speaker-photo

Rami Khoriaty

USA
Dr. Rami Khoriaty is Associate Professor of Internal Medicine, Associate Professor of Cell and Developmental Biology, and Section head of Classical Hematology, at the University of Michigan.   He runs a lab focused on 1) studying normal and defective erythropoiesis, 2) dissecting the molecular mechanisms of rare erythroid disorders, and 3) studying the biology of globin switching.   His work is funded by grants from the NIH and others.
10:30 – 12:20

Tuesday Day 2 : May 5th

Scientific Session 2 – Erythropoiesis: Mechanisms and Disorders

CHAIRS : Frédérique Verdier, Auria Godard

10:30 – 10:55 Invited speaker: Olivier Hermine (France)

VEXAS anemia is a mosaic erythroblastopenia

10:55 – 11:20 Invited speaker: Rami Khoriaty (United States)

Congenital Dyserythropoietic Anemia Type II: From Molecular Pathogenesis to Therapeutic Discovery

11:20 – 11:35 Loane Schertzer (The Netherlands)

Elucidating the involvement of ion channels and transporters during erythropoiesis

11:35 – 11:50 Robert Seute (France)

Role of KCNN4 in erythroid differentiation

11:50 – 12:05 Valentina Lefkaditi (The Netherlands)

CRISPR/Cas9-mediated generation of IKZF1 and WIZ knockout HUDEP-2 clonal cell lines for the investigation of their role in human erythropoiesis and gamma-globin expression

12:05 – 12:20 Mariano Ostuni (France)

Hemin delays early erythroid differentiation and induces mitochondrial clearance via LRP1-mediated ERK signaling

12:20 - 12:35 Olivier Hermine (France)
GR-Ex: Integrating Science, Innovation and Patient Impact in Red Cell Research