Public Talks For Public Good

Join us for an exciting series about the diverse issues the community cares about and how BioFrontiers explores them to improve lives.

BioFrontiers logo

Doors open at 5:45 pm, talks begin at 6:00 pm. A social reception will follow at 7:00 pm.Registration is free but required.

An overflow room is available when registration fills.

Upcoming Talks

Check back for Series 3 in 2025!

Location

All talks will take place in the Jennie Smoly Caruthers Biotechnology Building on the beautiful CU Boulder campus. Paid parking is available, and the building is served by Route S (Stampede) of the CU bus system.

JSCBB

Parking Information

Attendees can park in lot 543 with aparking voucher for $5

To do so, visit theParking & Transportation websiteand follow the instructions below.

  • Select “online services” on the top right corner of the webpage
  • Select “purchase event parking”
  • Select “other events”
  • Select the date -BioFrontiers Presents, e.g. "9/17/24 - BioFrontiers Presents"
  • Select the permit type:"Lot 543 $5 Reserved Event Parking ($5/day)"
  • Select the location "(543) 543 : Event Parking"
  • Click “add vehicle” button
  • Check out
  • Please enter email and license plate number to avoid citations

Past Talks

November 19, 2024

"If I Only Had a New..." Progress and Promise in Tissue Engineering Research

Kristi Anseth

Distinguished Professor of Chemical and Biological Engineering
AssociateDirector, Head Academic Leadership, BioFrontiers Institute

Kristi Anseth is a Professor of Chemical and Biological Engineering and Associate Faculty Director of the BioFrontiers Institute at the University of Colorado at Boulder.Her research interests lie at the interface between biology and engineering where she designs new biomaterials for applications in drug delivery and regenerative medicine. Dr. Anseth’s research group has published over 400 peer-reviewed manuscripts, and she has trained more than 150 graduate students and postdoctoral associates. She is the youngest woman elected to the National Academy of Engineering (2009), the National Academy of Medicine (2009), the National Academy of Sciences (2013), the National Academy of Inventors (2016) and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (2019).Most recently, she received the L’Oreal-UNESCO for Women in Science Award in the Life Sciences (2020).Dr. Anseth has served on the Board of Directors and as President of the Materials Research Society, Board of Directors for the American Institute of Chemical Engineers, the Board of Governors for Acta Materialia, Inc, Chair of the Board of Trustees for the Gordon Research Conferences, the NIH Advisory Council for NIBIB, and as Chair of the NAE US Frontiers of Engineering meetings and NAE Bioengineering Section.

Organoid line art

Kristi Anseth

October 15, 2024

One Size Does Not Fit All: Genomics and Personalized Medicine in the Age of AI

Ryan Layer

Assistant Professor
Department of Computer Science, CU Boulder
Division of Biomedical Informatics & Personalized Medicine, CU Anschutz Medical Campus

Ryan is an Assistant Professor at the BioFrontiers Institute and Computer Science Department in Boulder. He got his PhD in Computer Science from the University of Virginia and did a postdoc at the University of Utah in the Human Genetics Department. His research focuses on developing methods to explore large-scale genetic datasets and is particularly interested in structural variation in cancer and rare diseases. He is also committed to improving the reliability and reproducibility of scientific software and teaches a Software Engineering for Scientists class every fall.

Healthcare providers base their treatment decisions on a combination of their experience, patient concerns, and data from clinical trials. Although clinical trials are the gold standard for assessing the safety and effectiveness of medical interventions, they are designed to measure how well a treatment works on average. However, what providers really want to know is the best treatment for their individual patients, which can be difficult to determine from trial data for patients who deviate from the average. As a result, many people do not benefit from medical advances. Our goal is to use advanced machine learning methods to identify representative research cohorts dynamically from large patient databases, from which we can to determine the best treatments for all patients.

