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IMMUNOLOGY2023™

IMMUNOLOGY2023™

May 11–15, 2023 | Washington, DC

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      • Thursday, May 11
      • Friday, May 12
      • Saturday, May 13
      • Sunday, May 14
      • Monday, May 15
    • President’s Program
    • Distinguished Lectures
    • Special Session
    • Major Symposia
    • Committee-Sponsored Sessions
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  • Full Program
  • Thu 11
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  • At a Glance

Scientific Program

We are still filling in the details for IMMUNOLOGY2023™. Please check back here frequently for the most up-to-date scientific program information.

Contents

  • President’s Program
  • Distinguished Lectures
  • Major Symposia
  • Special Session
  • Award Presentations & Lectures
  • Committee-Sponsored Sessions & Events
  • Guest Sessions
  • Career Development Opportunities
  • Social Events
  • AAI Business Meeting & Award Presentations
  • Block Symposia & Poster Sessions
  • Exhibit Hall & Exhibitor Workshops

President’s Program

 Thursday, May 11, 2023     5:00 PM – 6:15 PM     Ballroom AB

11. President’s Address

Generously supported by GSK

Mark M. Davis
HHMI, Stanford Univ. Sch. of Med., AAI President
My Immunology Adventures

Leslie J. Berg
Univ. of Colorado Sch. of Med.
Introduction

Presentation of AAI Lifetime Achievement Award and Acknowledgment of Distinguished Fellows of AAI Class of 2023

 Sunday, May 14, 2023     12:30 PM – 2:30 PM     Ballroom AB

211. President’s Symposium

Generously supported by BD Biosciences

Frontiers of Human Immunology

Chair

  • Mark M. Davis, HHMI, Stanford Univ. Sch. of Med., AAI President

Speakers

Pamela J. Bjorkman
Caltech
Mosaic RBD nanoparticles protect against diverse sarbecovirus challenges in animal models

Akiko Iwasaki
HHMI, Yale Sch. of Med.
Immune responses to SARS-CoV-2

Bali Pulendran
Stanford Univ.
Systems biological analysis of immunity to infection and vaccination

Petter Brodin
Imperial Col. London and Karolinska Inst.
Human immune system development

Presentation of AAI Excellence in Mentoring Award

Distinguished Lectures

 Friday, May 12, 2023     6:00 PM – 6:45 PM     Ballroom AB

101. Distinguished Lecture—Douglas R. Green

Generously supported by BD Biosciences

Chair

  • Cathryn R. Nagler, Univ. of Chicago, AAI Program Committee Chair

Speaker

Doug Green

Douglas R. Green
St. Jude Children’s Res. Hosp.
Start me up: early events in T cell activation influence long-term cell fate

 Saturday, May 13, 2023     6:00 PM – 6:45 PM     Ballroom AB

188. Distinguished Lecture—Carla V. Rothlin

Generously supported by BD Biosciences

Chair

  • Cathryn R. Nagler, Univ. of Chicago, AAI Program Committee Chair

Speaker

Carla V. Rothlin
Yale Sch. of Med.
Principles of resolving and non-resolving inflammation

 Sunday, May 14, 2023     6:00 PM – 6:45 PM     Ballroom AB

265. Distinguished Lecture—Leslie J. Berg

Generously supported by BD Biosciences

Chair

  • Cathryn R. Nagler, Univ. of Chicago, AAI Program Committee Chair

Speaker

Leslie J. Berg

Leslie J. Berg
Univ. of Colorado Sch. of Med.
Linking variations in T cell receptor signaling to changes in gene expression and T cell function

Special Session

 Friday, May 12, 2023     7:00 PM – 8:00 PM     Ballroom AB

102. Pandemic Preparedness and Response: Lessons from COVID-19

Speaker

Anthony S. Fauci
Former Director, NIAID, NIH

Mark M. Davis
HHMI, Stanford Univ. Sch. of Med., AAI President
Introduction

AAI is delighted to welcome Anthony S. Fauci, M.D., DFAAI (AAI ’73), to deliver this important and timely plenary lecture. Dr. Fauci, who recently stepped down from his position as director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases after 38 years, is the former chief medical advisor to President Joseph R. Biden Jr.

Major Symposia

 Friday, May 12, 2023     8:00 AM – 11:30 AM     Ballroom A

13. Major Symposium A

Peripheral Neuroimmune Interactions

Chairs

  • Daniel Mucida, HHMI, Rockefeller Univ.
  • Esther Borges Florsheim, Arizona State Univ.

Speakers

  • Daniel Mucida, HHMI, Rockefeller Univ., Neuro-immune interactions in the gut
  • Esther Borges Florsheim, Arizona State Univ., Mast cell-derived lipid mediator promotes food aversion
  • Caroline L. Sokol, Massachusetts Gen. Hosp., Neuroimmune circuits drive allergic immunity
  • Jessica A. Osterhout, Univ. of Utah, Neural circuits of sickness behavior
  • Felipe Almeida de Pinho Ribeiro, Washington Univ. Sch. of Med. in St. Louis, Sensory control of immunity
 Friday, May 12, 2023     8:00 AM – 11:30 AM     Ballroom B

14. Major Symposium B

Cell Death and Immunity: Caspases and Beyond

Chairs

  • Francis K. Chan, Duke Univ.
  • Sunny Shin, Univ. of Pennsylvania Perelman Sch. of Med.

Speakers

  • Sunny Shin, Univ. of Pennsylvania Perelman Sch. of Med., Inflammasome-mediated anti-bacterial defense
  • Megan H. Orzalli, Univ. of Massachusetts Chan Med. Sch., Activation and inhibition of cutaneous antiviral immunity
  • Julie Magarian Blander, Weill Cornell Med., Phagocytic mode of non-canonical NLRP3 inflammasome activation: implications to pyroptosis and immunity
  • Francis K. Chan, Duke Univ., Necroptosis in anti-viral immunity and tumor immunotherapy
  • Weiping Zou, Univ. of Michigan, Ferroptosis in tumor immunity
  • Kodi S. Ravichandran, Washington Univ. Sch. of Med. in St. Louis, Eating lessons from phagocytes and the implications to immunity
 Saturday, May 13, 2023     8:00 AM – 11:30 AM     Ballroom A

103. Major Symposium C

Generously supported by PerkinElmer Health Sciences, Inc. & Honeycomb Biotechnologies

Mechanisms of Innate Immune Memory and Tissue Adaptation

Chairs

  • Shruti Naik, New York Univ. Grossman Sch. of Med.
  • Joseph C. Sun, Mem. Sloan Kettering Cancer Ctr.

Speakers

  • Ruslan Medzhitov, HHMI, Yale Sch. of Med., Tissue homeostasis and inflammation
  • Luis B. Barreiro, Univ. of Chicago, Genetic and epigenetic determinants of inter-individual variation in innate immune responses to infectious agents
  • Timothy E. O’Sullivan, Univ. of California, Los Angeles, Transcriptional and epigenetic control of natural killer cell memory
  • Ai Ing Lim, Princeton Univ., Pre-birth immune education
  • Steven Z. Josefowicz, Weill Cornell Med., Epigenetic memory of inflammation and infection in hematopoietic progenitor cells
  • Shruti Naik, New York Univ. Grossman Sch. of Med., Adaptive and maladaptive immune-epithelial interactions
 Saturday, May 13, 2023     8:00 AM – 11:30 AM     Ballroom B

104. Major Symposium D

Aging, Obesity, and Adverse Immune Responses

Chairs

  • Lydia Lynch, Brigham and Women’s Hosp.
  • Andrew E. Hogan, Maynooth Univ., Ireland

Speakers

  • Lydia Lynch, Brigham and Women’s Hosp., Uncoupling the effects of obesity from dietary lipids on cancer development
  • Andrew E. Hogan, Maynooth Univ., Ireland, MAITabolism: Unravelling the impact of obesity on human MAIT cells and their contribution to disease
  • Semir Beyaz, Cold Spring Harbor Lab., Dietary regulation of stem cell—immune cell—microbiome interactions that influence cancer
  • Susan M. Kaech, Salk Inst. for Bio. Sts., You are what you eat: nutrient preferences by effector and exhausted T cells
  • Alison E. Ringel, Ragon Inst. of MGH, MIT and Harvard, Aging and immunity in the tumor niche
 Sunday, May 14, 2023     8:00 AM – 11:30 AM     Ballroom A

189. Major Symposium E

Engineering at the Interface of Immunology and Immunotherapy

Chairs

  • Jeffrey A. Hubbell, Univ. of Chicago
  • Susan N. Thomas, Georgia Tech

Speakers

  • Jeffrey A. Hubbell, Univ. of Chicago, Engineering cytokines to modulate regiospecific function
  • Evan A. Scott, Northwestern Univ., Engineering synthetic nanocarriers for targeted immune modulation
  • Jennifer H. Elisseeff, Johns Hopkins Univ., Engineering immune-stromal crosstalk regulating tissue structure
  • Sai T. Reddy, Swiss Fed. Inst. of Tech., Zurich, Synthetic coevolution of neutralizing antibodies and SARS-CoV-2
  • James J. Moon, Univ. of Michigan, Engineering strategies to modulate the gut microbiome and immune system
  • Susan N. Thomas, Georgia Tech, Engineered lymph node drug delivery and disease modeling technologies enable next-generation approaches in cancer immunotherapy
 Sunday, May 14, 2023     8:00 AM – 11:30 AM     Ballroom B

190. Major Symposium F

Environmental Drivers of Myeloid Cells

Chairs

  • Jessica A. Hamerman, Benaroya Res. Inst.
  • P’ng Loke, NIAID, NIH

Speakers

  • Jessica A. Hamerman, Benaroya Res. Inst., Monocyte differentiation during inflammation
  • P’ng Loke, NIAID, NIH, Helminth exposure protects against murine SARS-CoV-2 infection through macrophage dependent T cell activation
  • Paul Kubes, Univ. of Calgary, Loss of resident macrophage identity induced by local environmental changes
  • Mark B. Headley II, Fred Hutch Cancer Res. Ctr., Immunosurveillance of the lung by specialized dendritic cell populations
  • Amariliz Rivera, Rutgers New Jersey Med. Sch., Novel insights on the role of interferons as regulators of pulmonary antifungal immunity
 Monday, May 15, 2023     8:00 AM – 11:30 AM     Ballroom A

266. Major Symposium G

Mucosal Immunity in Health and Disease

Chairs

  • Ivaylo I. Ivanov, Columbia Univ.
  • Manuela Raffatellu, Univ. of California, San Diego

