THIRTEENTH INTERNATIONAL WORKSHOP

MAY 23-26, 2022
Molecular Aspects of Myeloid Stem Cell
Development and Leukemia
Cincinnati, Ohio
LIVE & IN PERSON

Our meeting is full, and registration has closed.

ABOUT

Since 1995, the Workshop on Molecular Aspects of Myeloid Stem Cell Development and Leukemia has offered a highly successful presentation series from approximately 40-50 renowned national and international researchers and clinicians.

The goal of these biennial workshops is to bring together investigators with expertise in complementary aspects of stem cell biology and myelopoiesis – from normal myelopoiesis to myeloid leukemia and myelodysplastic/myeloproliferative syndromes. Basic researchers and clinician investigators from both sides of the Atlantic, Australia, and Japan come together biennially to discuss their latest findings in a close and informal setting. The workshop brings together scientists with expertise in normal and abnormal hematopoiesis and clinicians who treat leukemia/MDS/MPD patients and also have active research programs in these diseases.

Participants achieve a better understanding of critical steps/factors that regulate hematopoiesis, their impact on leukemogenesis, and potential relevance in clinical settings. Although there are other workshops and meetings dedicated to understanding the regulation of hematopoiesis or clinical advances in leukemia, this workshop uniquely brings together both clinicians and scientists in a relaxed forum.

Register

A close up of the blood cells in a cell

Speakers

Abkowitz, Jan
University of Washington
CCEH

Aifantis, Iannis
New York University

Beaudin, Anna
University of Utah
CCEH

Bernt, Kathrin
University of Pennsylvania

Bhatia, Ravi
University of Alabama, Birmingham

Bonifer, Constanze
University of Birmingham, UK

Bresnick, Emery
University of Wisconsin – Madison

Bryder, David
Lund University, Sweden

Camargo, Fernando
Harvard

Cancelas, Jose
Hoxworth Blood Center & CCHMC
CCEH

Carroll, Martin
University of Pennsylvania

Delwel, Ruud
Erasmus University, Netherlands

Dick, John
University of Toronto, Canada

Doulatov, Sergei
University of Washington
CCEH

Ernst, Patricia
University of Colorado

Figueroa, Maria
University of Miami

Filippi, Marie-Dominique
Cincinnati Children’s Hospital
CCEH

Gazit, Roi
NIBN, Israel

Ginhoux, Florent
A-STAR, Singapore

Goodell, Margaret
Baylor

Gore, Steve
NIH NCI

Grimes, H. Leighton
CCHMC
CCEH

Halene, Stephanie
Yale
CCEH

Hidalgo, Andres
CNIC, Spain

Hiebert, Scott
Vanderbilt University

Huang, Gang
University of Texas, San Antonio

Kapur, Reuben
Indiana University
CCEH

Kentsis, Alex
Memorial Sloan Kettering

King, Katherine
Baylor

Krause, Diane
Yale
CCEH

Levine, Ross
Memorial Sloan Kettering

Lucas, Daniel
Cincinnati Children’s Hospital
CCEH

McKinney-Freeman, Shannon
St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