Icons of people with DNA strands overlaid

Ryan Layer headshot

September 17, 2024

It's All In Your Head: Past, Present, and Future of Neurodegenerative Disease Research

Roy Parker

Distinguished Professor of Biochemistry
Executive Director, BioFrontiers Institute

Roy Parker is an Investigator with the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Director of the BioFrontiers Institute, Cech-Leinwand Endowed Chair of Biochemistry, and Distinguished Professor at the 鶹Ƶ. He is a global leader in the study of RNA molecules, which are both molecular machines and the messenger of genetic information. His pioneering work has revealed new aspects of the life of RNA and how abnormalities in RNA regulation contribute to neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s Diseases. He was President of the RNA Society and is an elected Fellow of the American Academy of Arts & Sciences and Member of the National Academy of Sciences. When not exploring new territory in RNA and neurodegeneration, he can be found exploring aquatic territory, including multiple rafting runs through the Grand Canyon and rare routes on other Southwestern US rivers.

Neurodegenerative diseases are a set of common devastating, progressive diseases including Alzheimer's and Parkinson's Diseases. How these diseases are caused and spread in the human brain is an area of intense research. Progress is being made at understanding the underlying mechanisms causing these diseases, with the potential for future therapies. Dr. Parker, an internationally recognized leader in RNA biology who has recently focused his work on neurodegenerative diseases, will discuss these topics.

Neuron line art

April 23rd, 2024

Pollinator Pandemic: The Outsized Role of Parasites in Bee Health

Sammy Ramsey

Assistant Professor of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology

Dr. Sammy Ramsey is an Assistant Professor of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology and holds a Marvin H. Caruthers Endowed Chair for Early-Career Faculty at the 鶹Ƶ. He is also the founder and Executive Director of the non-profit Ramsey Research Foundation, whose mission is to safeguard pollinator health and diversity. Dr. Ramsey’s research has shifted the accepted paradigm of how the parasitic mite, Varroa destructor, preys on honey bees to ultimately kill them and drive the enormous annual loss of these essential pollinators. He has won a National Geographic Wayfinder Award and been recognized by the Explorers Club as one of “50 People Changing the World That You Should Know 鶹Ƶ”. A gifted and dedicated science communicator, he is regularly featured in mass media such as NPR, CBS Mornings, PBS Nature, and Wired. You can also hear him literally singing the praises of insects: he has worked professionally as a singer and composes music.

While pesticides dominate most discussions of honey bee welfare, research has consistently shown that parasites are the most significant single driver of honey bee losses. The landscape of honey bee parasites is diverse and strange, so much so that bee parasites have earned their own ecological category "Melittophiles". Each has had to amass a suite of odd adaptations to persist with social organisms primed by millions of years of evolution to exclude any creature seeking access to their trove of biologically invaluable treasures (honey, wax, bee bread, brood, etc). This research has taken me and my team (in collaboration with National Geographic) all over Asia as we track the emergence of a new Melittophile destroying bees in each new country it spreads to carving an unsettling path westward. 

Bee line art

Sammy Ramsey

March 19th, 2024

Viruses, Our Defenses, and a Possible Path to HIV Vaccines

Sara Sawyer

Professor of Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology

Dr. Sara Sawyer is a Professor at the 鶹Ƶ. She has received national and international prizes in virology. In 2011, President Barack Obama awarded her the Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers at the White House. In 2022, she received the NIH’s Director’s Pioneer award. In 2020, she co-founded Darwin Biosciences, an infectious disease diagnostics company located in Boulder, Colorado. Dr. Sawyer serves on the NIH’s Office of AIDS Research Advisory Council. She studies animal viruses that infect humans.

The COVID and HIV crises illustrate the global tragedies that can arise after humans are infected with the viruses of animals. Yet COVID was met with a vaccine in less than a year while we have waited over 40 years for an HIV vaccine. How do virus characteristics and our own immune systems dictate which animal viruses make us sick, which ones cause pandemics, and which ones are harder to develop vaccines against? This talk will discuss the challenges associated with diagnosing human infections caused by rare and new animal viruses. I will also discuss new hope in the quest for an HIV vaccine.