Speakers

  • Kathy D. McCoy, Univ. of Calgary, Microbes and metabolites: shaping mucosal immunity
  • Isaac M. Chiu, Harvard Med. Sch., Nociceptor neuron regulation of gut barrier function and immunity
  • Manuela Raffatellu, Univ. of California, San Diego, New insights on mucosal immunity to Enterobacteriaceae
  • Ivaylo I. Ivanov, Columbia Univ., Homeostatic functions of commensal Th17 cells
  • Suzanne Devkota, Cedars-Sinai Med. Ctr., Immunological and physiological responses to gut bacterial translocation in humans
  • Dan R. Littman, New York Univ. Grossman Sch. of Med., Microbiota guidance of T cell differentiation
 Monday, May 15, 2023     8:00 AM – 11:30 AM     Ballroom B

267. Major Symposium H

Immunity to Emerging Pathogens: COVID-19 and Beyond

Chairs

  • James E. Crowe Jr., Vanderbilt Univ. Med. Ctr.
  • Laura M. Walker, Moderna

Speakers

  • James E. Crowe Jr., Vanderbilt Univ. Med. Ctr., Human monoclonal antibodies for emerging infections
  • Laura M. Walker, Moderna, Evolution of antibody immunity following Omicron breakthrough infection
  • Robert A. Seder, NIAID, NIH, Scientific and clinical development of monoclonal antibodies to prevent malaria
  • Mark T. Esser, AstraZeneca, From the lab to the jab: lessons learned from the development of AstraZeneca’s long-acting antibody combination (Evusheld) for the prevention and treatment of COVID-19
  • Amy L. Hartman, Univ. of Pittsburgh, Combating the threat of Rift Valley fever virus infection in utero

Award Presentations & Lectures

AAI is pleased to recognize the extraordinary professional achievements, service, and career promise of its members with the following awards and lectures.

 Thursday, May 11, 2023     5:00 PM – 6:15 PM     Ballroom AB

11. AAI Lifetime Achievement Award Presentation

AAI President Mark M. Davis will introduce the awardee and present the award prior to the start of the President's Address.

Chair

  • Mark M. Davis, HHMI, Stanford Univ. Sch. of Med., AAI President

Award Recipient

•	Lewis L. Lanier

Lewis L. Lanier
Univ. of California, San Francisco

The AAI Lifetime Achievement Award is the highest honor bestowed by the AAI Council upon an AAI member. This award recognizes a deserving member for a career of scientific achievement and for contributions to AAI and fellow immunologists.

 Thursday, May 11, 2023     5:00 PM – 6:15 PM     Ballroom AB

11. Distinguished Fellows of AAI Class of 2023 Acknowledgment

AAI President Mark M. Davis will acknowledge the honorees prior to the start of the President's Address.

Chair

  • Mark M. Davis, HHMI, Stanford Univ. Sch. of Med., AAI President

The Distinguished Fellows of AAI annually recognizes members for distinguished careers and outstanding scientific contributions as well as their service to AAI and the immunology community. It honors active, long-term members (25 or more years) who have demonstrated one or more of the following: excellence in research accomplishment in the field of immunology; exceptional leadership to the immunology community in academia, foundations, nonprofits, industry, or government at a national or international level; notable distinction as an educator.

Meet the Distinguished Fellows of AAI Class of 2023.

 Friday, May 12, 2023     8:00 AM – 9:30 AM     Room 202B

12. AAI Distinguished Service Award Presentations

AAI President Mark M. Davis will introduce the awardees and present the awards during the AAI Business Meeting.

Chair

  •  Loretta L. Doan, AAI Chief Executive Officer

Award Recipients

Cherié L. Butts

Cherié L. Butts
Biogen

For outstanding service as chair and member of the AAI Minority Affairs Committee, 2011–2017

Clifford V. Harding

Clifford V. Harding
Case Western Reserve Univ.

For outstanding service as chair and member of the AAI Committee on Public Affairs, 2009–2016

The AAI Distinguished Service Awards recognize individuals for outstanding service to AAI and the immunology community.

 Friday, May 12, 2023     12:30 PM – 1:30 PM     Room 202A

44. AAI-BioLegend Herzenberg Award Presentation and Lecture

Generously supported by BioLegend

AAI President Mark M. Davis will introduce the awardee and present the award immediately prior to Dr. Crotty’s lecture.

Chair

  • Gary A. Koretzky, Cornell Univ. and Weill Cornell Med., AAI Past President

Award Recipient

Shane Crotty

Shane Crotty
La Jolla Inst. for Immunology
Long-lived and high-quality antibody and memory B cell responses regulated by Tfh cells and germinal centers

The AAI-BioLegend Herzenberg Award recognizes outstanding research contributions to the field of immunology in the area of B cell biology.

 Friday, May 12, 2023     1:30 PM – 2:30 PM     Ballroom A

55. FASEB Excellence in Science Early-Career Investigator Award Presentation and Lecture

Dr. Garvy will introduce the awardee and present the award immediately prior to Dr. Krishnaswamy’s lecture.

Chair

  • Beth A. Garvy, Univ. of Kentucky Col. of Med., FASEB Vice President for Science Policy

Award Recipient

Smita Krishnaswamy

Smita Krishnaswamy
Yale Univ.
Deep geometric and topological analyses characterizing and predicting immune responses

The FASEB Excellence in Science Early-Career Investigator Award recognizes excellence, innovation, leadership, and mentorship of a female early career investigator whose research has contributed significantly to a particular discipline in biological science.

 Friday, May 12, 2023     4:30 PM – 5:30 PM     Ballroom AB

100. AAI-BD Biosciences Investigator Award Presentation and Lecture

Generously supported by BD Biosciences

AAI President Mark M. Davis and Robert Balderas, Vice President of Bio. Sci., BD Biosciences, will introduce the awardee and present the award immediately prior to Dr. Sonnenberg’s lecture.

Chair

  • Akiko Iwasaki, HHMI, Yale Sch. of Med., AAI Vice President

Award Recipient

Gregory F. Sonnenberg

Gregory F. Sonnenberg
Weill Cornell Med.
Innate regulation of immunity, inflammation, tolerance, and cancer

The AAI-BD Biosciences Investigator Award recognizes an early-career investigator who has made outstanding contributions to the field of immunology.

 Saturday, May 13, 2023     11:30 AM – 1:30 PM     Room 202A

125. AAI ASPIRE Award Symposium

AAI President Mark M. Davis will introduce the awardees and present the awards immediately prior to the symposium.

Chairs

  • Joan Goverman, Univ. of Washington, AAI Secretary-Treasurer
  • Akiko Iwasaki, HHMI, Yale Sch. of Med., AAI Vice President

Award Recipients

Todd Bradley

Todd Bradley
Children's Mercy Kansas City
Natural killer cell immunoregulation of the HIV-1 antibody response

Hitesh Deshmukh

Hitesh Deshmukh
Cincinnati Children's Hosp. Med. Ctr.
Establishing lifelong trajectories of pulmonary health before and after birth

Rebecca Martin

Rebecca Martin
Virginia Commonwealth Univ.
Targeting dendritic cell metabolism promotes allergen tolerance in asthma

•	Gabrielle Rizzuto

Gabrielle Rizzuto
Mem. Sloan Kettering Cancer Ctr.
Glycan-dependent mechanisms of fetomaternal tolerance

Tuoqi Wu

Tuoqi Wu
Univ. of Texas Southwestern Med. Ctr.
Transcriptional regulation of long-term T-cell immunity

Melody Yue Zeng

Melody Yue Zeng
Weill Cornell Med.
Immune regulation by the gut microbiome in early life

The AAI ASPIRE Awards recognize early career research accomplishments and professional promise in the field of immunology.

 Saturday, May 13, 2023     1:30 PM – 2:30 PM     Ballroom A

137. FASEB Excellence in Science Lifetime Achievement Award Presentation and Lecture

Dr. Butts will introduce the awardee and present the award immediately prior to Dr. Sharpe’s lecture.

Chair

  • Cherié L. Butts, Biogen, FASEB Treasurer

Award Recipient

Arlene H. Sharpe

Arlene H. Sharpe
Harvard Med. Sch.
The biology behind PD-1 blockade

The FASEB Excellence in Science Lifetime Achievement Award recognizes excellence, innovation, leadership, and mentorship of a female established investigator whose research has contributed significantly to a particular discipline in biological science.

 Saturday, May 13, 2023     4:30 PM – 5:30 PM     Ballroom AB

187. AAI-Thermo Fisher Meritorious Career Award Presentation and Lecture

Generously supported by Thermo Fisher Scientific

AAI President Mark M. Davis and Rhonda Newman, Thermo Fisher Scientific, will introduce the awardee and present the award immediately prior to Dr. Wu’s lecture.

Chair

  • Gary A. Koretzky, Cornell Univ. and Weill Cornell Med., AAI Past President

Award Recipient

Hao Wu

Hao Wu
Harvard Med. Sch. and Boston Children's Hosp.
Inner workings on the inflammasome engine

The AAI-Thermo Fisher Meritorious Career Award recognizes a mid-career scientist for outstanding research contributions to the field of immunology.

 Sunday, May 14, 2023     11:15 AM – 12:15 PM     Room 202B

210. AAI Vanguard Award Presentation and Lecture

Sponsored by the AAI Minority Affairs Committee
Generously supported by BD Biosciences

AAI President Mark M. Davis will introduce the awardee and present the award immediately prior to Dr. Binder’s lecture.

Chair

  • Tonya J. Webb, Univ. of Maryland Sch. of Med., AAI Minority Affairs Committee Chair

Speaker

Robert J. Binder

Robert J. Binder
Univ. of Pittsburgh
Key pathways in immunosurveillance of cancer

The AAI Vanguard Award recognizes an underrepresented member investigator noted for significant scientific achievement and exemplary career success.

 Sunday, May 14, 2023     12:30 PM – 2:30 PM     Ballroom AB

211. AAI Excellence in Mentoring Award Presentation

AAI President Mark M. Davis and Shruti Naik, New York Univ. Grossman Sch. of Med., will introduce the awardee and present the award prior to the start of the President’s Symposium.

Chair

  • Mark M. Davis, HHMI, Stanford Univ. Sch. of Med., AAI President

Award Recipient

Yasmine Belkaid

Yasmine Belkaid
NIAID, NIH

The AAI Excellence in Mentoring Award recognizes exemplary career contributions to a future generation of scientists.

 Sunday, May 14, 2023     4:30 PM – 5:30 PM     Ballroom AB

264. AAI-Steinman Award for Human Immunology Research Presentation and Lecture

AAI President Mark M. Davis will introduce the awardee and present the award immediately prior to Dr. Hafler’s lecture.

