Call for Abstract
Scientific Program
Annual congress on Clinical Microbiology and Yeast Congress, will be organized around the theme “Unravel the Spearheads of Yeast Genetics”
Yeast Congress 2020 is comprised of 18 tracks and 16 sessions designed to offer comprehensive sessions that address current issues in Yeast Congress 2020.
Submit your abstract to any of the mentioned tracks. All related abstracts are accepted.
Register now for the conference by choosing an appropriate package suitable to you.
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\r\nMushroom is a spore-bearing, fleshy fruiting body of a fungus, which grows above ground on soil or on the organic food source. The most important microscopic feature for identification of mushrooms is the spores. Their spores, called basidiospores, are produced on the gills and fall in a fine rain of powder from under the caps as a result. Mushrooms are the fruit bodies of members of the order Agaricales, whose type genus is agaricus and type species is the field mushroom, agaricus campestris. However, in modern molecularly defined classifications, not all members of the order agaricales produce mushroom fruit bodies, and many other gilled fungi, collectively called mushrooms, occur in other orders of the class agaricomycetes. It is formed within the mycelium, the mass of threadlike hyphae that make up the fungus. Many species of mushrooms seemingly appear overnight, growing or expanding rapidly. In reality, all species of mushrooms take several days to form primordial mushroom fruit bodies, though they do expand rapidly by the absorption of fluids. An atypical mushroom is the lobster mushroom, which is deformed, by the mycoparasitic ascomycete hypomyces lactifluorum. Some are having pores underneath, others have spines.
- Track 3-1Mushroom production technology
- Track 3-2Mushroom production technology
- Track 3-3Psychoactive mushrooms
- Track 3-4Medicinal mushrooms
- Track 3-5Edible and toxic mushrooms
- Track 3-6 Classification
- Track 5-1Yeast Prions and Heat Shock Proteins
- Track 8-1Systems Biology of yeast
- Track 10-1Yeast as a model for human diseases and drug testing
- Track 11-1Yeast and industrial biotechnology
- Track 14-1RNA processing and regulation
- Track 16-1Non-conventional yeasts and yeast-like organisms
- Track 16-2Yeast Comparative and Evolutionary Biology
Aging is not typically measured by time in yeast, but rather by the number of divisions an individual cell completes before it dies. An individual cell is easy to follow from birth to death because yeast divides asymmetrically by budding off new daughters. Unlike their mothers, the daughters start from scratch, having the potential for a full lifespan. Thus, individual cells are mortal, while the yeast population is immortal. The probability that a cell will continue dividing decreases exponentially as a function of the number of completed divisions. Thus, the mortality rate increases exponentially with age. However, it plateaus at older ages in similarity to what has been observed in other species. Yeasts undergo a variety of changes as they age, and some of these are clearly detrimental. In view of this, it is reasonable to speak of an aging process. In practical terms, yeast lifespan is measured by observing individual cells periodically under a microscope and removing buds with a micro-manipulator.
- Track 17-1Systems Biology of yeast
- Track 17-2Cell death and ageing
- Track 17-3Cell death and ageing
The awesome power of yeast genetics is partially due to the ability to quickly map a phenotype-producing gene to a region of the S. cerevisiae genome. For the past two decades S. cerevisiae has been the model system for much of molecular genetic research because the basic cellular mechanics of replication, recombination, cell division and metabolism are generally conserved between yeast and larger eukaryotes, including mammals.
Molecular genetics is the field of biology and genetics that studies the structure and function of genes at a molecular level. The study of chromosomes and gene expression of an organism can give insight into heredity, genetic variation, and mutations.