Virus line art

February 20th, 2024

The Catalyst: Explaining RNA to the General Public

Tom Cech

Distinguished Professor of Biochemistry
Nobel Prize Laureate

Dr. Tom Cech is Distinguished Professor of Biochemistry at the 鶹Ƶ and an Investigator with the Howard Hughes Medical Institute where he was President from 2000-2009. He was the first Executive Director of the BioFrontiers Institute and is the Faculty Director of the Interdisciplinary Quantitative Biology Ph.D. Program at BioFrontiers. In the early 1980s, his lab’s discoveries that RNA can cut and join chemical bonds expanded the Central Dogma of Biology, which originally restricted RNA to just the role of passive, transient information carrier. This  opened up an entire world of exploration that has uncovered many more essential RNA functions and therapeutic opportunities. Dr. Cech has won many awards and prizes for his work, including the Nobel Prize in Chemistry, the National Medal of Science, the Albert Lasker Basic Medical Research Award, and elected membership in the U.S. National Academy of Sciences and National Academy of Medicine. In addition to RNA, Dr. Cech loves the Colorado mountains where he enjoys running, hiking, and skiing.

The mRNA vaccines have put RNA in the spotlight, coming out from the shadow of the DNA double helix. But RNA is more than a passive messenger of the information stored in DNA. RNA functions as the “Swiss Army Knife” of biology, from powering the immortality enzyme telomerase, with its roles in aging, cancer, and genetic bone marrow failure, to powering the biotechnology revolution of CRISPR gene editing. Dr. Tom Cech, Nobel Prize laureate for his discoveries that RNA can act as a molecular scissors, will explain this previously hidden life of RNA and discuss where untapped potential may remain as we seek biotechnology-based approaches to improve global health and welfare.

RNA line art

Tom Cech

January 23rd, 2024

A Woman is Not a Small Man: Sex Differences in the Heart

Leslie Leinwand

Distinguished Professor of Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology
Chief Scientific Officer, BioFrontiers Institute

Dr. Leslie Leinwand is Distinguished Professor of Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology at the 鶹Ƶ and a Professor with the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. She is also a founder of the BioFrontiers Institute and its Chief Scientific Officer. In the early 1980s, her lab was the first to clone and map the human genes encoding the myosin heavy chains: the proteins responsible for heart and muscle contractions. This formed the basis for the next four decades of work, involving everything from animal models of genetic heart disease to the influence of sex, diet, and exercise on heart disease to pioneering technologies for studying disease-causing myosin mutants. All of this contributed to Dr. Leinwand co-founding the company MyoKardia, which developed the first FDA-approved drug for treating genetic heart disease. She is a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, an Established Investigator of the American Heart Association, and an elected member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the National Academy of Inventors. When Dr. Leinwand is not in the lab she is often in the kitchen, where she is known as a formidable and creative chef.

Somewhat surprising to many people is that heart disease is the number one killer of both men and women. Yet most studies have focused only on men. In this talk I will discuss the large differences between male and female hearts in health and disease and how the sexes can respond differently to the same medicines. Did you know that women can have different symptoms than men having a heart attack, leading to missed diagnoses in women? Studies in women’s heart health are very important and we need to get the message out there to patients and doctors alike!

EKG line art

Leslie Leinwand

FAQs

• What time are the talks?

Doors open at 5:45 pm, talks begin at 6:00. There is a reception from 7-8 pm.

• Where are the talks?

All talks are in the Butcher Auditorium (room A115, next to the main floor coffee shop) at the Jennie Smoly Caruthers Biotechnology Building on CU’s East Campus. The address is 3415 Colorado Ave. Signs inside the building will direct you to the auditorium.

• How much does this cost?

Nothing! It’s free! You must register in advance, though (see link above).

• Do you have to be a science expert to understand these talks?

No! These talks are specifically designed to reach a broad background.

• Will there be a question-and-answer period?

Yes! The last 15’ of the talks are reserved for audience questions.

• Do I have to be part of CU?

No! We encourage the public to attend.

• What if I couldn't get tickets? Can I still attend?

There will be an overflow room available for those who were unable to get tickets. You will not be able to ask questions in that room, but will be able to watch the talk live and are welcome to attend the reception.

• What is the reception afterwards?

This is a time for the audience to mingle with each other and with our scientists. We will provide snacks and non-alcoholic beverages.

• Can children attend?

Children may attend, although young children may not enjoy the talks as much as older teens and adults. CU does offer exciting scientific programming directed towards youngerchildren that we encourage you to consider.