Chair

  • Mark M. Davis, HHMI, Stanford Univ. Sch. of Med., AAI President

Award Recipient

David A. Hafler

David A. Hafler
Yale Sch. of Med.
Treg biology: insights into immunology by the study of human disease

The AAI-Steinman Award for Human Immunology Research recognizes an individual who has made significant contributions to the understanding of immune processes underlying human disease pathogenesis, prevention, or therapy.

Committee-Sponsored Sessions

AAI committees host symposia, workshops, lectures, and events that address the most recent advances in their specialty areas of immunology research, as well as issues in public policy and career development.

 Thursday, May 11, 2023     2:00 PM – 4:00 PM     Room 202A

1. Back to School: A Review of Four Fast-Moving Fields

Sponsored by the AAI Program Committee

Chairs

  • Cathryn R. Nagler, Univ. of Chicago, AAI Program Committee Chair
  • Chandrashekhar Pasare, Cincinnati Children’s Hosp. Med. Ctr.

Speakers

  • Judith A. James, Oklahoma Med. Res. Fndn., Cross-reactive B cells
  • Chandrashekhar Pasare, Cincinnati Children’s Hosp. Med. Ctr., Mechanisms of microbial and non-microbial (sterile) innate inflammation
  • Timothy E. O’Sullivan, Univ. of California, Los Angeles, CRISPR-Cas9 tools and technology in immunity
  • Golnaz Vahedi, Univ. of Pennsylvania Perelman Sch. of Med., Advances in single-cell analysis
 Friday, May 12, 2023     10:15 AM – 12:15 PM     Room 202B

27. Human Immunological Diseases and Pathologies: Current Standard of Care, Mechanisms of Action, and Unmet Needs

Sponsored by the AAI Clinical Immunology Committee

Chairs

  • Erica L. Stone, GigaGen, AAI Clinical Immunology Committee Chair
  • Thomas A. Wynn, Pfizer

Speakers

  • Joanne L. Viney, Seismic Therapeut., New therapeutic approaches for dysregulated adaptive immunity
  • John C. Cambier, Univ. of Colorado Anschutz Sch. of Med., Exploiting inverse agonism for therapy in autoimmunity: immune cell silencing without death
  • Kristie M. Grebe, Anokion, Harnessing natural tolerance pathways in the liver to treat autoimmune diseases: evidence from KAN-101 for the treatment of celiac disease
  • David M. Berman, ImmunoCore, TCR bispecific protein therapeutics to treat autoimmunity

This session will include talks on a variety of immune-driven disease states and describe disease pathogenesis, current treatments, and their shortfalls, where potential areas of improvement may be in new treatments, and next therapies on the horizon. Linking the bench to the clinic will be emphasized.

 Friday, May 12, 2023     10:15 AM – 12:15 PM     Room 207B

28. My Lab is Recruiting Postdocs: Policy Approaches to Address the Needs of Today’s Biomedical Research Workforce

Sponsored by the AAI Committee on Public Affairs

Chairs

  • Peter E. Jensen, Univ. of Utah, AAI Committee on Public Affairs Chair
  • Tullia C. Bruno, Univ. of Pittsburgh

Speakers

  • Ericka Boone, Director, Div. of Biomed. Res. Workforce, NIH, Panelist
  • Greg M. Delgoffe, Univ. of Pittsburgh, Panelist

In recent years, principal investigators have expressed increasing concern about the difficulty of recruiting and retaining postdoctoral researchers, particularly in academia. While the problem is multifactorial, challenges include inadequate compensation/benefits, lack of affordable housing, difficulties achieving work-life balance, and insufficient support for training and mental health. The availability of postdocs has been further reduced by the COVID-19 pandemic and related disruptions, which have sharply decreased the number of international graduate students studying in the United States, resulting in a smaller potential postdoc pool. These challenges, combined with the lack of certainty in achieving “success” when pursuing a career in academia, often lead graduate students to pursue non-academic jobs in industry or elsewhere. With half of U.S. postdocs financially supported by federal agencies, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) has established a Working Group to evaluate whether there is statistical evidence of this perceived postdoc shortage, assess the factors that may be causing it, and develop recommendations to facilitate recruitment and retention.

This session will feature a distinguished panel of speakers who will discuss the current state of the postdoc workforce, the reasons for a dearth of candidates applying for postdoc positions, and potential policy approaches to alleviate the strain on the biomedical research workforce. The formal presentations will be followed by an open mic period during which all members of the audience, in particular trainees, will be invited to ask questions and/or speak about their experiences.

 Friday, May 12, 2023     11:00 AM – 1:00 PM     Room 209ABC

36. Immunology Teaching Interest Group: Enhancing Your Immunology Teaching

Sponsored by the AAI Education Committee

Chairs

  • Sumali Pandey, Minnesota State Univ., Moorhead
  • Damian L. Turner, Williams Col.

Speakers

  • Viviane Boaventura, Oswaldo Cruz Fndn., Fed. Univ. of Bahia, Brazil, ImmunoAlvo board game for dynamic teaching of immunology
  • William H. Carr, Medgar Evers Col., CUNY, Easing the pain of group work with an ice-breaker activity: "a case in point: from active learning to the job market"
  • Nadeem Fazal, Chicago State Univ. Col. of Phrm., A case for teaching basic immunology through scientific journalism: lesson taught by a coronavirus went viral!
  • Lindsey D. Hughes, Yale Sch. of Med., A perfect fit: 3D-printed kit to teach students principles of antigen-antibody recognition and herd immunity

Breakout Session Leaders

  • Vitaly V. Ganusov, Univ. of Tennessee, and Julie M. Jameson, California State Univ., San Marcos, Use of the AAI curriculum recommendations in an undergraduate immunology course
  • Tomas Helikar, Univ. of Nebraska, Lincoln, Louis B. Justement, Univ. of Alabama at Birmingham, Sumali Pandey, Minnesota State Univ., Moorhead, and Rebekah T. Taylor, Frostburg State Univ., Modeling immunological networks in an educational setting using Cell Collective*
  • Aimee Pugh-Bernard, Univ. of Colorado Anschutz Med. Campus, The use and creation of analogies as a teaching tool for understanding immunology
  • Rebecca Rivard, Gwynedd Mercy Univ., Immune Battle: use of a board game to help improve student understanding of immune function

Are you looking for new ideas or strategies to enliven and improve your teaching? If so, please join us for this special interest group, which will focus on strategies that instructors can use to successfully convey immunology concepts to students at the undergraduate and graduate levels. This session will explore teaching strategies through talks and structured breakout discussion groups. Current educators, new faculty, and trainees with an interest in teaching are welcome.

*Bring your laptop to get the most out of this breakout session!

 Friday, May 12, 2023     12:00 PM – 2:15 PM     West Salon GH

40. Careers Roundtables and Speed Networking Session

Sponsored by the AAI Minority Affairs Committee
Generously supported by the Department of Immunobiology, Yale School of Medicine

Chair

  • Tonya J. Webb, Univ. of Maryland Sch. of Med., AAI Minority Affairs Committee Chair

Career building and networking skills have never been more crucial to ensure success for trainees and early career scientists, including those traditionally underrepresented in biomedical research. At the session, take advantage of the opportunity to meet in small-group format with established immunologists and others to hear how they have handled the career challenges you now face and learn what they believe will work for you today. Then practice networking in a relaxed environment offering a structured networking exercise and personalized feedback on communicating your scientific interests/objectives most effectively. Scientists and trainees of all backgrounds are encouraged to attend!

Registration Fee: $30 (includes lunch)

Discussion Topics

Grad Student: Finding a Mentor, Setting Sights on Postdoc Training

  • Curtis Henry, Emory Univ.; Beth Tamburini, Univ. of Colorado
  • Julie Mirpuri, UT Southwestern Med. Ctr.; Henrique Serezani, Vanderbilt Univ.
  • Joseph Larkin III, Univ. of Florida; Robin Stephens, Rutgers Univ.

Navigating Challenges Unique to International Graduate Students and Postdocs

  • Adriana Larregina, Univ. of Pittsburgh; Mercedes Rincon, Univ. of Colorado
  • Craig Maynard, Univ. of Alabama at Birmingham; Lili Sanmarco, Seismic Therap.

Postdoc: Finding a Mentor, Setting Sights on a Faculty Position

  • Luis Montaner, The Wistar Inst.; Charlotte Vines, Univ. of Texas at El Paso
  • Harlan Jones, Univ. of North Texas; Antonieta Guerrero-Plata, Louisiana State Univ.
  • Maria-Luisa Alegre, Univ. of Chicago; Jeniffer Hernandez, Keck Graduate Inst.

Junior Faculty: Preparing for Promotion and Tenure

  • Elizabeth Kovacs, Univ. of Colorado; Carla Rothlin, Yale Sch. of Med.
  • Jose Conejo-Garcia, Duke Univ.; Tonya Webb, Univ. of Maryland Sch. of Med.
  • Robert Binder, Univ. of Pittsburgh

Maintaining Research Productivity at a Primarily Undergraduate Teaching Institution

  • Michael Opata, NIAID, NIH; Jennifer Punt, Univ. of Pennsylvania

Academia or Industry: How to Decide (or Switch Sides)

  • Louise D’Cruz, BD Biosci.; Stephen Haley, Immudex
  • Jonathan Deane, Kumquat Biosci.; Barbara Sullivan, Ultragenyx
  • Robert Balderas, BD Biosci.; Kiyomi Komori, Kinevant Sciences
  • Cherié Butts, Biogen; Sadiye Rieder, Horizon Therapeut.
  • Steven Crampton, Janssen Pharma.; Isharat Yusuf, Gossamer Bio
  • Frann Antignano, STEMCELL Technol.; Rashade Haynes II, Bristol Myers Squibb

Government Agency Careers (including Grant Review)

  • Swinburne Augustine, EPA; Kelly Hudspeth, NIAID, NIH
  • Timothy Gondre-Lewis, NIAID, NIH; Anuja Mathew, NIAID, NIH
  • Thomas Conway, NIAID, NIH; Vanitha Raman, NIAID, NIH

Beyond the Bench Science Careers:

  • Entrepreneurship
    • Eduardo Davila, Univ. of Colorado; Amber Miller, Fortis Life Sci.
    • James Lillard, Morehouse Sch. of Med.; Aliyah Weinstein, Fortis Life Sci.
  • Nonprofits/Foundations
    • Derek Haseltine, Hertz Fndn.; Thandi Onami, Bill and Melinda Gates Fndn.
  • Science Policy
    • Emily Kansler, AAI; Jacob Schumacher, AAI; Yvette Seger, FASEB
  • Scientific Patent Law
    • Jaconda Wagner, Wagner Law LLC; Joseph Hsiao, Officeof the Solicitor, U.S. Dept. of the Interior
  • Scientific Publishing /Science Writing
    • Adriana Benavides, Am. Assoc. for Cancer Res.; Charles Richter, AAI
    • Nicole Beauchamp, AAI; Emily Arturo, AAI
 Friday, May 12, 2023     12:30 PM – 2:30 PM     Room 207B

