We are very excited to welcome the newest PouLab members, three talented postbac scholars from UMB’s prestigious STAR-PREP program will become the lab’s youngest investigators! Jefferey Inen, mouse geneticist & cancer biologist extraordinaire from UMBC, will work with Ryan Richardson; Saovleak “Noury” Khim, all-round development-to-regenerative neuroscientist from Temple, and Uriel Jean-Baptiste, hardcore structure-function biochemist from Florida State, will work with Bek Altas. Welcome to your new lab, enjoy your research, and get lots of great data!
Congrats Andrea!
Ryan presents his work at the Keystone Symposium on Genome Engineering
Ryan Richardson presented his work on “Optimizing HDR efficiency and biallelic modification for in vivo knock-in” at the Keystone Symposium on Genome Engineering at Victoria, BC, Canada.
The lab does Baltimore Brain Awareness Week
Andrea and Garrett spreading the love for neuroscience at Windsor Hills Elementary and Middle School!
Learn more at UMB NOVA (Neuroscience Outreach and Volunteer Association)
New lab rotation students get the window chalk talk
Do we use the windows as white boards? We sure do.
Today is the first day for Ben Grosso (Program in Biochemistry & Molecular Biology) and Garrett Bunce (Program in Neuroscience) in the lab, kicking off the first round of 2019 lab rotations for GPILS students. Andrea and Marilyn introduce the new lab members to the lab’s science…
Our paper on subcellular -omics from cortical projections out today in Nature
Introducing Crowdsourced Journal Club
Lab’s 1st PhD student down to business!
Andrea Romanowski, from the Program in Molecular Medicine, becomes the lab’s 1st PhD student! Andrea’s first official day of PhD work, July 26, is also the day that, exactly 100 years ago, Emmy Noether published a paper outlining her eponymous theorem. Auspicious beginnings for the future Dr. Romanowski!
Moving Day
Moving day is here! Time for the Poulopoulos Lab to get a new home across the street in Health Sciences Facility III.
Equipment needs bubble wrap, heavy things need lifting, scopes come apart and back together again. And in the midst of this madness, our science doesn’t miss a beat! The heroic investigators of the lab continued cloning and perfusing in between filling crates and hauling off incubators. Everyone working hard… except the guy behind the camera, that is.
Goodbye old lab… hello vista from the 9th floor of the new and improved PouLab!!!