CSB Professor Karlene Cimprich’s paper “Transcription-coupled nucleotide excision repair factors promote R-loop-induced genome instability” was recently recommended by the Faculty of 1000. Check out the write-up in Faculty of 1000 and read the full publication at PubMed.
The recent Science publication from the lab of Mary Teruel, “Controlling low rates of cell differentiation through noise and ultra-high feedback”, has been selected as a Science Editors’ Choice and has been featured in SCOPE, the Stanford School of Medicine Read More »
CSB Professor Dan Jarosz has just been named one of fifteen researchers granted the Searle Scholar Award for his work on “Protein Folding: A Capacitor of Evolutionary Change, Disease, and Development.” Each year, the Scientific Advisory Board reviews applications from Read More »
The Stanford SPARK Program, founded by CSB Faculty Dr. Daria Mochly-Rosen, continues to provide the platform to better bridge between science at the bench and drug development for treatment. Read all about the process and a brief history of the Read More »
CSB Senior Research Scientist, Marie-Helene Disatnik, Ph.D., has had her work on the preservation of motochondrial function featured by the American Heart Association Scientific Sessions. According to her research, inhibiting mitochondrial fragmentation by selectively inhibiting the interaction between the proteins Read More »
The SPARK team, including professors Daria Mochly-Rosen and Kevin Grimes, are happy to announce A Practical Guide to Drug Development in Academia: the SPARK Approach was recently published through SpringerBriefs. The book serves as a general introduction to academics new to Read More »
Dr. Kim Bonger, working with her colleagues in the Chen and Wandless labs, developed a new method to regulate the stability of specific proteins using non-toxic blue light. Kim previously discovered a short peptide sequence that is very destabilizing when Read More »
Have you heard the news? Stanford has been awarded a $11.4 million, 5 year grant from the National Centers for Systems Biology to fund the launch of the new Center for Collective Cell Decisions, co-directed by our own Chemical & Read More »
The recent publication from the lab of Tobias Meyer, The Proliferation-Quiescence Decision Is Controlled by a Bifurcation in CDK2 Activity at Mitotic Exit, has been featured and reviewed by Elizabeth McKenna at Cancer Discovery. Check out McKenna’s review at Cancer Discovery Read More »
Chemical and Systems Biology’s own Dr. Josh Elias has been awarded a prestigious 2013 Keck Medical Research Award from the Keck Foundation for his proposed work with Mass Spectrometry-based peptide analysis and sequencing to search in a new direction for Read More »