Harriet L. Wilkes Honor College
line Directions  News & Events MyFAU FAU  Search
 
 
Campus Map
General FAQ
Graduate School Placement
Mission and Guiding Principles
News
Overview
Student-Faculty publications
Student Profiles
Alumni Profiles
Virtual Tour
 
Academics Image Section: Academics
Home > About the College > News > WHC Students present research at national cell biology conference
 
Honors College students present research at national cell biology conference
 
Jupiter, FL (October 28, 2009) - Dr. Nick Quintyne, Assistant Professor of Biology at the Harriet L. Wilkes Honors College of Florida Atlantic University, will join five Honors College students at the 49th Annual Meeting of The American Society for Cell Biology (ASCB) in San Diego, California from December 5 – 9, 2009.
Cancer conference
Dr. Quintyne (middle) with students in San Francisco at the 2008 conference

The ASCB Annual Meeting, which will be held at the San Diego Convention Center, brings together students and scientists in academia, government, industry, and higher education.  The conference allows attendees to hear and discuss cutting-edge discoveries made in cell biology and to gain a broader view of research in the field.  With between 7,000 and 10,000 participants each year, it is the largest cell biology conference in the world.  As Dr. Quintyne said, “It’s basically five days of hard-core, intense cell biology and, at the end of it, your brain is so full that you come home and try to digest it all.”
There will be over 100 scientific sessions and 3,500 poster presentations covering all disciplines of cellular and molecular biology.  The students that Dr. Quintyne takes to the conference this year will be presenting their research during the poster sessions.  “I’ve attended the conference with students for the past three years now; so this will be the fourth year that I’ve done it.  I took one student in 2006, one student in 2007, and then last year, I took four students to San Francisco.  This year, I will be going with five.  All of them will be presenting their research at the meeting,” said Dr. Quintyne.  “This means they will be disseminating their own work and illustrating the quality of research Florida Atlantic University does at the undergraduate level.  The students will be presenting in the full poster sessions, so they will be responding to questions from the best names in the field.  We will be treated as equals in terms of the research.”
Dr. Quintyne will be presenting his own work on topics related to molecular motors.  Students Laura Alsina and Lindsay McCullough will discuss their research into molecular motor functions, Erik Raborn and Nisha Nagarsheth will present original work in the field of cell division, and Ericka Gold will discuss her findings on protein purification.  “I also hope we have fun,” Dr. Quintyne concluded.  “This is one of those conferences where you work hard all day, each day, and it’s not a vacation because you’re constantly being immersed in new discoveries.  But if everything goes right you can also find a nice afternoon to explore the San Diego Zoo.”

 

 

byline: Tamara Howard

FAU Campuses: