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VIROLOGY WITH THE CQ1

In this webinar:

  • Understand how to study SARS-CoV-2 cell entry and infection using image-based approaches
  • Learn how to readapt high-content microscopes to ‘everyday’ experiments
  • Hear about quantitative 3D imaging in an automated fashion
  • Explore how automated quantitative imaging can lead to antiviral drug discovery

Image based, quantitative approaches to study SARS CoV 2 cell entry and infection- full webinar

SARS-CoV-2 is the causative agent of the COVID-19 pandemic. Understanding the molecular mechanisms of how this virus infects our cells is key to the development of antiviral therapies.

In this webinar, expert speaker Dr. Giuseppe Balistreri will illustrate how to use powerful three-dimensional (3D), automated and quantitative imaging approaches using the Yokogawa CellVoyager™ CQ1 to study how SARS-CoV-2 enters cells of the respiratory tract and neurons. By readapting techniques originally conceived for large screening approaches, Balistreri will explain how high-content microscopy can be used for single-cell experiments. He will cover how fully automated imaging and image analysis provides the unprecedented possibility to follow single viral particles and cellular proteins in millions of cells.

With reagents readily available, software that is easy to use, compact instrumentations, and simple protocols, research can be accelerated. These methods also reduce costs, produce unbiased quantitative results and allow any researcher to address a greater number of questions.

The Speaker

Dr. Giuseppe Balistreri, Ph.D. in Molecular Virology, University of Helsinki, Finland | Academy of Finland Research Fellow and Principal Investigator and Adjunct Associate Professor, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia

Dr. Giuseppe Balistreri obtained a master’s degree in molecular biology and microbiology from the University of Palermo, Italy. After moving to Finland, he obtained a Ph.D. in Molecular Virology from the University of Helsinki, focusing on virus replication and virus-induced host membrane rearrangements, in the team led by Professor Leevi Kääriäinen. His research on viruses, particularly virus entry, continued in the research group of Professor Ari Helenius at the ETH Institute in Zurich, Switzerland, where Dr. Balistreri developed novel image-based screening approaches working on multiple human viruses. After a short excursion into oncogenic herpesviruses, Dr. Balistreri became a principal investigator at the University of Helsinki where he currently works, focusing on the mechanism of SARS-CoV-2 cell entry and spreading and on the development of novel antiviral therapies and improved vaccines. Since 2020, Dr. Balistreri is also an adjunct Assistant Professor at the University of Queensland in Brisbane, Australia where he studies how viruses infect and spread in neurons.

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