Melick, Ari
Cornell University

Mikkola, Hanna
UCLA

Milsom, Michael
HI-STEM, Heidelberg Germany

Naik, Shalin
WEHI, Australia

Nerlov, Claus
University of Oxford, UK

Ng, Laiguan
A-STAR, Singapore

Nimer, Stephen
University of Miami

Papapetrou, Eirini
Mount Sinai

Passegue, Emmanuelle
Columbia University

Rodriguez-Fraticelli, Alejo
IRB Barcelona, Spain

Rothenberg, Ellen
California Institute of Technology

Singh, Harinder
University of Pittsburgh

Speck, Nancy
University of Pennsylvania

Starczynowski, Daniel
Cincinnati Children’s Hospital

Stegmaier, Kimberly
Dana Farber/Harvard

Steidl, Ulrich
Albert Einstein College of Medicine

Tenen, Dan
CSI Singapore and Harvard

Tong, Wei
CHOP

Trowbridge, Jennifer
Jackson Labs

Trumpp, Andreas
HI-STEM, Heidelberg Germany

van Galen, Peter
Brigham and Women's Hospital

Vyas, Paresh
University of Oxford, UK

Waskow, Claudia
Friedrich Schiller University, Germany

Will, Britta
Albert Einstein College of Medicine

Xu, Jian
UT Southwestern

Zheng, Yi
CCHMC
CCEH

Zon, Leonard
Harvard

AGENDA

Monday, May 23rd

12:00 PM

LUNCH “Lemonade
“Marble Foyer” (in front of P&G Hall) of the Aronoff Center for the Arts
650 Walnut St., Cincinnati, OH 45202
(directly across the street from the 21C Hotel)

12:50 PM

LUNCH ENDS: please make your way to the auditorium

1:00 PM

SESSION # 1 – CHAIR: Marie Dominique Filippi
Jarson-Kaplan Theater of the Aronoff Center for the Arts
650 Walnut St., Cincinnati, OH 45202
(directly across the street from the 21C Hotel)

1:00 PM

1 Will
Iron-Dependent Lipid Turnover Confers Stem Cell Identity
Britta Will, Albert Einstein College of Medicine

1:20 PM

2 Filippi
Divisional Memory Drives HSC Functional Diversity
Marie-Dominique Filippi, Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center

1:40 PM

3 van Galen
Integrating Multiple Layers of Information from Single-Cell Sequencing in the Blood System
Peter van Galen, Harvard Medical School

2:00 PM

4 Zon
Quality Assurance of Hematopoietic Stem Cells by Macrophages Determines Adult Stem Cell Clonality
Leonard Zon, Harvard University

2:20 PM

5 Cancelas
Basolateral Complex Scribble is a Negative Regulator of Interferon-I Dependent Notch1 Activation in Adult Hematopoietic Stem Cells and Progenitors
Jose Cancelas, Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center

2:40 PM

6 Mikkola
Decoding Mechanisms Governing Human Hematopoietic Stem Cell Specification and Self-Renewal
Hanna K.A. Mikkola, University of California, Los Angeles

3:30 PM

SESSION # 2 – CHAIR: Claus Nerlov
Jarson-Kaplan Theater of the Aronoff Center for the Arts
650 Walnut St., Cincinnati, OH 45202
(directly across the street from the 21C Hotel)

3:30 PM

7s Comazzetto
SHORT TALK
Vitamin C Limits Multipotent Progenitor Self-renewal and Clonal Expansion
Stefano Comazzetto, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

3:40 PM

8 Krause
Post-Translational Modification of Runx1 Regulates Megakaryocyte-Erythroid Progenitor Fate Specification
Diane S. Krause, Yale University

4:00 PM

9 Lucas
A Durable Anatomy with Local Microplasticity Enables Normal and Stress Hematopoiesis
Daniel Lucas, Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center

4:20 PM

10s Silberstein
SHORT TALK
Myeloid-Biased HSC Requires Semaphorin 4A from the Bone Marrow Niche for Self-Renewal Under Stress and Life-Long Persistence
Lev Silberstein, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

4:30 PM

11s Reynaud
SHORT TALK
Hematopoietic Flt3+ Multipotent Progenitors Are Organized in Discrete
Functionally and Hierarchically Distinct Populations
Damien Reynaud, Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center

4:40 PM

12 Nerlov
Fate-mapping of Hematopoietic Differentiation Pathways
Claus Nerlov, University of Oxford

5:00 PM

13 Camargo
Resolving Embryonic Origins of the Blood through Cellular Barcoding
Fernando Camargo, Boston Children’s Hospital

5:20 PM

14 Naik
A Revised ‘Parallel Tracks’ Landscape of Haematopoiesis Informed by Lentiviral and in Situ Cellular Barcoding
Shalin H. Naik, University of Melbourne

5:40 PM

15 McKinney-Freeman
Discovering Novel Molecular Markers of Hematopoietic Stem Cell Functional Heterogeneity
Shannon McKinney-Freeman, St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital

6:00 PM

TRAVEL OPTIONS
1. WALK 10 min/0.5-mile walk down Walnut Street to the riverfront
2. STREETCAR Cincinnati Bell connector is free
DESTINATION: National Underground Railroad Freedom Center
50 E Freedom Way, Cincinnati, OH 45202

