Daniel Gusenleitner received the Award for Best Poster Presentation at the 13th Annual International Workshop on Bioinformatics and Systems Biology (IBSB 2013), for his poster, Genomic Signatures of Carcinogenicity. Congratulations Dan!
The dynamics of hybrid metabolic-genetic oscillators, from the Segrè lab, is the top research highlight on Chaos.
Congratulations to John Brothers and Kahkeshan Hijazi for their work in Avi Spira’s lab. Their BMC Medicine article was published online July 19 and has already been given the “Highly Accessed” designation. Bridging the clinical gaps: genetic, epigenetic and transcriptomic biomarkers for the early detection of lung cancer in the post-National Lung Screening Trial era.
Congratulations to Allyson Byrd who won a best poster award at ISMB/ECCB in Berlin. She presented the IGERT Challenge Project poster, Clinical Pathoscope: An alignment and filtering pipeline for rapid pathogen identification in unassembled, next-generation sequencing data. Allyson and her team members Joseph Perez-Rogers and Kylee Bergin worked on their Challenge Project with Prof. Evan Johnson in the Computational Biomedicine Dept at the BU School of Medicine. Great job!!
Six BU Bioinfo students in Prof. James Galagan's Lab were part of a group that had their research published online today in Nature, Anna Lyubetskaya, Elham Azizi, Antonio Gomes, Irina Glotova, Wen-Han Yu and Jonathan Dreyfuss. Read the paper, The Mycobacterium tuberculosis regulatory network and hypoxia.
Allyson Byrd and Anna Lyubetskaya will be presenting at the ISMB/ECCB 2013, in Berlin from July 21-23. Allyson was selected to give an 8 minute presentation of her group's IGERT Challenge Project poster, and Anna will be giving a satellite talk on her research on the regulatory network of TB transcription factors.
More than 20 students and faculty from BU Bioinformatics will be traveling to Kyoto this summer to attend the 13th Annual International Workshop on Bioinformatics and Systems Biology. The IBSB 2013 is part of an international collaboration between Bioinformatics Graduate Program at BU, the Computational Systems Biology training program in Germany, the Human Genome Center at the University of Tokyo, and the International Research and Training Program on Bioinformatics and Systems Biology in the Bioinformatics Center at Kyoto University.
What Is Life? Prof. Segrè writes from a biologist's perspective in the Winter-Spring 2013 issue of Bostonia magazine.
Evan Maxwell's recent comb jellies paper in BMC Genomics was mentioned in a Nature news piece, which was also re-printed in Scientific American.
Check out Carl Zimmer’s report in Wired Magazine about Evan Snitkin’s (PhD ’09) work using genome sequencing to help solve the infectious outbreak mystery at the NIH Clinical Center.