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New study from the Elias Lab suggests that cell surface antigens presented by MHC could open new ways to target regulatory T cells, and other challenging cell types.

Immunopeptidomes promise novel surface markers as ideal immunotherapy targets, but their characterization by mass spectrometry (MS) remains challenging. Until recently, cell numbers exceeding 109 were...
onlinelibrary.wiley.com

CSB graduate student Carlos Gonzalez (Elias Lab) is featured in Stanford Medicine SCOPE as part of the "Stars of Stanford Medicine" that introduces readers to standout scholars in the School of Medicine. Learn more about Carlos' journey to CSB below. Congratulations!

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Stanford Medicine

Not everyone takes a straight path to their career, and Carlos Gonzales is one of those people. Here, how he went from graphic artist to PhD candidate in chemical and systems biology: http://stan.md/2EYD7Gz (Photo by Kavya Swaminathan)

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Thankful for our rockstar graduate students for helping make this year’s Biosciences Interview Session another great success!

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Stanford Biosciences - Office of Graduate Education is at Li Ka Shing Center For Learning and Knowledge.

Senior Associate Dean for Graduate Education and Postdoctoral Affairs, Will Talbot, greets the Biosciences interviewees at the interview session welcome breakfast. We hope all of our prospective PhD candidates have an enjoyable and insightful time visiting Stanford this week!

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Stanford Biosciences - Office of Graduate Education

The Biosciences community is excited to welcome prospective PhD students for the 2018 interview session later this week!

Current trainees: what advice would you share with the interviewing students?

Don't forget to stop by Munzer at 11AM TODAY to hear Dr. Sello's seminar on “Bridging Basic and Medical Sciences via Studies of Bioactive Small Molecules." See you soon!

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Don't forget to stop by Munzer at 2PM TODAY to hear Dr. Winship Herr's seminar on “Regulation of Mammalian Cell Proliferation and Metabolism via the Versatiles HCF-1 Transcription Hub." See you soon!

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Dr. Joanna Wysocka and Dr. Tomasz Swigut, Senior Research Scientist of the Wysocka Lab, are part of a team of researchers from KU Leuven (Belgium) and the universities of Pittsburgh and Penn State (US) who have identified fifteen genes that determine our facial features. View the original news release below:

Researchers from KU Leuven and the universities of Pittsburgh, Stanford, and Penn State (US) have identified fifteen genes that determine our facial features. The findings were published in Nature Genetics.
nieuws.kuleuven.be

CSB faculty Dr. Daniel Jarosz and graduate student Richard She featured in Stanford Medicine Scope. Read the full post below:

Researchers have assumed that "synonymous" mutations don't matter. Now it looks like they're among the most important for creating species diversity.
scopeblog.stanford.edu

Don't forget to stop by Alway M106 at 11AM TODAY to hear Dr. Samrat Mukhopadhyay's seminar on “Prying into Prions: Deadly Conformational Switch of the Prion Protein." See you soon!

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Be sure to check out Dr. Samrat Mukhopadhyay's seminar on “Prying into Prions: Deadly Conformational Switch of the Prion Protein." The seminar will take place next Tuesday, February 20th at 11AM in Alway M106. See you there!

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Don't forget to stop by Munzer Auditorium TODAY at 12:30PM to hear Dr. Simon Alberti's lecture on “Organizing Living Matter: The Emerging Role of Phase Transitions in Cell Biology and Disease" See you soon!

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Don't forget to stop by Munzer Auditorium tomorrow at 12:30PM to hear Dr. Simon Alberti's lecture on “Organizing Living Matter: The Emerging Role of Phase Transitions in Cell Biology and Disease" See you there!

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Check out this interactive 360° image of Nobel Laureate and CSB Courtesy Faculty member Dr. Brian Kobilka's lab, featuring CSB alumna Rachel Matt ('17).

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Stanford Medicine

What does the lab of a Nobel winner look like? Take a peek: http://stan.md/2H9RdGF (Photo courtesy of Lindau Nobel Laureate Meetings)