6:30 PM – 8:30 PM

EVENING EVENT “39.0976° N, 84.5113° W The End of the South
West Africa meets the American South at the Mason-Dixon Line
(for reference, see Netflix's “High on the Hog”)

Tuesday, May 24th

6:00 AM – 7:50 AM

BREAKFAST (for guests of the 21C Hotel)
21C Hotel MAIN GALLERY (on the second floor of the hotel)

8:00 AM

SESSION # 3 – CHAIR: Steve Gore
Jarson-Kaplan Theater of the Aronoff Center for the Arts
650 Walnut St., Cincinnati, OH 45202
(directly across the street from the 21C Hotel)

8:00 AM

16 Gore
Progress Update on the National MDS Natural History Study
Steve Gore, NCI NIH

8:20 AM

17 Huang
Downregulation of Mitochondrial Complex II (MC II) in Myelodysplastic Syndromes
Gang Huang, University of Texas San Antonio

8:40 AM

18 Vyas
Quantitative Analysis of Clonal Selection and Stem Cell Expansion Combined with Single Cell Characterization of Transcriptional and Chromatin Programs in Clonal Hematopoiesis
Paresh Vyas, University of Oxford

9:00 AM

19 DISCUSSION – ONE HOUR
Panel Discussion: Curing Myelodysplastic Syndrome (MDS): What are the most important questions?
Sponsor: The Taub Foundation
Discussion leader: Steve Gore

10:00 AM

BREAK

10:30 AM

SESSION # 4 – CHAIR: Jose Cancelas
SPONSOR: Hoxworth Blood Center
Jarson-Kaplan Theater of the Aronoff Center for the Arts
650 Walnut St., Cincinnati, OH 45202
(directly across the street from the 21C Hotel)

10:30 AM

20s Machlus
SHORT TALK
Regulation of Fatty Acids is a Novel Mechanism Controlling Megakaryopoiesis and Platelet Production
Kellie Machlus, Boston Children’s Hospital

10:40 AM

21 Tong
RAB27B Promotes Myeloid Malignancies through Regulating NRAS Palmitoylation, Trafficking, and Signaling
Wei Tong, Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia

11:00 AM

22 Abkowitz
The transcriptomic landscape of normal and ineffective erythropoiesis at single-cell resolution
Janis L Abkowitz, University of Washington

11:20 AM

23 Halene
ALKBH5 Controlled OGDH Stability Limits Hematopoietic Stem Progenitor Cell Metabolic Fitness – a m6A-Dependent Metabolic Rheostat
Stephanie Halene, Yale University School of Medicine

11:40 AM

24s Izraeli
SHORT TALK
The Conserved Proline 199 of the Transcription Factor ERG Mediates It's Leukemogenic Potential Through the Interactions with the NCoR-HDAC3 Co-Repressor Complex
Shai Izraeli, Schneider Children’s Medical Center of Israel

11:50 AM

25s Geiger
SHORT TALK
Clonal Hematopoiesis in the Elderly Might Not be Linked to Mutations in HSCs
Hartmut Geiger, University of Ulm

12:00 PM

LUNCH “Smorbrod
“Marble Foyer” (in front of P&G Hall) of the Aronoff Center for the Arts
650 Walnut St., Cincinnati, OH 45202
(directly across the street from the 21C Hotel)

1:00 PM

SESSION # 5 – CHAIR: Harinder Singh
Jarson-Kaplan Theater of the Aronoff Center for the Arts
650 Walnut St., Cincinnati, OH 45202
(directly across the street from the 21C Hotel)

1:00 PM

26 Rothenberg
Runx Transcription Factors and Epigenetic State Interactions as Drivers of Early T-cell Development
Ellen V. Rothenberg, California Institute of Technology

1:20 PM

27 Singh
Discovery and Analysis of Composite Transcriptional Elements in Immune and Hematopoietic Cis-Regulomes
Harinder Singh, University of Pittsburgh

1:40 PM

28 Rodriguez-Fraticelli
Identifying the Determinants of Stem Cell Aging Through Single-Cell Lineage Tracing
Alejo E. Rodriguez-Fraticelli, IRB Barcelona

