Canadian Society of Biochemistry, Molecular and Cellular Biology (CSBMCB) Fostering the Science of Biochemistry in Canada
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Brief History

  • born as the CBS in 1957 its purpose was to foster the science of biochemistry
  • first president was Professor A.M. Wynne
  • hosting the XIth International Congress of Biochemistry in Toronto (chair: Dr. George Connell) yielded over $100,000 for the society.
  • financial reserve is used to sponsor scientific meetings in Canada and further Canadian Biochemistry, Molecular and Cellular Biology
  • renamed as the Canadian Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology in 1992
  • merged with the Canadian Society of Cellular and Molecular Biology in 1995 to form the CSBMCB
  • the society left CFBS in 2000, and now runs its own annual thematic conferences.

History and Mandate of the CSBMCB (1957- present)

The Canadian Biochemical Society (CBS) was first conceived by a group of biochemists attending the Canadian Physiological Society meeting held at the University of Ottawa on October 9th, 1957. The purpose of this new society was to foster the science of biochemistry. Our first President was Professor A.M. Wynne, head of the Department of Biochemistry at the University of Toronto and our first meeting was held at Queen's University the following summer under the auspices of the Canadian Federation of Biological Societies (CFBS), which was formed in 1958 with the CBS as a founding member.

Management of the Canadian Biochemical Society is vested in a Council which consists of a President, Vice-President, Past-President, Treasurer, Secretary and six Councillors. Since the inception of our Society, forty eminent Biochemists have held the Presidency. Membership to the Council is by election in an annual ballot by Society members. Council members serve a three year term; the holder of the office of Vice-President passes annually in turn to President and then Past-President. The Society is governed by a constitution and a set of by-laws and is mandated to be bicultural.

In 1992 the Society changed its name to the Canadian Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology in order to better reflect the scientific interests of its membership. In 1995 the Canadian Society of Cellular and Molecular Biology elected to surrender its charter and merged with the Canadian Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology to form the Canadian Society for Biochemistry and Molecular & Cellular Biology (CSBMCB).

The Society was incorporated in 1979 so that we could host the XIth International Congress of Biochemistry in Toronto, organized under the Chairmanship of Dr. George Connell. As a result of the financial success of this meeting, the Canadian Biochemical Society received an infusion of over $100,000. These moneys have been shrewdly invested by a succession of Society Treasurers and the Society now has a reserve of more than $300,000. Interest derived from these moneys is used to sponsor scientific meetings in Canada and further Canadian Biochemistry, Molecular and Cellular Biology.

Professional activities of the Society include an annual meeting, sponsorship of symposia and the administration of a number of awards. Summer meetings were formerly held in June with CFBS. Society members voted to withdraw from the CFBS at the end of 2000. Starting in 2001, the Society has held its own annual meeting.

The Ayerst Award was first instituted by the Society in 1966 and is presented annually to a young Canadian Biochemist in recognition of his or her outstanding scientific achievements. In 1991 the sponsorship of this award changed and it became the CBS-Pharmacia Award. In 1993 Merck Frosst Canada underwrote this prize and it is now the CSBMCB-Merck Frosst Award. The second award, the Roche Diagnostics Award (formerly the Boehringer-Mannheim Award), instituted in 1981, is given every second year in recognition of outstanding achievements in research in the field of biochemistry and/or molecular biology. Alternating with the Roche Diagnostics Award, the third award given by the Society is the Jeanne Manery Fisher Memorial Lectureship. This award is given to a female Canadian scientist who has distinguished herself in the field of biochemistry, molecular biology or cellular biology in one or more of the following areas; research, teaching or community service. In addition to these prizes the Society has instituted awards for its trainee members.

Trainee travel awards for graduate students and post-doctoral fellows are donated by various corporate sponsors such as Merck Frosst and Amgen, to help defray the cost of attending the CSBMCB annual meeting.  In addition, the CSBMCB and Roche Diagnostics co-sponsor a poster competition at the annual meeting, with cash prizes for the best poster presentations by graduate students and post-doctoral fellows.  These awards are presented to the winners during the CSBMCB annual meeting banquet.

Date Updated: January 25, 2007
 

 
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