Deja Lab
Deja Lab is dedicated to advancing the field of metabolomics and fluxomics in metabolic disease research.
Deja Lab is dedicated to advancing the field of metabolomics and fluxomics in metabolic disease research.
We unite researchers with diverse expertise in computational modeling, biochemical reconstitution, structural analysis of polymers, and cell biology to focus on three distinct condensates that are important for genome homeostasis.
Qi lab specializes in investigating the structure and function of membrane proteins related to human diseases using cryo-EM, cell-based assays, and mouse models.
The Louros Lab uses a hybrid approach combining molecular biophysics, structural biology, and bioinformatics to investigate protein stability, misfolding, and aggregation, with a particular interest in neurodegenerative diseases.
The Wang lab applies single-molecule fluorescence biophysical, quantitative biochemical, structural, and genetics approaches to unravel the intricate relationships between structure, dynamics and function in complex dynamic biological systems. Our primary goal is to understand the dynamic mechanisms of cytosolic and mitochondrial protein synthesis and how they are dysregulated in human diseases.
We mine large-scale data for biological discoveries.
We are investigating how protein homeostasis (the maturation and turnover of enzymes) interacts with lipid homeostasis.
We investigate genetic and molecular basis of phenotypic diversity observed in nature by using a range of methodologies such as whole genome sequencing, fluidics, long-term evolution experiments, and large-scale combinatorial mutagenesis.
We investigate the mechanism of neurotransmitter release using a variety of biophysical approaches, including NMR spectroscopy, X-ray crystallography, cryo-EM, molecular dynamics simulations and liposome fusion assays.
The Rice Lab uses structure, biochemistry, reconstitution, microscopy, computer modeling, and more to study the molecular mechanisms that generate and regulate microtubule dynamics.