2:00 PM

29 Levine
Deciphering and Modeling Clonal Hematopoiesis and Evolution to MPN/AML
Ross L. Levine, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

2:20 PM

30 Steidl
Heparan Sulfate-Based Glycotyping for Cell Characterization and Isolation in the Hematopoietic System
Ulrich Steidl, Albert Einstein College of Medicine

2:40 PM

31 Grimes
Isolating Discrete Hematopoietic Cell States
H. Leighton Grimes, Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center

3:00 PM

BREAK “Sable et Fleurs
**POSTER PRESENTERS, GO GET YOUR POSTERS**

3:30 PM

32s DISCUSSION
SHORT TALK
Neutrophils: Old cells with Neu Names?
Discussion leader: Lai Guan Ng

3:40 PM

33 Speck
RUNX1 Attenuates Toll-like Receptor and Type I Interferon Signaling in Neutrophils
Nancy A. Speck, University of Pennsylvania

4:00 PM

34 Hidalgo
Non-Canonical Neutrophils
Andres Hidalgo, Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Cardiovasculares (CNIC)

4:20 PM

35 Ng
Neutrophil Heterogeneity in Tumors
Lai Guan Ng, A*STAR (Agency for Science, Technology, and Research)

4:40 PM

36 Ginhoux
Dendritic Cell Type 3 Arises from Ly6C+ Monocyte-Dendritic Cell Progenitors
Florent Ginhoux, Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine

5:00 PM

**POSTER PRESENTERS GO FIRST ON THE SHUTTLES**
TRAVEL OPTIONS for other attendees
1. WAIT for the shuttles to return
1. WALK 16 min/0.7 mile
2. STREETCAR Cincinnati Bell connector is free
DESTINATION: Cincinnati Music Hall
1241 Elm St., Cincinnati, OH 45202

5:30 PM – 7:00 PM

POSTER SESSION
SPONSOR: EVANS MDS (a funding initiative of the Edward P Evans Foundation)
on the 2nd floor of the EDYTH B. LINDNER GRAND FOYER of the Cincinnati Music Hall

7:00PM – 9:00PM

EVENING EVENT “Quinceañera
The traditional celebration of a Mexican girl’s 15th birthday.
on the 1st floor of the EDYTH B. LINDNER GRAND FOYER of the Cincinnati Music Hall

Wednesday, May 25th

6:00 AM – 7:50 AM

BREAKFAST (for guests of the 21C Hotel)
21C Hotel MAIN GALLERY (on the second floor of the hotel)

8:20 AM

SESSION # 6 – CHAIR: Emmanuelle Passegué & Michael Milsom
Jarson-Kaplan Theater of the Aronoff Center for the Arts
650 Walnut St., Cincinnati, OH 45202
(directly across the street from the 21C Hotel)

8:20 AM

37 Tenen
Myeloid Transcription Factors are Really Rna Binding Proteins Facilitating Enhancer Promoter Interactions
Daniel G. Tenen, Harvard

8:40 AM

38 Waskow
Human Innate Immunity in NSGW41 Mice
Claudia Waskow, Leibniz Institute on Aging – Fritz Lipmann Institute
39 Kapur —cancellation—-
Calcium Channel Blockers Inhibit Obesity Induced Exacerbated Clonal Hematopoiesis
Reuben Kapur, Indiana University School of Medicine

9:00 AM

40 Milsom
Next Generation Interrogation of DNA Methylome Data Focussed Upon Analysis of Co-Ordinately-Programmed CpGs (CP-CpGs) During Hematopoietic Differentiation
Michael Milsom, HI-STEM: The Heidelberg Institute for Stem Cell Technology and Experimental Medicine

9:20 AM

41 Trowbridge
Distinct TNF Receptors Dictate Hematopoietic Stem Cell Fitness Versus Lineage Output in Dnmt3a-Mutant Clonal Hematopoiesis During Aging
Jennifer J. Trowbridge, The Jackson Laboratory

9:40 AM

42 Goodell
Requirement and Function of the Disordered N-terminal Domain of DNMT3A in Development
Margaret A. Goodell, Baylor College of Medicine

