Quality Control in Biology: From Cellular Systems to Ecosystems.
The 35th annual Carnegie Embryology Mini-Symposium
Dr. Micha Rapé (UC Berkeley) presents, "Mitochondrial Stress Signaling in Development and Disease."
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At the Carnegie Institution for Science, Department of Embryology, we study biology across a vast scale—from individual molecules to the whole organism. One constant at all levels is the need to perform quality control functions to ensure proper physiology. Our 35th annual Mini-Symposium explored these mechanisms by highlighting the work of nine remarkable scientists:
– Dr. Joshua Rosenthal (Marine Biological Laboratory): "Rewriting the cephalopod neural transcriptome by editing mRNAs."
– Dr. Micha Rapé (UC Berkeley): "Mitochondrial Stress Signaling in Development and Disease."
– Dr. Patrick Lusk (Yale): "Protecting the Integrity of the Nuclear Compartment."
– Dr. Elçin Ünal (UC Berkeley): "Nuclear Pore Complex Modularity in Meiosis: Regulatory Mechanisms & Possible Functions."
– Dr. Jennifer Zallen (Sloan Kettering Institute): "Signals, Forces, and Cells: Decoding Tissue Morphogenesis."
– Dr. Amy Shyer (Rockefeller University): "Skin Cells Generate Supracellular Order Through Dynamic Cell-matrix Feedback
– Dr. Lucy O’Brien (Stanford): "Cellular Life Cycles Enable Adaptive Organ States."
– Dr. Joel Sachs (UC Riverside): "Host Plant Control and Sanctioning of Ineffective Symbionts."
– Dr. Mark Mandel (University of Wisconsin–Madison): "Establishment of a Specific Animal Microbiome."
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