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Dr. Martin Adelmann
Ms. Raquel Cabana
Dr. L. Scott Cram
Dr. Madhu Dikshit
Dr. Sumeet Gujral
Mr. Michael Keeney
Dr. Awtar Krishan
Dr. Mike Ormerod
Dr. Vincent Shankey
Dr. Arvinder Singh
Dr. Ranbir Sobti
Dr. Vivek Tanavde
Dr. William G. Telford
Dr. Rakesh Singal
Mrs. Veena Kapoor
Mr. Ron Hamelik
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Core Faculty
Dr. Martin Adelmann
Martin Adelmann received his MS degree from the University of Kaiserslautern in Germany. He did his post-graduate training at Max Planck Institute for Psychiatry, Martinsried near Munich in the Department of Neuroimmunology studying Immuno-pathological relevance of autoimmune B- and T-Cell responses to the myelin-oligodendrocyte glycoprotein. He was at Medizinische Klinik Innenstadt des Klinikums Innenstadt, Dept. of Haematology/Oncology, Laboratory for Blood Stem Cell Transplantation, Ludwig-Maximilians Universität, München, Germany from 1995-1997 where he did research on ex-vivo expansion of peripheral blood stem cells in liquid cultures with the help of cytokine cocktails. He joined Coulter Immunotech Diagnostics GmbH, Krefeld, Germany in 1997 as a product specialist. From 2000-.2003 he was European Product Manager for flow Cytometry and Immunology with Beckman Coulter EuroCenter in Nyon, Switzerland. At present Martin is Product Support Manager for Systems Biology, Beckman Coulter International, S.A.
Lecture
Martin Adelmann will review flow cytometric methods used in Immunophenotyping. His talk will focuss on technical aspect of using multiparametric flow cytometry for immunopheotyping of leukemia and lymphoma.
Relevant Literature
Ichikawa M., Johns TG., Adelmann M., et al.; Int. Immunol 8 (11), 1667-1674, 1996. Antibody response in Lewis rats injected with myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein derived peptides.
Genain CP., Adelmann M., et al.; J. Clin. Invest. 96 (6), 2966-2974, 1995. Antibody facilitation of multiple sclerosis-like lesions in a non-human primate.
Adelmann M., Wood J., et al.; J. Neuroimmunology 63 (1), 17-27, 1995. The N-terminal domain of the myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein (MOG) induces acute demyelinating experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis in the Lewis rat
Adelmann M., Linnington C.; Neurochem. Res. 17 (9), 887-897, 1992. Molecular mimicry and the autoimmune response to the peripheral nerve myelin P0-glycoprotein.
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