45. Immunological Approaches to (Re)emerging and Global Zoonotic Threats

Sponsored by the AAI Veterinary Immunology Committee

Chair

  • Janice C. Telfer, Univ. of Massachusetts, Amherst, AAI Veterinary Immunology Committee Chair

Speakers

  • Joan Lunney, USDA, ARS, The pig as a biomedical model: importance for immunity, disease, and vaccine research
  • Rudra Channappanavar, Oklahoma State Univ. Col. of Vet. Med., Role of dysregulated immunity in the pathogenesis of coronavirus infections
  • Bronwyn M. Gunn, Washington State Univ. Col. of Vet. Med., Leveraging a systems serology approach to define antibody-mediated mechanisms of immunity against zoonotic viral infection
  • Christopher A. Hunter, Univ. of Pennsylvania Sch. of Vet. Med., Understanding how mRNA vaccines promote CD8+ T cell responses

The modern hyper-mobile world, climate change, and increased contact between wildlife and humans has led to the increased incidence of emerging infectious disease (EID), which is defined as an infectious disease in which incidence has increased in the past 20 years and has potential for increasing further in the future. It is estimated that more than six out of every 10 known EIDS in people can be spread from animals, and three out of every four newly detected EIDs in people are transmitted from animal reservoirs. It is thus important to understand the pathogen–host immune response in all species. This symposium will highlight the study of swine as an important biomedical model species and reservoir as well as strategies to improve vaccines designed to combat EIDs in all species.

 Friday, May 12, 2023     1:00 PM – 2:00 PM     Room 205

54. Giving an Effective Media Interview

Sponsored by the AAI Public Communications Committee

Did you know that immunologists are in high demand by the media as subject matter experts? The pandemic highlighted the crucial role that the field of immunology plays in public health, and interest in related health topics is growing well beyond COVID-19 and vaccines. If you can speak about immunology in a way that is easy for the public to understand, and if you know how to prepare for a media interview, you can become a sought-after expert!

For descriptions and details of all sessions, please visit the IMMUNOLOGY2023™ Program page.

In this session, media trainer Andrea Fetchko, vice president, JPA Health, will teach you the general principles of preparing for and delivering an effective media interview. Learn how to develop your message and talking points, how to stay on message, how to speak so that consumers can understand and remember your points, and the Top 10 Dos and Don’ts of media interviewing.

You will also learn what to expect when speaking to a print journalist versus being a guest on a television or radio news show. Additionally, Kristina McBurney, Ph.D., a producer of The Immunology Podcast, will also join us to share tips specific to being a memorable and engaging podcast guest.

 Saturday, May 13, 2023     10:15 AM – 12:15 PM     Room 202B

114. Spotlight on AAI Journals

Sponsored by the AAI Publications Committee

Chairs

  • Daniel J. Campbell, Benaroya Res. Inst., AAI Publications Committee Chair
  • Eugene M. Oltz, Ohio State Univ. Col. of Med., Editor-in-Chief, The Journal of Immunology

Speakers

  • Nitya Jain, Harvard Med. Sch., RXRA regulates the development of resident tissue macrophages
  • Todd Bartkowiak, Vanderbilt Univ., Systems immunology analyses of STAT1 gain-of-function immune phenotypes reveal heterogeneous response to IL-6 and broad immunometabolic roles for STAT1
  • Tiffany Taylor, Univ. of Pittsburgh, Roles of IL-17-responsive transcription factors in regulating oropharyngeal candidiasis
  • Joshua J. Obar, Geisel Sch. of Med. at Dartmouth, Alveolar macrophages: controllers of the antifungal interferon response
  • Zhichao Fan, UConn Health, CFTR in regulating monocyte recruitment and integrin function
  • Vanessa Espinosa, Rutgers New Jersey Med. Sch., Neutrophils license the maturation of monocytes into effective antifungal effectors

A symposium featuring talks highlighting papers recently published in The Journal of Immunology and ImmunoHorizons.

 Saturday, May 13, 2023     11:45 AM – 1:15 PM     West Salon GH

126. Careers in Science Lecture and Roundtables

Sponsored by the AAI Education Committee and AAI Committee on the Status of Women

Chair

  • Dorina Avram, Moffitt Cancer Ctr., Committee on the Status of Women Chair

Speaker

  • Gwendalyn J. Randolph, Washington Univ. Sch. of Med. in St. Louis, Avoiding tokenism—choosing your seat at the table

At this popular session, attendees will have the opportunity to meet with experienced scientists to explore specific career issues important to today's scientists. Gain insights into issues you are confronting in your own career. Topics include international opportunities in science, succeeding in graduate school, tips on grant writing, considerations for scientists in M.D.-Ph.D. careers, and exciting careers beyond the bench. Topics include building productive mentor/mentee relationships; overcoming self-doubt; and tackling gender biases in recruitment, research, and leadership; and navigating work/life issues, such as balancing careers with family and transitioning from specific career stages, which may be relevant to any work environment (academic research, biotech industry, governmental agencies, nonprofit). Don’t miss this great opportunity!

Registration Fee: $30 (includes lunch)

Discussion Topics

A Conversation about Bystander Intervention

  • Gwendalyn J. Randolph, Washington Univ. Sch. of Med. in St. Louis

New PI (mentoring effectively, recruiting students and postdocs, preparing for promotion, early career self-promotion)

  • Venuprasad Poojary, UT Southwestern Med. Ctr.; Gregory F. Sonnenberg, Weill Cornell Med.

Succeeding in Graduate School

  • Lee Ann Garrett-Sinha, Univ. at Buffalo, SUNY; Joseph Larkin, III, Univ. of Florida; Brian Sheridan, Stony Brook Univ.; David Weiner, Wistar Inst.

Graduate Student to Postdoc

  • Ann Griffith, UT Health San Antonio; Wei Luo, Indiana Univ. Sch. of Med.; Joyce Wu, Ohio State Univ.

Postdoc to PI

  • Lisa Denzin, Child Health Inst. of New Jersey; David Hafler, Yale Sch. of Med.; Shruti Naik, New York Univ. Grossman Sch. of Med.; Irene Salinas, Univ. of New Mexico; Robin Stephens, Rutgers New Jersey Med. Sch.

Work/Life Balance

  • Kate MacNamara, Albany Med. Col.; Liang Zhou, Univ. of Florida

Building Networking Skills

  • Judith Cannon, Univ. of New Mexico; Cheong-Hee Chang, Univ. of Michigan; Rachel Gerstein, Univ. of Massachusetts Chan Med. Sch.; Amanda Jamieson, Brown Univ.

Biotech and Industry

  • Richard Boismenu, Sangamo Therapeutics; Richard Hanna, AstraZeneca; James Jin, Biocytogen Boston Corp.; Kiyomi Komori, Kinevant Sciences; Nikki B. Marshall, GSK; Sadiye Rieder, Horizon Therapeut.; Karsten Sauer, Cullinan Oncology; Erica Stone, GigaGen

Careers in Science Policy

  • Lauren G. Gross, AAI; Emily Kansler, AAI

Grant Writing for PIs

  • Michele Anderson, Univ. of Toronto; Jie Sun, Univ. of Virginia

Grant Writing for Fellowships

  • Shannon Dunn, St. Michael’s Hosp., Toronto; Virginia Shapiro, Mayo Clin.

Research from the M.D., Ph.D. Perspective/The Physician Scientist

  • Maria-Louisa Alegre, Univ. of Chicago; Amal Amer, Ohio State Univ.; Onyinye Iweala, Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Fayyaz Sutterwala, Cedars-Sinai Med. Ctr.

Careers in Veterinary Immunology

  • Weishan Huang, Louisiana State Univ.; Crystal Loving, National Animal Disease Ctr.

International Opportunities

  • Haiyan Liu, Natl. Univ. of Singapore; Gianluca Veggiani, Louisiana State Univ. and Cold Spring Harbor Lab.

How to Build Productive Mentor/Mentee Relationships

  • Barbara Kee, Univ. of Chicago; Kashayarsha Khazaie, Mayo Clin.

Balancing Teaching Responsibilities with Research

  • Deborah Brown, Clarkson Univ. and Trudeau Inst.; Julie Jameson, California State Univ., San Marcos

How to Negotiate for Better Self-Promotion

  • Thirumala-Devi Kanneganti, St. Jude Children’s Res. Hosp.; Malini Raghavan, Univ. of Michigan

NEW! Science Communication, Popular Science Writing, Editing

  • Deepta Bhattacharya, Univ. of Arizona; Jennifer Grier, Univ. of South Carolina Sch. of Med., Greenville

Challenges for Women Mentors and PIs

  • Laurence Morel, UT Hlth. San Antonio; Carla Rothlin, Yale Sch. of Med.

Academia versus Industry

  • Mandy McGeachy, Cornell Univ.; Jeff Rathmell, Vanderbilt Univ. Med. Ctr.

Alternative Careers

  • Dan Nevrivy, Nevrivy Patent Law Grp.

Tackling Gender Biases in Recruitment, Research, and Leadership

  • Avery August, Cornell Univ.; Dorina Avram, Moffitt Cancer Ctr.

Careers in Government Agencies

  • Yasmine Belkaid, NIAID, NIH; Deborah Hodge, NIAID, NIH; Kaushiki Mazumdar, CSR, NIH; Courtney Pinard, NIMH, NIH

Scientific Publishing

  • Henrique Borges da Silva; Mayo Clin.; Jose Conejo-Garcia, Duke Univ.

Opportunities for Scientists in Non-profits/Foundations

  • Jennifer Pesanelli, Biophysical Society; Joshua Vieth, JDRF
 Sunday, May 14, 2023     8:30 AM – 10:00 AM     West Salon GH

196. Sip and Learn: Speed Networking with Immunology Educators

Sponsored by the AAI Education Committee and ImmunoHorizons

Chairs

  • Nicholas A. Pullen, Univ. of Northern Colorado, AAI Education Committee Chair
  • Heather A. Bruns, Univ. of Alabama at Birmingham, ImmunoHorizons Editor

Mentors:

  • Katayoun Ayasoufi, Mayo Clin.
  • Aimee Bernard, Univ. of Colorado
  • Bonnie Blomberg, Univ. of Miami, Miller Sch. of Med.
  • Deborah Brown, Trudeau Inst.
  • Melanie Gubbels Bupp, Randolph-Macon Col.
  • Farhan Cyprian, Qatar Univ., Qatar
  • Benjamin Enslow, Univ. of Texas Hlth. Sci. Ctr., San Antonio
  • Beth Garvy, Univ. of Kentucky, Chandler Med. Ctr.
  • Maria Guerrero-Plata, Louisiana State Univ.
  • Jeniffer Hernandez, Keck Grad. Inst.
  • Stephanie James, Regis Univ.
  • Liliana Lamperti, Univ. of Concepcion, Chile
  • Estefania Nova-Lamperti, Univ. of Concepcion, Chile
  • Reinhard Obst, Univ. of Munich, Germany
  • Robin Orozco, Univ. of Kansas
  • Sumali Pandey, Minnesota State Univ.
  • Fernanda Rosa, Texas Tech Univ.
  • Sophia Sarafova, Davidson Col.
  • Jastaranpreet Singh, Univ. of Toronto, Canada
  • Michelle Swanson-Mungerson, Midwestern Univ., Chicago Col. of Osteopathic Med.
  • Julie Swartzendruber, Midwestern Univ.
  • Michael Volin, Midwestern Univ.