10:00 AM

BREAK

10:30 AM

43s Viny _recorded from quarantine_
SHORT TALK
Epigenetic Determinates of HSC Self-Renewal and Lineage Fate Commitment
Aaron D. Viny, Columbia University Irving Medical Center

10:40 AM

44 King
The Contribution of Hematopoietic Stem and Progenitor Cells to Trained Immunity
Katherine Y. King, Baylor College of Medicine

11:00 AM

45 Starczynowski
The Role of Microbial-Derived Signals in Myeloid Malignancies
Daniel T. Starczynowski, Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center

11:20 AM

46 Aifantis
Inflammation Remodels the Immune Microenvironment in Acute Myeloid Leukemia
Iannis Aifantis, NYU Grossman School of Medicine

11:40 AM

47 Beaudin
Heterogeneity of Fetal Hematopoietic Stem and Progenitors Shapes the Prenatal Response to Inflammation
Anna E. Beaudin, University of Utah School of Medicine

12:00 AM

LUNCH “Jerusalem
“Marble Foyer” (in front of P&G Hall) of the Aronoff Center for the Arts
650 Walnut St., Cincinnati, OH 45202
(directly across the street from the 21C Hotel)

1:00 PM

SESSION # 6 CONTINUES
Jarson-Kaplan Theater of the Aronoff Center for the Arts
650 Walnut St., Cincinnati, OH 45202
(directly across the street from the 21C Hotel)

1:00 PM

48 Gazit
Acute and Chronic Immune Stimuli of Hematopoietic Stem Cells
Roi Gazit, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

1:20 PM

49 Passegue
Autophagy Counters Inflammation-Driven Glycolytic Impairment in Aging Hematopoietic Stem Cells
Emmanuelle Passegué, Columbia University

1:40 PM

SESSION # 7 – CHAIR: Len Zon
Jarson-Kaplan Theater of the Aronoff Center for the Arts
650 Walnut St., Cincinnati, OH 45202
(directly across the street from the 21C Hotel)

1:40 PM

50 Dick
A Cellular Hierarchy Framework for Understanding Heterogeneity and Predicting Drug Response in Acute Myeloid Leukemia
John E. Dick, Princess Margaret Cancer Centre

2:00 PM

51s Eisfeld
SHORT TALK
Genomic Landscape for Black Patients with Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML)
Ann-Kathrin Eisfeld, The Ohio State University

2:10 PM

52s Guzman
SHORT TALK
Genomic Landscape for Hispanic Patients with Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML)
Monica L. Guzman, Weill Cornell Medicine

2:20 PM

53 Papapetrou
A Pan-AML Panel of Human iPSCs
Eirini P Papapetrou, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

2:40 PM

54 Stegmaier
Discovery of New AML Therapeutic Targets with Functional Genomics Approaches
Kimberly Stegmaier, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute

3:00 PM

LONG BREAK “Koriela

3:50 PM

55s Skorski
SHORT TALK
DNA Polymerase Theta Protects Leukemia Cells from Metabolic-Induced DNA Damage
Tomasz Skorski, Temple University Lewis Katz School of Medicine

4:00 PM

56 Nimer
Tyrosine Phosphorylation of Carm1 Promotes Its Enzymatic Activity and Alters Its Target Specificity
Stephen D. Nimer, University of Miami
57 Delwel —cancellation—-
EVI1 is a Repressor of CEBPA Transcription via a Distal Enhancer in inv(3)/t(3;3) AML
Ruud Delwel, Erasmus MC Cancer Institute and Oncode Institute
58 Figueroa —cancellation—-
sPDZD2, a Novel Soluble Tumor Suppressor in AML
Maria E. Figueroa, University of Miami Health System

4:20 PM

59 Hiebert
Defining the RUNX1/ETO Transcriptional Control Circuits
Scott W. Hiebert, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine

4:40 PM

60 Bresnick
Pathogenic Mutation that Dislocates GATA2 Zinc Fingers Establishes a Hematopoiesis-Disrupting Signaling Network
Emery H. Bresnick, Wisconsin Blood Cancer Research Institute

