Image of the Month: Snapshot of eye development in the fruit fly
In his lab at Baylor College of Medicine, Dr. Hugo Bellen and his colleagues work with the fruit fly, Drosophila melanogaster, as a model system
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In his lab at Baylor College of Medicine, Dr. Hugo Bellen and his colleagues work with the fruit fly, Drosophila melanogaster, as a model system
Read MoreEach year, at least 3 million people worldwide die of sudden cardiac death. In the U.S., this number reaches up to 450,000 people. Although sudden
Read MoreResistance to therapy is common in estrogen receptor positive (ER+) breast cancer, the most common type of breast cancer, and eventual development of metastatic disease
Read MoreVision begins in the retina, a light-sensing neural network in the eye that is critical for our ability observe the world around us. “Unless we
Read MoreIn July 2018, From the Labs released a post on the laboratory evidence suggesting that in a mouse model of moderately stressed aortas, exposure to
Read MoreDr. Suzanne Fuqua shares what inspired her to get involved in metastatic breast cancer research and how she is educating the public about scientific advances at Baylor College of Medicine and beyond.
Read MoreIf the genome is like computer hardware, then the epigenome is the software that turns certain genes on and others off. During development, the epigenome
Read MoreFrom the Labs sat down with McNair Scholar Dr. Xiang “Shawn” Zhang to learn more about him, his research, his motivations to pursue a career
Read MoreOne way to study neuronal function is by altering the activity of the neurons and then observing the outcomes, just like in genetics where scientists
Read MoreGenes can cause disease because of mutations that result in loss-of-function; for instance, when the mutated gene is not producing the protein it encodes. But
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