Are you interested in immunology education? Join the editors of ImmunoHorizons and the AAI Education Committee for a networking event for current and future immunology educators! The first part of this session will be short one-on-one meetings, where you’ll have the opportunity to meet others with an interest in immunology education. Then attendees can continue their conversations in a relaxed setting over coffee. All are welcome! Scientists and trainees of all backgrounds are encouraged to attend.

Registration Fee: $15 (includes coffee)

 Sunday, May 14, 2023     10:15 AM – 12:15 PM     Room 209ABC

202. Careers in Biotech: Panel Discussion and Networking

Sponsored by the AAI Education Committee
Generously supported by BD Biosciences

Chair

  • Kiyomi Komori, Kinevant

Panelists

  • Agata Bartczak, Horizon Therapeut.
  • Louise M. D'Cruz, BD Biosci.
  • Ian T. Saunders, Janssen Res. and Development
  • Thomas A. Wynn, Pfizer

Many opportunities exist in industry for scientists with advanced degrees. There are positions in laboratory research, program management, business development, regulatory affairs, clinical trials oversight, medical liaison, and more. This panel features scientists employed in a variety of positions in industry discussing their career paths and the skills required for success in each. Following the panel discussion, enjoy casual conversation with the speakers and other scientists from industry at a networking reception.

 Sunday, May 14, 2023     11:15 AM – 12:15 PM     Room 202B

210. AAI Vanguard Award Presentation and Lecture

Sponsored by the AAI Minority Affairs Committee
Generously supported by BD Biosciences

AAI President Mark M. Davis will introduce the awardee and present the award immediately prior to Dr. Binder’s lecture.

Chair

  • Tonya J. Webb, Univ. of Maryland Sch. of Med., AAI Minority Affairs Committee Chair

Speaker

Robert J. Binder

Robert J. Binder
Univ. of Pittsburgh
Key pathways in immunosurveillance of cancer

The AAI Vanguard Award recognizes an underrepresented member investigator noted for significant scientific achievement and exemplary career success.

GUEST Symposia

Each year guest societies, government agencies, and other research organizations join the scientific program to bring unique perspectives on basic research and clinical issues influencing and advancing the field. AAI has been honored to have program partners from many US and international societies, as well as government agencies that both fund and carry out stellar research programs.

 Friday, May 12, 2023     10:15 AM – 12:15 PM     Room 101

29. National Institute on Aging (NIA, NIH) Symposium

Mucosal Immunity, Microbiome, and Aging

Chairs

  • Mulualem E. Tilahun, NIA, NIH
  • Elizabeth J. Kovacs, Univ. of Colorado, Denver

Speakers

  • Elizabeth J. Kovacs, Univ. of Colorado, Denver, Inflammaging, burn trauma, and the gut-lung axis
  • Marta Rodriguez-Garcia, Tufts Univ. Sch. of Med., Aging compromises neutrophil-mediated innate protection against HIV in the human female genital tract
  • Noah W. Palm, Yale Sch. of Med., Mapping uncharted landscapes of host-microbiota communication
  • Yanjiao Zhou, Univ. of Connecticut Sch. of Med., The gut microbiome and immune responses in young and old mice on an intermittent-fasting diet
 Friday, May 12, 2023     12:30 PM – 2:30 PM     Room 202B

46. German Society for Immunology (DGfI) Symposium

Immune Competence in Tissues

Chairs

  • Dietmar Zehn, Tech. Univ. of Munich, Germany
  • Georg Gasteiger, Max-Planck Res. Group for Systems Immunology, Univ. of Würzburg, Germany

Speakers

  • Dietmar Zehn, Tech. Univ. of Munich, Germany, Dynamics and maintenance of resident CD8+ T cells in the intestine
  • Georg Gasteiger, Max-Planck Res. Group for Systems Immunology, Univ. of Würzburg, Germany, Tissue niches of resident lymphocytes
  • Wolfgang Kastenmüller, Max-Planck Res. Group for Systems Immunology, Univ. of Würzburg, Germany, Spatiotemporal orchestration of cellular immunity
  • Christine S. Falk, Medizinische Hochschule Hannover, Germany, T and NK cell chimerism in human lung transplantation
 Friday, May 12, 2023     12:30 PM – 2:30 PM     Room 101

47. International Society of Neuroimmunology (ISNI) Symposium

Neuroimmune Interactions in CNS Development, Repair, and Disease

Chairs

  • Francisco J. Quintana, Harvard Med. Sch.
  • Nicola J. Allen, Salk Inst. for Biological Studies

Speakers

  • Nicola J. Allen, Salk Inst. for Biological Studies, Astrocyte-neuron interaction in health and disease
  • Michael V. Sofroniew, Univ. of California, Los Angeles, Diverse astrocyte roles in CNS innate immunity
  • John R Lukens, Univ. of Virginia, SYKO mode: SYK is a key regulator of neuroprotective immune responses in Alzheimer’s disease
  • Francisco J. Quintana, Harvard Med. Sch., Regulatory cell interactions in CNS inflammation
 Friday, May 12, 2023     12:30 PM – 2:30 PM     Ballroom B

48. Society for Mucosal Immunology (SMI) Symposium

Protecting the Barrier from Invaders

Chairs

  • Gretchen E. Diehl, Mem. Sloan Kettering Cancer Ctr.
  • Kathryn A. Knoop, Mayo Clin.

Speakers

  • Gretchen E. Diehl, Mem. Sloan Kettering Cancer Ctr., Commensal regulation of gut immunity to pathogens
  • Kathryn A. Knoop, Mayo Clin., Early life protection in the intestine
  • Amanda M. Jamieson, Brown Univ., Polymicrobial lung infections
  • Nichole R. Klatt, Univ. of Minnesota Med. Sch., Vaginal microbiome and HIV infection
 Friday, May 12, 2023     12:30 PM – 2:30 PM     Room 102AB

49. Society for Natural Immunity (SNI) Symposium

NK Cells and ILCs in Cancer

Chairs

  • Todd A. Fehniger, Washington Univ. Sch. of Med. in St. Louis
  • Mariapia A. Degli-Esposti, Monash Univ., Australia

Speakers

  • Karl-Johan Malmberg, Univ. of Oslo, Norway, Transfer learning reveals NK cell states in the tumor microenvironment
  • John B. Sunwoo, Stanford Univ. Sch. of Med., CD103+ NK cells and cancer
  • Mariapia A. Degli-Esposti, Monash Univ., Australia, Regulatory roles of NK cells in infection and cancer
  • Heather M. McGee, City of Hope Nat. Med. Ctr., Radiation-induced innate lymphoid cell activation in the liver tumor microenvironment
 Friday, May 12, 2023     3:45 PM – 5:45 PM     Room 101

90. International Complement Society (ICS) Symposium

Location Matters: The Evolving Roles of Cell-autonomous and Local Complement

Chairs

  • Ben Afzali, NIDDK, NIH
  • Marcela Pekna, Univ. of Gothenburg, Sweden

Speakers

  • Niki M. Moutsopoulos, NIDCR, NIH, Innate immunity and the oral mucosa
  • Markus Bosmann, Boston Univ., Take a breath: local complement in lung pathologies
  • Marcela Pekna, Univ. of Gothenburg, Sweden, C3a receptor signaling in neural plasticity and astrocyte-microglia crosstalk after CNS injury
  • Brahm H. Segal, Univ. at Buffalo, SUNY, The unexpected contributions of local complement in ovarian cancer
 Friday, May 12, 2023     3:45 PM – 5:45 PM     Room 207B

91. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID, NIH) Symposium

Improved Tools for Modeling Human Immunity In Vitro and In Vivo—Organoid Cultures and Novel Mouse Models

Chairs

  • Joy Liu, NIAID, NIH
  • Mark T. Heise, Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Speakers

  • Mark T. Heise, Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Complex genetic architecture underlies regulation of respiratory virus immune responses in the collaborative cross
  • Huimin Zhang, Stanford Univ. Med. Sch., Modeling tissue-resident immunity in organoids
  • Barbara Rehermann, NIDDK, NIH, Wild mouse microbiota in preclinical models of inflammation and metabolism
  • Suhas Sureshchandra, Univ. of California, Irvine, Modeling human adaptive immune responses with tonsil organoids
  • Paolo Casali, UT Health, San Antonio, Long Sch. of Med., Construction of mice with a fully human immune system mounting class-switched, hypermutated, and neutralizing antibody response
 Friday, May 12, 2023     3:45 PM – 5:45 PM     Room 102AB

92. National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases (NIAMS, NIH) Symposium

Somatic Mutations in Non-malignant Diseases

Chairs

  • Peter C. Grayson, NIAMS, NIH
  • Bhavisha A. Patel, NHLBI, NIH

Speakers

  • Heather E. Machado, Sanger Inst., U.K., Mutational landscapes in human lymphocytes
  • Peter C. Grayson, NIAMS, NIH, Somatic mutations in rheumatology: VEXAS syndrome and beyond
  • Bhavisha A. Patel, NHLBI, NIH, Somatic mutations in benign hematologic diseases
 Saturday, May 13, 2023     8:00 AM – 10:00 AM     Room 207A

105. Society for Immunotherapy of Cancer (SITC) Symposium

Building the Antitumor Repertoire

Chairs

  • Lisa H. Butterfield, Univ. of California, San Francisco
  • Stephen P. Schoenberger, La Jolla Inst. for Immunology

Speakers

  • Lisa H. Butterfield, Univ. of California, San Francisco, Dendritic cell dysfunction and making better vaccines
  • Stephen P. Schoenberger, La Jolla Inst. for Immunology, ACT with NeoAg-specific CD4+ T cells
  • Neeha Zaidi, Johns Hopkins Univ., Ras antigen vaccines, GVAX vaccines, and pancreatic cancer combinations
  • Gordon J. Freeman, Dana-Farber Cancer Inst., Checkpoint modulation of the T cell repertoire
 Saturday, May 13, 2023     10:15 AM – 12:15 PM     Room 102AB