5:00 PM

61 Zheng
RUNX1 Mutation Causes Megakaryocyte-Primed Hematopoietic Stem Cell Differentiation Blockage and Familial Platelet Disorder
Yi Zheng, Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center

5:20 PM

62 Bryder
Mechanisms of Disease Progression in MLL-ENL-Driven AML
David Bryder, Lund University

5:40 PM

63 Bonifer
Gene Regulatory Network Dynamics in Acute Myeloid Leukemia
Constanze Bonifer, University of Birmingham

6:00 PM

64 Trumpp
Decoding Transcriptomic and Epigenetic Consequences of Chromosomal Rearrangements in Ck-Aml at Single-Cell Resolution
Andreas Trumpp, Heidelberg Institute for Stem Cell Technology and Experimental Medicine

6:20 PM

65s Velten
SHORT TALK
Hunting leukemic stem cells with clonally resolved single-cell multi-omics
Lars Velten, Centre for Genomic Regulation, Barcelona, Spain

6:30 PM

TRAVEL OPTIONS
WALK 5 min/0.3 mile
DESTINATION: The Mercantile Library
414 Walnut St., #1100, Cincinnati, OH 45202

7:00 PM – 9:00 PM

EVENING EVENT “Isle of Capri
A quiet evening of guitar, good wine, and pasta in a setting from 1835.

Thursday, May 26th

6:00 AM – 7:50 AM

BREAKFAST (for guests of the 21C Hotel)
21C Hotel MAIN GALLERY (on the second floor of the hotel)

8:00 AM

SESSION 8 CHAIR: Ari Melnick
Jarson-Kaplan Theater of the Aronoff Center for the Arts
650 Walnut St., Cincinnati, OH 45202
(directly across the street from the 21C Hotel)

8:00 AM

66 Ernst
Regulation of B/Myeloid Fate to Improve Murine Models of High Risk, MLL-rearranged Pediatric B-ALL
Patricia Ernst, Children’s Hospital, Colorado

8:20 AM

67 Bernt
The Role of GATA2 in Drug Resistance in AML
Kathrin Bernt, Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia

8:40 AM

68 Doulatov
Nuclear Lamins in Clonal Progression to High-Risk Myeloid Neoplasms
Sergei Doulatov, University of Washington

9:00 AM

69 Bhatia
Adaptive Metabolic Response to Tyrosine Kinase Inhibition in Chronic Myelogenous Leukemia Stem Cells
Ravi Bhatia, University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB)

9:20 AM

70s Cockerill
SHORT TALK
Defining the Gene Regulatory Networks Targeted by RUNX1 and FLT3 Inhibitors
Peter Cockerill, University of Birmingham

9:30 AM

71s Wiest
SHORT TALK
The ERK2 DBP Domain Opposes Pathogenesis of a JAK2V617F-Driven Myeloproliferative Neoplasm
David L. Wiest, Fox Chase Cancer Center

9:40 AM

BREAK

10:30 AM

72s Jones
SHORT TALK
SIRT3 Inhibition Targets Leukemia Stem Cells Through Perturbing Fatty Acid Metabolism
Courtney L. Jones, University of Toronto

10:40 AM

73 Carroll
Acute Myeloid Leukemia with Mutant TP53 Requires Mevalonate Biosynthesis for Chemotherapy Resistance
Martin Carroll, Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia

11:00 AM

74 Kentsis
Epigenetic Mechanisms and Therapeutic Targeting of Leukemia Stem Cell Quiescence
Alex Kentsis, Sloan Kettering Institute

11:20 AM

75 Xu
Dissecting Mechanisms of Acquired Resistance to IDH Inhibition in Myeloid Leukemia
Jian Xu, UT Southwestern Medical Center

11:40 AM

76 Melnick
Identifying Genetic Susceptibilities to Epigenetic Therapies for Rational Targeted Therapy of AML Patients
Ari Melnick, Weill Cornell Medicine

12:00 PM

LUNCH “Ploughman’s Lunch
BOX LUNCH TAKEAWAY

1:00 PM

BUS 1 will transport directly to CVG

1:30 PM

BUS 2 will transport directly to CVG

SUBMIT ABSTRACT

  • All abstracts should follow the ASH (American Society of Hematology) format guidelines.

