Skip to content
Monday, June 16, 2025
Latest:
  • A new treatment can potentially change the outlook for patients with Alagille syndrome
  • Mental health for first-time parents
  • Heart attack survivor credits Baylor doctor for a second chance at life
  • It’s a first: implementing safe and effective RSV prevention treatments significantly reduces hospitalizations in infants
  • Invisible to the naked eye: Space omics and the need for sample collection guidelines
Baylor College of Medicine Blog Network

  • Home
  • Momentum
    • About Momentum
    • Resources
    • Contributors
      • Taylor Barnes
      • Dana Benson
      • Molly Chiu
      • Julie Garcia
      • Graciela Gutierrez
      • Anna Kiappes
      • Andy Phifer
      • Homa Shalchi
      • Melissa Tucker
    • Contact Us
  • From The Labs
    • About From the Labs
    • Follow From The Labs on Twitter
  • Policywise
    • About PolicyWise
    • Follow @BCMEthics on Twitter
  • The Stitch
    • About The Stitch
  • Progress Notes
    • About Progress Notes
    • Progress Notes Editors
    • Connect With Us
  • bcm.edu
From The Labs

IQSEC1 gene mutations cause new intellectual disability syndrome

October 22, 2019 consanguineous marriages,  intellectual disability,  IQSEC1,  Research,  schizo gene

It used to take several years or sometimes decades to unequivocally identify the genes that cause rare human syndromes that affect very few individuals. Nowadays,

Read More

From the Labs: Image of the Month

Blood vessels (magenta) intertwined with metastatic medulloblastoma tumor cells (green) nestled within the protective layers that surround the mouse spinal cord. From the Labs: a closer look at metastatic medulloblastoma

Healthy Habits: A DOC-umentary Series

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SlNiMWHUhbc

Archives

Search

©1998 - 2023 Baylor College of Medicine®
One Baylor Plaza, Houston, Texas 77030
(713) 798-4951