115. International Cytokine and Interferon Society (ICIS) Symposium

Understanding and Modulating Cytokine Activity through Structural Knowledge

Chairs

  • Juan L. Mendoza, Univ. of Chicago
  • Ignacio Moraga, Univ. of Dundee, Univ. of Dundee, United Kingdom

Speakers

  • Matthew C. Franklin, Regeneron Pharma., Structural insights into the assembly of gp130 family cytokine signaling complexes
  • Juan L. Mendoza, Univ. of Chicago, The native JAK-JAK geometry in the type III IFN signaling complex limits the functional potency
  • Dylan Daniel, CytomX Therapeut., Designing conditionally activated probody cytokines to localize antitumor activity to cancers
  • Ignacio Moraga, Univ. of Dundee, United Kingdom, Manipulating cytokine activities in different extracellular microenvironments
  • Jamie B. Spangler, Johns Hopkins Univ., Dissecting immune biology using de novo engineered cytokines
 Saturday, May 13, 2023     10:15 AM – 12:15 PM     Room 101

116. Chinese Society of Immunology, Taiwan (CSIT) Symposium

Novel Strategies for the Prevention and Therapy of SARS-CoV-2 Infection

Chairs

  • Shie-Liang Hsieh, Genomics Res. Ctr., Academia Sinica, Taiwan
  • Jenny P.-Y. Ting, Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Speakers

  • Shie-Liang Hsieh, Genomics Res. Ctr., Academia Sinica, Taiwan, Targeting the CLEC2- CLEC5A/TLR2 axis to attenuate SARS-CoV-2-induced immunothrombosis
  • Kuo-I Lin, Genomics Res. Ctr., Academia Sinica, Taiwan, Vaccination with a glyco-engineered SARS-CoV-2 spike protein confers cross-strain protection in mice
  • Shih-Jen Liu, Nat. Hlth. Res. Inst., Taiwan, Strategies of DNA vaccination against COVID-19
  • Che-Ming Hu, Inst. of Biomedical Sci., Academia Sinica, Taiwan, Breaking down the T cell induction barrier with modular nanotechnology for anticancer and antiviral applications
 Saturday, May 13, 2023     12:30 PM – 2:30 PM     Room 101

131. Canadian Society for Immunology (CSI) Symposium

The Ontogeny and Functioning of the Immune System: Lessons from Non-mammalian Systems

Chairs

  • Edan Foley, Univ. of Alberta, Canada
  • Jason N. Berman, Univ. of Ottowa and Children's Hosp. of Eastern Ontario Res. Inst., Canada

Speakers

  • Edan Foley, Univ. of Alberta, Canada, Single-cell resolution of the zebrafish intestinal immune response to a Vibrio cholerae infection
  • Jason N. Berman, Univ. of Ottowa and Children's Hosp. of Eastern Ontario Res. Inst., Canada, Leveraging the zebrafish model for preclinical studies of the immune microenvironment in cancer
  • Francesca Di Cara, Dalhousie Univ., Canada, Drosophila immunity
  • Shayan Sharif, Univ. of Guelph, Canada, Chicken immunity and viral pathogens
  • W. Brent Derry, Univ. of Toronto, Canada, C. elegans innate immunity
 Saturday, May 13, 2023     3:45 PM – 5:45 PM     Room 101

177. Korean Association of Immunologists and Association of Korean Immunologists in America (KAI & AKIA) Symposium

Immune Cell Communications in Cancer and Inflammation

Chairs

  • Minsoo Kim, Univ. of Rochester
  • Su-Hyung Park, Korea Advanced Inst. of Sci. and Tech., South Korea

Speakers

  • Eun D. Lee, Virginia Commonwealth Univ., Targeting ERAP2 for cancer therapy
  • Eun Young Choi, Seoul Nat. Univ. Col. of Med., South Korea, Actin and microtubule cross-talks in immune synapse and the application to CAR T cell therapy
  • Chang-Duk Jun, Gwangju Inst. of Sci. and Tech., South Korea, T cell microvilli shedding as a mechanism of T cell clonal expansion
  • Myong-Hee Sung, NIA, NIH, Double knock-in reporter mice reveal NF-κβ trajectories in signaling, immune cell development, and aging
 Sunday, May 14, 2023     10:15 AM – 12:15 PM     Room 202A

200. American Society of Transplantation (AST) Symposium

Cutting Edge Research in Transplantation Tolerance, Rejection, and Infection

Chairs

  • Valeria R. Mas, Univ. of Maryland Sch. of Med.
  • Leonardo V. Riella, Massachusetts Gen. Hosp.

Speakers

  • Keri E. Lunsford, Rutgers New Jersey Med. Sch., Liver transplant multi-omic assessment of immune frailty
  • Anoma Nellore, Univ. of Alabama at Birmingham, Mucosal flu-specific B cells: insights from vaccine and ex vivo lung perfusion studies
  • Mandy L. Ford, Emory Univ., Risky memory T cell subsets in transplantation
  • Paolo Cravedi, Icahn Sch. of Med. at Mount Sinai, Inducing regulatory T cells for allograft survival
 Sunday, May 14, 2023     10:15 AM – 12:15 PM     Room 102AB

201. American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene (ASTMH) Symposium

Immunoparasitology: Perspectives by Top Trainees, Early Career, and Established ASTMH Researchers

Chairs

  • Robin Stephens, Rutgers New Jersey Med. Sch.
  • Azza Hussein Idris, NIAID, NIH

Speakers

  • Romaniya Zayats, Univ. of Manitoba, Canada, Cellular dynamics of immune evasion during Leishmania major infection
  • Kirk D. C. Jensen, Univ. of California, Merced, Regulation of humoral immunity to Toxoplasma gondii
  • Azza Hussein Idris, NIAID, NIH, Antibodies for malaria prevention—a bench to bedside story
  • Robin Stephens, Rutgers New Jersey Med. Sch., CD4+ T cell regulation of immunity to plasmodium parasites
 Sunday, May 14, 2023     3:45 PM – 5:45 PM     Room 209ABC

255. National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS, NIH) Symposium

How the Latest Advances in Immunology Inform the Field of Developmental Immunotoxicology: A Panel Discussion

This symposium will feature brief talks and a panel discussion between basic and developmental immunologists and immunotoxicologists to learn from and inform each other of new scientific paradigms, advances, and methodology in their respective fields.

Chairs

  • Michael C. Humble, NIEHS, NIH
  • Fenna C.M. Sillé, Johns Hopkins Univ.

Panelists

  • Michael C. Humble, NIEHS, NIH, Introduction
  • Anna E. Beaudin, Univ. of Utah, Contribution of fetal hematopoiesis to postnatal immune function and disease susceptibility
  • Jamie C. DeWitt, East Carolina Univ., Impact of early-life exposure to per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) and implications for later life immune-based diseases
  • Isha Khan, Michigan State Univ., An in vitro model of human hematopoiesis for developmental immunotoxicity testing
  • Brian D. Rudd, Cornell Univ., Studying immune development in mice with normalized microbial exposure
  • Momoko Yoshimoto-Kobayashi, Univ. of Texas Hlth. Sci. Cntr. at Houston, HSC-independent hematopoiesis in the embryo contributes to a significant part of adult immune cell
  • Judith T. Zelikoff, New York Univ. Langone Health, Pulmonary immunotoxic effects of inhaled ambient particulate matter on prenatally-exposed offspring
  • Fenna C.M. Sillé, Johns Hopkins Univ., Panel discussion: future outlook on alternatives to DIT testing
 Sunday, May 14, 2023     3:45 PM – 5:45 PM     Room 204ABC

254. European Federation of Immunological Societies (EFIS) Symposium

Fundamental Lessons Learned from the Clinic

Chairs

  • Bojan Polić, Univ. of Rijeka, Croatia
  • Rami Bechara, Université Paris-Saclay, France

Speakers

  • Bojan Polić, Univ. of Rijeka, Croatia, Immune-endocrine regulation of blood glucose in a strong non-lethal viral infection
  • Eva Martínez-Cáceres, Germans Trias i Pujol Hosp., Badalone, Spain, Cell-based tolerogenic therapies: from bench to bedside, and back
  • Luke A.J. O'Neill, Trinity Col., Dublin, Ireland, Macrophage immunometabolism and the regulation of inflammation
  • S. Marieke van Ham, Sanquin Res., Netherlands, Insights into human B cell differentiation upon infection and vaccination
  • David C. Wraith, University of Birmingham, United Kingdom, The mechanism of antigen-specific immunotherapy of autoimmune diseases

Career Development Opportunities

IMMUNOLOGY2023™ provides a wide range of sessions to support the career development of students, postdoctoral fellows, and faculty.

 Friday, May 12, 2023     9:00 AM – 10:00 AM     Room 209ABC

23. How to Convert Your CV into a Résumé

Speaker

  • Derek J. Haseltine, Hertz Fndn.

For anyone seeking a job outside of academe, how you present yourself on paper is critical. A well-prepared résumé can make all the difference in securing that interview. The focus of this session will be on the important elements of a résumé, the differences between a résumé and the standard academic curriculum vitae, and the information needed to make a good impression. In this special career development session, attendees will be instructed in how to transform their CVs into professional résumés. Small breakout sessions for individual consulting will follow. Bring your CV!

 Friday, May 12, 2023     11:00 AM – 1:00 PM     Room 209ABC

36. Immunology Teaching Interest Group: Enhancing Your Immunology Teaching

Sponsored by the AAI Education Committee

Chairs

  • Sumali Pandey, Minnesota State Univ., Moorhead
  • Damian L. Turner, Williams Col.

