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KELSEY GRAY RECEIVES “OUTSTANDING POSTER AWARD”

October 23, 2017

Kelsey Gray (Greg Matera’s lab), a graduate student in Genetics and Molecular Biology, received an outstanding poster award for her poster titled “SCFSlmb mediates degradation of Survival Motor Neuron (SMN) protein” at the Department of Genetics Scientific Retreat.

EMILIE RICHARDS PUBLISHES IN “PLOS GENETICS”

October 23, 2017

Congratulations to Emilie Richards (Chris Martin’s lab) for her publication in PLOS Genetics titled “Adaptive introgression from distant Caribbean islands contributed to the diversification of a microendemic adaptive radiation of trophic specialist pupfishes.” Emilie demonstrates that rare introgression of adaptive alleles linked to novel craniofacial phenotypes may be necessary for adaptive radiation in addition to the traditional paradigm of ecological opportunity. Intriguingly, narrowly endemic species are assembled from different pots of genetic variation over a very large range.

DANGL LAB’S PAPER APPEARS IN “PNAS”

October 23, 2017

Farid El Kasmi and Eui Hwan Chung of the Jeff Dangl labpublished “Signaling from the plasma-membrane localized plant immune receptor RPM1 requires self-association of the full-length protein” in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Co-authors include current post docs Ryan Anderson and Li Wan, former doctoral student Tim Eitas and former post-doc Zhiyong Gao. This work explores the relationship between protein structure and function of a representative plant resistance NLR protein.

FRANK CONLON’S LAB IS AWARDED AN NIH R01 RESEARCH GRANT

July 28, 2017

Congratulations to Frank Conlon’s lab which received an R01 grant award from the NIH and National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute. The 4-year $1.5-million award is for studies of the role for the epicardium in cardiac development and congenital heart disease.

DAYUN JIN’S PAPER APPEARS IN “BLOOD”

July 28, 2017

Congratulations to Dayun Jin (Darrel Stafford’s lab) whose paper titled “Molecular basis of the first reported clinical case of congenital combined deficiency of coagulation factors” appears in the journal Blood.

CELIA SHIAU RECEIVES NIH MIRA GRANT

July 28, 2017

Congratulations to Celia Shiau, who has been awarded a 5-year Outstanding Early-Stage Investigator MIRA (Maximizing Investigators’ Research Award) grant from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences totaling ~$1.9 million. The MIRA award provides support for NIGMS-related research and provides flexibility for investigators to pursue innovative and important research directions as opportunities arise rather than tied to specific aims that are predefined and fixed. The Shiau lab will use this award to study the genetic and metabolic regulation of macrophage activation in vivo using zebrafish and other systems. This work has implications for the design of macrophage-targeted technologies for controlling inflammatory processes and addressing health challenges related to immune dysregulation, such as diabetes, obesity, and cancer.

JILL DOWEN RECEIVES NIH MIRA GRANT

July 28, 2017

Congratulations to Jill Dowen’s lab, which was awarded a 5-year NIH MIRA (Maximizing Investigators’ Research Award) grant from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences. This award totals 1.2 million dollars and will support the study of fundamental mechanisms that connect genome organization and gene expression during development and disease.