  • All abstracts should be submitted in Arial, 11-point font with one-inch margins.

  • Posters should be printed to mount on a display board that is 48” high x 93.5” long (roughly 4×8 ft).

  • All abstracts must be submitted by April 1st, 2022.

HOTEL

21c Museum Hotel, Cincinnati
609 Walnut Street
Cincinnati, Ohio 45202

(513) 578-6600

Speakers must call the hotel and request a reservation within the “MyeloidMeeting22” room block to get the discounted rate. Make sure that you talk to a 21c Cincinnati front desk associate. Do not let them transfer you to Sofitel registration because Sofitel cannot make reservations in the MyeloidMeeting22 block.

Attention NIH participants: Government rate may be available for Attendees that hold a valid government ID at the time of their stay. Please inquire upon making your reservation.

Speakers reserving rooms outside the block will not be reimbursed.
ATTENDEES ONLY (not Speakers) can use this link to book their rooms.

A group of planets with lights in the background.

SPONSORS

A logo of the edward p. Evans foundation
A blue and white logo for cincinnati children 's cancer and blood diseases institute.
A yellow sign with the name alex 's lemonade stand written in blue.
A logo of cincinnati children 's department of pathology.
A red and white logo of the gabrielle 's angel foundation for cancer research.
A logo of journal of experimental medicine
The henry & marilyn taub foundation

EXPLORE CINCINNATI

A building with lights on the outside of it
Contemporary Arts Center

The CAC is one of the first contemporary art institutions in the United States. It is a pioneering contemporary art museum located in Cincinnati, Ohio. The CAC is a non-collecting museum that focuses on new developments in painting, sculpture, photography, and more.

A building with steps and stairs leading to the top.
Cincinnati Art Museum

The Cincinnati Art Museum is one of the oldest art museums in the United States. Founded in 1881, it was the first purpose-built art museum west of the Alleghenies. Its collection of over 60,000 works makes it one of the most comprehensive collections in the Midwest.

A statue of a rhino in front of a building.
Cincinnati Zoo and Botanical Garden

The Cincinnati Zoo and Botanical Garden is one of the oldest zoos in the United States. It opened in 1875, just 14 months after the Philadelphia Zoo on July 1st, 1874. The Reptile House is the oldest zoo building in the United States, dating from 1875.

A large paddle boat on the water near a bridge.
BB Riverboats

Learn about the history of the river, take in a magnificent meal, or dance under the stars on an unbelievable journey you will never forget. BB Riverboats offers a wide variety of cruises, ranging from lunch and dinner cruises to sightseeing cruises and all-day mini vacations.

A fountain with steps leading to it and a clock in the background.
Cincinnati Museum Center

The Cincinnati Museum Center at Union Terminal is a passenger railroad station in the Queensgate neighborhood of Cincinnati. After the decline of railroad travel, most of the building was converted to other uses, and now houses museums, theaters, and more.

A fountain with lights and statues in the middle of it.
Fountain Square

Fountain Square attracts over 2 million people annually to its special events, free concerts, tailgates, and lunchtime contests. It’s a place to meet friends for morning coffee or gather for lunch. A place to learn about Cincinnati's history and begin or end your evening downtown.

A red sculpture in the grass near trees.
Pyramid Hill

Pyramid Hill is an outdoor museum focusing on monumental pieces of sculpture in an environment of meadows, forests, and various gardens. They also feature a 10,000-square-foot Ancient Sculpture Museum displaying Egyptian, Greek, Roman, and Etruscan sculptures thousands of years old.

A white house with blue shutters and green shutters.
The Taft Museum of Art

The Taft Museum of Art is one of the finest small art museums in America. A National Historic Landmark built in 1820, the Taft is home to an extensive art collection that includes European and American master paintings, Chinese porcelains, and European decorative arts.

CONTACT

Scientific Issues
H. Leighton Grimes, PhD
Phone: (513) 636-6089
[email protected]

Logistic Issues
[email protected]

Three men in cowboy hats and coats posing for a picture.