Speakers

  • Viviane Boaventura, Oswaldo Cruz Fndn., Fed. Univ. of Bahia, Brazil, ImmunoAlvo board game for dynamic teaching of immunology
  • William H. Carr, Medgar Evers Col., CUNY, Easing the pain of group work with an ice-breaker activity: "a case in point: from active learning to the job market"
  • Nadeem Fazal, Chicago State Univ. Col. of Phrm., A case for teaching basic immunology through scientific journalism: lesson taught by a coronavirus went viral!
  • Lindsey D. Hughes, Yale Sch. of Med., A perfect fit: 3D-printed kit to teach students principles of antigen-antibody recognition and herd immunity

Breakout Session Leaders

  • Vitaly V. Ganusov, Univ. of Tennessee, and Julie M. Jameson, California State Univ., San Marcos, Use of the AAI curriculum recommendations in an undergraduate immunology course
  • Tomas Helikar, Univ. of Nebraska, Lincoln, Louis B. Justement, Univ. of Alabama at Birmingham, Sumali Pandey, Minnesota State Univ., Moorhead, and Rebekah T. Taylor, Frostburg State Univ., Modeling immunological networks in an educational setting using Cell Collective*
  • Aimee Pugh-Bernard, Univ. of Colorado Anschutz Med. Campus, The use and creation of analogies as a teaching tool for understanding immunology
  • Rebecca Rivard, Gwynedd Mercy Univ., Immune Battle: use of a board game to help improve student understanding of immune function

Are you looking for new ideas or strategies to enliven and improve your teaching? If so, please join us for this special interest group, which will focus on strategies that instructors can use to successfully convey immunology concepts to students at the undergraduate and graduate levels. This session will explore teaching strategies through talks and structured breakout discussion groups. Current educators, new faculty, and trainees with an interest in teaching are welcome.

*Bring your laptop to get the most out of this breakout session!

 Friday, May 12, 2023     12:00 PM – 2:15 PM     West Salon GH

40. Careers Roundtables and Speed Networking Session

Sponsored by the AAI Minority Affairs Committee
Generously supported by the Department of Immunobiology, Yale School of Medicine

Chair

  • Tonya J. Webb, Univ. of Maryland Sch. of Med., AAI Minority Affairs Committee Chair

Career building and networking skills have never been more crucial to ensure success for trainees and early career scientists, including those traditionally underrepresented in biomedical research. At the session, take advantage of the opportunity to meet in small-group format with established immunologists and others to hear how they have handled the career challenges you now face and learn what they believe will work for you today. Then practice networking in a relaxed environment offering a structured networking exercise and personalized feedback on communicating your scientific interests/objectives most effectively. Scientists and trainees of all backgrounds are encouraged to attend!

Registration Fee: $30 (includes lunch)

Discussion Topics

Grad Student: Finding a Mentor, Setting Sights on Postdoc Training

  • Curtis Henry, Emory Univ.; Beth Tamburini, Univ. of Colorado
  • Julie Mirpuri, UT Southwestern Med. Ctr.; Henrique Serezani, Vanderbilt Univ.
  • Joseph Larkin III, Univ. of Florida; Robin Stephens, Rutgers Univ.

Navigating Challenges Unique to International Graduate Students and Postdocs

  • Adriana Larregina, Univ. of Pittsburgh; Mercedes Rincon, Univ. of Colorado
  • Craig Maynard, Univ. of Alabama at Birmingham; Lili Sanmarco, Seismic Therap.

Postdoc: Finding a Mentor, Setting Sights on a Faculty Position

  • Luis Montaner, The Wistar Inst.; Charlotte Vines, Univ. of Texas at El Paso
  • Harlan Jones, Univ. of North Texas; Antonieta Guerrero-Plata, Louisiana State Univ.
  • Maria-Luisa Alegre, Univ. of Chicago; Jeniffer Hernandez, Keck Graduate Inst.

Junior Faculty: Preparing for Promotion and Tenure

  • Elizabeth Kovacs, Univ. of Colorado; Carla Rothlin, Yale Sch. of Med.
  • Jose Conejo-Garcia, Duke Univ.; Tonya Webb, Univ. of Maryland Sch. of Med.
  • Robert Binder, Univ. of Pittsburgh

Maintaining Research Productivity at a Primarily Undergraduate Teaching Institution

  • Michael Opata, NIAID, NIH; Jennifer Punt, Univ. of Pennsylvania

Academia or Industry: How to Decide (or Switch Sides)

  • Louise D’Cruz, BD Biosci.; Stephen Haley, Immudex
  • Jonathan Deane, Kumquat Biosci.; Barbara Sullivan, Ultragenyx
  • Robert Balderas, BD Biosci.; Kiyomi Komori, Kinevant Sciences
  • Cherié Butts, Biogen; Sadiye Rieder, Horizon Therapeut.
  • Steven Crampton, Janssen Pharma.; Isharat Yusuf, Gossamer Bio
  • Frann Antignano, STEMCELL Technol.; Rashade Haynes II, Bristol Myers Squibb

Government Agency Careers (including Grant Review)

  • Swinburne Augustine, EPA; Kelly Hudspeth, NIAID, NIH
  • Timothy Gondre-Lewis, NIAID, NIH; Anuja Mathew, NIAID, NIH
  • Thomas Conway, NIAID, NIH; Vanitha Raman, NIAID, NIH

Beyond the Bench Science Careers:

  • Entrepreneurship
    • Eduardo Davila, Univ. of Colorado; Amber Miller, Fortis Life Sci.
    • James Lillard, Morehouse Sch. of Med.; Aliyah Weinstein, Fortis Life Sci.
  • Nonprofits/Foundations
    • Derek Haseltine, Hertz Fndn.; Thandi Onami, Bill and Melinda Gates Fndn.
  • Science Policy
    • Emily Kansler, AAI; Jacob Schumacher, AAI; Yvette Seger, FASEB
  • Scientific Patent Law
    • Jaconda Wagner, Wagner Law LLC; Joseph Hsiao, Officeof the Solicitor, U.S. Dept. of the Interior
  • Scientific Publishing /Science Writing
    • Adriana Benavides, Am. Assoc. for Cancer Res.; Charles Richter, AAI
    • Nicole Beauchamp, AAI; Emily Arturo, AAI
 Friday, May 12, 2023     1:00 PM – 2:00 PM     Room 205

54. Giving an Effective Media Interview

Sponsored by the AAI Public Communications Committee

Did you know that immunologists are in high demand by the media as subject matter experts? The pandemic highlighted the crucial role that the field of immunology plays in public health, and interest in related health topics is growing well beyond COVID-19 and vaccines. If you can speak about immunology in a way that is easy for the public to understand, and if you know how to prepare for a media interview, you can become a sought-after expert!

For descriptions and details of all sessions, please visit the IMMUNOLOGY2023™ Program page.

In this session, media trainer Andrea Fetchko, vice president, JPA Health, will teach you the general principles of preparing for and delivering an effective media interview. Learn how to develop your message and talking points, how to stay on message, how to speak so that consumers can understand and remember your points, and the Top 10 Dos and Don’ts of media interviewing.

You will also learn what to expect when speaking to a print journalist versus being a guest on a television or radio news show. Additionally, Kristina McBurney, Ph.D., a producer of The Immunology Podcast, will also join us to share tips specific to being a memorable and engaging podcast guest.

 Saturday, May 13, 2023     10:15 AM – 11:15 AM     Room 209ABC

113. Interviewing for a Job

Speaker

  • Derek J. Haseltine, Hertz Fndn.

This session will focus on tips and techniques to help you successfully navigate the interview process. Emphasis will be on how you can present yourself in the best possible light. You will also learn how to respond to unexpected questions. This session is open to anyone but is especially intended for student and postdoctoral attendees.

 Saturday, May 13, 2023     11:45 AM – 1:15 PM     West Salon GH

126. Careers in Science Lecture and Roundtables

Sponsored by the AAI Education Committee and AAI Committee on the Status of Women

Chair

  • Dorina Avram, Moffitt Cancer Ctr., Committee on the Status of Women Chair

Speaker

  • Gwendalyn J. Randolph, Washington Univ. Sch. of Med. in St. Louis, Avoiding tokenism—choosing your seat at the table

At this popular session, attendees will have the opportunity to meet with experienced scientists to explore specific career issues important to today's scientists. Gain insights into issues you are confronting in your own career. Topics include international opportunities in science, succeeding in graduate school, tips on grant writing, considerations for scientists in M.D.-Ph.D. careers, and exciting careers beyond the bench. Topics include building productive mentor/mentee relationships; overcoming self-doubt; and tackling gender biases in recruitment, research, and leadership; and navigating work/life issues, such as balancing careers with family and transitioning from specific career stages, which may be relevant to any work environment (academic research, biotech industry, governmental agencies, nonprofit). Don’t miss this great opportunity!

Registration Fee: $30 (includes lunch)

Discussion Topics

A Conversation about Bystander Intervention

  • Gwendalyn J. Randolph, Washington Univ. Sch. of Med. in St. Louis

New PI (mentoring effectively, recruiting students and postdocs, preparing for promotion, early career self-promotion)

  • Venuprasad Poojary, UT Southwestern Med. Ctr.; Gregory F. Sonnenberg, Weill Cornell Med.

Succeeding in Graduate School

  • Lee Ann Garrett-Sinha, Univ. at Buffalo, SUNY; Joseph Larkin, III, Univ. of Florida; Brian Sheridan, Stony Brook Univ.; David Weiner, Wistar Inst.

Graduate Student to Postdoc

  • Ann Griffith, UT Health San Antonio; Wei Luo, Indiana Univ. Sch. of Med.; Joyce Wu, Ohio State Univ.

Postdoc to PI

  • Lisa Denzin, Child Health Inst. of New Jersey; David Hafler, Yale Sch. of Med.; Shruti Naik, New York Univ. Grossman Sch. of Med.; Irene Salinas, Univ. of New Mexico; Robin Stephens, Rutgers New Jersey Med. Sch.

Work/Life Balance

  • Kate MacNamara, Albany Med. Col.; Liang Zhou, Univ. of Florida

Building Networking Skills

  • Judith Cannon, Univ. of New Mexico; Cheong-Hee Chang, Univ. of Michigan; Rachel Gerstein, Univ. of Massachusetts Chan Med. Sch.; Amanda Jamieson, Brown Univ.

Biotech and Industry

  • Richard Boismenu, Sangamo Therapeutics; Richard Hanna, AstraZeneca; James Jin, Biocytogen Boston Corp.; Kiyomi Komori, Kinevant Sciences; Nikki B. Marshall, GSK; Sadiye Rieder, Horizon Therapeut.; Karsten Sauer, Cullinan Oncology; Erica Stone, GigaGen

Careers in Science Policy

  • Lauren G. Gross, AAI; Emily Kansler, AAI

Grant Writing for PIs

  • Michele Anderson, Univ. of Toronto; Jie Sun, Univ. of Virginia

Grant Writing for Fellowships

  • Shannon Dunn, St. Michael’s Hosp., Toronto; Virginia Shapiro, Mayo Clin.

Research from the M.D., Ph.D. Perspective/The Physician Scientist

  • Maria-Louisa Alegre, Univ. of Chicago; Amal Amer, Ohio State Univ.; Onyinye Iweala, Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Fayyaz Sutterwala, Cedars-Sinai Med. Ctr.

Careers in Veterinary Immunology

  • Weishan Huang, Louisiana State Univ.; Crystal Loving, National Animal Disease Ctr.

