Sun (Lu) Lab
The Sun Lab studies the most numerous cells in the brain, called “glial cells”.
The Sun Lab studies the most numerous cells in the brain, called “glial cells”.
Our lab currently studies hypoxia, prolyl hydroxylase, and VHL signaling in cancer, especially breast and renal cell carcinomas.
The Bioinformatics Lab provides services to manage and analyze next-generation sequencing data.
Welcome to the Xing Lab in the Eugene McDermott Center for Human Growth and Development!
The research in the Johnson lab is focused on vertebrate nervous system development during the transition from proliferating neural stem cells to differentiating neurons and glia.
Our lab focuses on the molecular and cellular mechanisms underlying cell fate specification during blood vessel development and organogenesis.
D'Orso Lab studies gene regulatory networks in normal and disease states as well as in the context of host-pathogen interactions.
The goal of the Krämer laboratory is to understand the molecular mechanisms that regulate responses to diverse cellular stresses.
Burstein Laboratory focuses on understanding the regulation of the inflammatory response at a molecular level, and elucidating how these events may participate in human disease.