: *Journal of Parasitology and Vector Biology * www.academicjournals.org/JPVB C Dear Colleague,** *Journal of Parasitology and Vector Biology (JPVB)'* Journal of Parasitology and Vector Biology (JPVB) publishes high-quality articles in English, in all areas of the sublect. All papers published by JPVB are peer reviewed. JPVB is a very rapid response journal with an issue published every month. All articles published in JPVB are peer-reviewed.The following types of papers are considered for publication: ? Original articles in basic and applied research. ? Critical reviews, surveys, opinions, commentaries and essays. Our objective is to inform authors of the decision on their manuscript(s) within four weeks of submission. Following acceptance, a paper will normally be published in the next issue. Instruction for authors and other details are available on our website www.academicjournals.org/JPVBProspective authors should send their manuscript(s) to *jpvb@acadjourn.org*. *Open Access* One key request of researchers across the world is unrestricted access to research publications. Journal of Parasitology and Vector Biology (JPVB) is fully committed Open Access Initiative by providing free access to all articles (both abstract and full PDF text) as soon as they are published. We ask you to support this initiative by publishing your papers in this journal. *Invitation to Review* JPVB* *is seeking for qualified reviewers as members of the review board team. JPVB serves as a great resource for researchers and students across the globe. We ask you to support this initiative by joining our reviewer's team. If you are interested in serving as a reviewer, kindly send us your resume to *jpvb@acadjourn.org*. *Publication Alert* We will be glad to send you a publication alert showing the table of content with link to the various abstracts and full PDF text of articles published in each issue. Kindly send us an email if you will like to receive publication alert. Best regards, *Michael Oruah* *Editorial Assistant, * Journal of Parasitology and Vector Biology E-mail: jpvb@acadjourn.org ** *http://www.academicjournals.org/jpvb * From neurofly from biozentrum.uni-wuerzburg.de Fri Feb 20 04:23:58 2009 From: neurofly from biozentrum.uni-wuerzburg.de (Neurofly 2008) Date: Fri Feb 20 13:59:10 2009 Subject: [Drosophila] [Neurofly] The Heisenberg Special Issue of J Neurogenetics Message-ID: <20090220102358.20877ppwzal9ser2@webmail.uni-wuerzburg.de> Dear Colleague, Together with the production office of the Journal of Neurogenetics, we have organized the edition of a special issue of the Journal of Neurogenetics with contributions from alumni and associates of the Heisenberg lab to commemorate Martin Heisenberg?s exoneration from university duties as Professor Emeritus. As you can see from the Content and the Editorial (attached), this Special Issue has developed into a fascinating collection of original articles and reviews on current topics of Drosophila neurogenetics, and also includes some personal reminiscences and a color photo gallery. (A few free samples of these articles are available at the Journal of Neurogenetics website ? http://www.journalofneurogenetics.org?, which is managed by the Journal Editorial Office.) After negotiation with the publisher, we have reserved a limited number of extra hard copies so that we can make this entire Special Issue available as hard copies at a tentative price of 29? or 38 US$, plus VAT and shipping (A4 size, high quality paper, about 265 pages total and many color figures). There is also a possibility of CD production of the special issue if there is enough demand (hopefully at a price comparable to that of the hard copies, depending on the number of copies to be prepared). In order for us to get a rough estimate on the number of copies we have to prepare, we would like to ask you to fill in the blanks below and reply to this email at your early convenience (before February 28, if possible). With best regards, Erich Buchner (Guest Editor) Chun-Fang Wu (Editor-in-Chief) I intend to order ... hard copies of the Special Issue (conditions as stated above) I intend to order ... CDs of the Special Issue (conditions as stated above) I prefer ... CDs but would order ... hard copies instead if CDs are not available Please return your response to this email address. (neurofly@biozentrum.uni-wuerzburg.de) -------------- next part -------------- _______________________________________________ Neurofly mailing list Neurofly@lists.uni-wuerzburg.de https://lists.uni-wuerzburg.de/mailman/listinfo/neurofly From maki.asano from osumc.edu Sat Feb 21 09:28:04 2009 From: maki.asano from osumc.edu (Maki Asano) Date: Sat Feb 21 15:27:26 2009 Subject: [Drosophila] YFP Message-ID: Hi Everyone, Does anyone have/know YFP (full length, N-term & C-term for split YFP) optimized for Drosophila cells? Either plasmid DNA or sequence alone would be greatly appreciated! Thanks, Maki Maki Asano, M.D., Ph.D. Assistant Professor Tumor Microenvironment Program The OSU Comprehensive Cancer Center Department of Molecular Cellular Biochemistry College of Medicine, Department of Molecular Genetics College of Biological Science Ohio State University 812 Biomedical Research Tower (BRT) 460 W. 12th Avenue, Columbus OH 43210 614-688-4164 Fax : 614-688-4181 maki.asano@osumc.edu