International Opportunities

  • Haiyan Liu, Natl. Univ. of Singapore; Gianluca Veggiani, Louisiana State Univ. and Cold Spring Harbor Lab.

How to Build Productive Mentor/Mentee Relationships

  • Barbara Kee, Univ. of Chicago; Kashayarsha Khazaie, Mayo Clin.

Balancing Teaching Responsibilities with Research

  • Deborah Brown, Clarkson Univ. and Trudeau Inst.; Julie Jameson, California State Univ., San Marcos

How to Negotiate for Better Self-Promotion

  • Thirumala-Devi Kanneganti, St. Jude Children’s Res. Hosp.; Malini Raghavan, Univ. of Michigan

NEW! Science Communication, Popular Science Writing, Editing

  • Deepta Bhattacharya, Univ. of Arizona; Jennifer Grier, Univ. of South Carolina Sch. of Med., Greenville

Challenges for Women Mentors and PIs

  • Laurence Morel, UT Hlth. San Antonio; Carla Rothlin, Yale Sch. of Med.

Academia versus Industry

  • Mandy McGeachy, Cornell Univ.; Jeff Rathmell, Vanderbilt Univ. Med. Ctr.

Alternative Careers

  • Dan Nevrivy, Nevrivy Patent Law Grp.

Tackling Gender Biases in Recruitment, Research, and Leadership

  • Avery August, Cornell Univ.; Dorina Avram, Moffitt Cancer Ctr.

Careers in Government Agencies

  • Yasmine Belkaid, NIAID, NIH; Deborah Hodge, NIAID, NIH; Kaushiki Mazumdar, CSR, NIH; Courtney Pinard, NIMH, NIH

Scientific Publishing

  • Henrique Borges da Silva; Mayo Clin.; Jose Conejo-Garcia, Duke Univ.

Opportunities for Scientists in Non-profits/Foundations

  • Jennifer Pesanelli, Biophysical Society; Joshua Vieth, JDRF
 Saturday, May 13, 2023     12:30 PM – 2:30 PM     Room 209ABC

130. NIH Grants Workshop: Demystifying the Grant Application Submission, Review, and Funding Processes

Chair

  • Alok Mulky, CSR, NIH

Panelists

  • Timothy Gondre-Lewis, NIAID, NIH
  • Lillian Kuo, NCI, NIH
  • Xinrui Li, CSR, NIH

This workshop will provide participants with an overview of NIH grant submission, assignment, review, and funding opportunities. Emphasis will be on discussing funding mechanisms and opportunities available through NIH, how to make an application “reviewer friendly,” and other strategies that contribute to applications that succeed in obtaining research funding, with a focus on RPG and training grant mechanisms.

The workshop will also provide information on how to understand the peer review system, which is essential to competing successfully for funding, with a focus on recent changes to the review process. NIH review and program staff will provide a broad array of expertise and encourage questions from seminar participants. This workshop is open to anyone interested in learning more about preparing an NIH grant application and obtaining NIH funding. Trainees and independent investigators are welcome.

 Sunday, May 14, 2023     8:30 AM – 10:00 AM     West Salon GH

196. Sip and Learn: Speed Networking with Immunology Educators

Sponsored by the AAI Education Committee and ImmunoHorizons

Chairs

  • Nicholas A. Pullen, Univ. of Northern Colorado, AAI Education Committee Chair
  • Heather A. Bruns, Univ. of Alabama at Birmingham, ImmunoHorizons Editor

Mentors:

  • Katayoun Ayasoufi, Mayo Clin.
  • Aimee Bernard, Univ. of Colorado
  • Bonnie Blomberg, Univ. of Miami, Miller Sch. of Med.
  • Deborah Brown, Trudeau Inst.
  • Melanie Gubbels Bupp, Randolph-Macon Col.
  • Farhan Cyprian, Qatar Univ., Qatar
  • Benjamin Enslow, Univ. of Texas Hlth. Sci. Ctr., San Antonio
  • Beth Garvy, Univ. of Kentucky, Chandler Med. Ctr.
  • Maria Guerrero-Plata, Louisiana State Univ.
  • Jeniffer Hernandez, Keck Grad. Inst.
  • Stephanie James, Regis Univ.
  • Liliana Lamperti, Univ. of Concepcion, Chile
  • Estefania Nova-Lamperti, Univ. of Concepcion, Chile
  • Reinhard Obst, Univ. of Munich, Germany
  • Robin Orozco, Univ. of Kansas
  • Sumali Pandey, Minnesota State Univ.
  • Fernanda Rosa, Texas Tech Univ.
  • Sophia Sarafova, Davidson Col.
  • Jastaranpreet Singh, Univ. of Toronto, Canada
  • Michelle Swanson-Mungerson, Midwestern Univ., Chicago Col. of Osteopathic Med.
  • Julie Swartzendruber, Midwestern Univ.
  • Michael Volin, Midwestern Univ.

Are you interested in immunology education? Join the editors of ImmunoHorizons and the AAI Education Committee for a networking event for current and future immunology educators! The first part of this session will be short one-on-one meetings, where you’ll have the opportunity to meet others with an interest in immunology education. Then attendees can continue their conversations in a relaxed setting over coffee. All are welcome! Scientists and trainees of all backgrounds are encouraged to attend.

Registration Fee: $15 (includes coffee)

 Sunday, May 14, 2023     10:15 AM – 12:15 PM     Room 209ABC

202. Careers in Biotech: Panel Discussion and Networking

Sponsored by the AAI Education Committee
Generously supported by BD Biosciences

Chair

  • Kiyomi Komori, Kinevant

Panelists

  • Agata Bartczak, Horizon Therapeut.
  • Louise M. D'Cruz, BD Biosci.
  • Ian T. Saunders, Janssen Res. and Development
  • Thomas A. Wynn, Pfizer

Many opportunities exist in industry for scientists with advanced degrees. There are positions in laboratory research, program management, business development, regulatory affairs, clinical trials oversight, medical liaison, and more. This panel features scientists employed in a variety of positions in industry discussing their career paths and the skills required for success in each. Following the panel discussion, enjoy casual conversation with the speakers and other scientists from industry at a networking reception.

 Monday, May 15, 2023     9:00 AM – 10:00 AM     Room 102AB

268. How to Have a Successful Postdoctoral Experience

Speaker

  • Lori Conlan, OITE, NIH

A postdoctoral fellowship is the time to develop research skills you will need to succeed as an independent scientist. It is, however, just as important to realize that you need to prepare for a career path at the same time. This session will highlight ways of getting the most out of your postdoctoral fellowship, relating successfully with your mentor, and understanding how to use the resources available to you to ensure that your training prepares you adequately for a seamless transition into the next phase of your career.

Other Career Resources

Jobs Board
AAI is sponsoring a virtual Jobs Board on the IMMUNOLOGY2023™ website. The Jobs Board service is FREE to all meeting registrants and exhibitors. Job Seekers! Review the online AAI Jobs Board to identify positions that target attendees. Reach recruiters directly; job postings will include e-mail addresses for recruiters’ designated contacts. Employers! Take advantage of this unparalleled opportunity to recruit from over 3,000 immunologists at all career stages!

SOCIAL EVENTS

 Thursday, May 11, 2023     4:00 PM – 4:45 PM    

New Member Reception

Sponsored by the AAI Membership Committee
Generously supported by BD Biosciences

Are you a new AAI Regular, Associate, or Postdoctoral Fellow member? Please join us for a special reception welcoming you to AAI and perhaps your very first AAI annual meeting! AAI President Mark Davis will say a few words, and you will have the opportunity to meet and mingle with AAI Council members, AAI staff, members of the Membership Committee, and other fellow new members!

(Light refreshments will be served. Badge and invitation are required.)

 Thursday, May 11, 2023     6:15 PM – 7:30 PM     Ballroom Lobby

IMMUNOLOGY2023™ Opening Night Welcome Reception

IMMUNOLOGY2022™ attendees at the Opening Night Welcome Reception, held outdoors in Portland

Following the President’s Address, join the Opening Night Welcome Reception in the convention center. Connect with friends, make new acquaintances, plan your week, and enjoy beautiful views of our nation’s capital city. One complimentary drink ticket is included and attached to your name badge.

(Attendees must be 21 years of age or older. Badge is required.)

 Friday, May 12, 2023     8:15 PM – 9:45 PM    

Minority Affairs Committee (MAC) Social Hour

Sponsored by the AAI Minority Affairs Committee
2022 MAC Social Hour
Attendees at the MAC Social Hour during IMMUNOLOGY2022™

One of the most important and meaningful aspects of the annual meeting is connection! The MAC Social Hour is an evening gathering for participants in the annual MAC Careers Roundtables session to reconvene for relaxed, informal networking. Soft drinks and hors d’oeuvres will be served.

(Badge and invitation are required. Invitations will be issued to meeting attendees registered to attend the MAC Careers Roundtables and Speed Networking Session.)

 Saturday, May 13, 2023     7:30 PM – 10:00 PM    

AAI President’s Service Appreciation Reception

Generously supported by BioLegend
PSAR Invitees at IMMUNOLOGY2022™

The annual President's Service Appreciation Reception is hosted by the AAI Council in honor of the dedicated volunteers who give generously of their time to serve the association as committee chairs and members, journal editors, and in other crucial roles.

(Badge and invitation are required.)

 Sunday, May 14, 2023     7:00 PM – 10:00 PM     National Museum of American History

IMMUNOLOGY2023™ Gala

Generously supported by BioLegend
IMMUNOLOGY2022™ attendees at the Gala, held at the Portland Art Museum

The IMMUNOLOGY2023™ Gala will be held at the National Museum of American History. Attendees will have the opportunity to view highly acclaimed exhibitions that tell the extraordinary story of the American people, including the Star-Spangled Banner; The American Presidency; First Ladies; The Price of Freedom; and America On the Move, which features objects ranging from Thomas Jefferson’s lap desk, Kermit the Frog, George Washington’s uniform, Dorothy’s ruby slippers, to the first car to cross the United States, and thousands more.*

(Badge and ticket are required. Attendance details are available during the online registration process. Attendees must be 21 years of age or older.)

*Please note that objects can rotate in and out of exhibition so we cannot guarantee that all items listed will be on display for the event.

  • Full Program
  • Thu 11
  • Fri 12
  • Sat 13
  • Sun 14
  • Mon 15
  • At a Glance

All IMMUNOLOGY2023™ attendees are required to comply with the AAI COVID-19 policy.

IMMUNOLOGY2023™
May 11—15, 2023
Walter E. Washington Convention Center
Washington, DC

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Jobs Board submissions for IMMMUNOLOGY2023™ are closed. Please post your jobs on the physical jobs board onsite in the convention center.