This is my love letter to mRNA: an Ignite talk I gave as a fundraiser for the Lawrence Hall of Science. Custom mRNA cancer vaccines could be a game changer, but anti-science policies make their future so uncertain. www.youtube.com/watch?v=WUlu...
This is my love letter to mRNA: an Ignite talk I gave as a fundraiser for the Lawrence Hall of Science. Custom mRNA cancer vaccines could be a game changer, but anti-science policies make their future so uncertain. www.youtube.com/watch?v=WUlu...
The two Nobel laureates in Berkeley's Molecular & Cell Biology department, Jennifer Doudna and Randy Schekman, both teach in our introductory biology course, Bio 1A.
MCB postdoc Joseph Lobel (Ingolia Lab) receives the 2026 RNA Society Scaringe Young Scientist Award
Congratulations to MCB postdoc Joseph Lobel (Ingolia Lab) on receiving the 2026 RNA Society Scaringe Young Scientist Award! 👏🎉 @rnasociety.bsky.social @nickingolia.bsky.social
mcb.berkeley.edu/news-and-eve...
Well, maybe he'll just call it a colorable argument...
2025 MCB Outstanding Postdoc Award recipients
Congrats to our 2025 MCB Outstanding Postdoc Award recipients who are being honored for their excellence in research, leadership, and service! 👏🎉Erin Doherty @erinedoherty.bsky.social, Kevin Eislmayr, Naohiro Kuwayama, & Joseph Lobel
mcb.berkeley.edu/news-and-eve...
This preprint from Helen Sakharova is one of the coolest things to come out of my lab: “Protein language models reveal evolutionary constraints on synonymous codon choice.” Codon choice is a big puzzle in how information is encoded in genomes, and we have a new angle. www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1...
"Writers have been using me long before the advent of AI. I am the punctuation equivalent of a cardigan—beloved by MFA grads, used by editors when it’s actually cold, and worn year-round by screenwriters. I am not new here."
Smallpox inoculation was practiced throughout the 1700s; George Washington mandated this life-saving measure for the whole Continental Army in 1777. It was supplanted by the first-ever vaccine in 1796, a huge breakthrough supported by government grants in the UK. Just randomly on my mind.
This is awful and stupid, I'm sorry.
A screenshot of the termination notice showing "Outstanding Investigator Grants"
A screenshot of the termination notice with "This award is terminated effective the date of this award, due to unsafe antisemitic actions that suggest the institution lacks concern for the safety and wellbeing of Jewish students." highlighted
Yesterday, the NIH R35 “Outstanding Investigator” grant to fund scientists in my lab studying antibiotic resistance was terminated for reasons not related to the content of the science, or any actions taken by me or members of my lab
Not about Chicago, but you might appreciate:
bsky.app/profile/moti...
My father-in-law, Jack Strominger, and I wrote a letter to the @wsj.com editor about the current threats to science due to Trump's funding freeze. Please repost! www.wsj.com/opinion/scie...
I was stunned by this work from Kathleen Collins' lab (Berkeley) when I heard her present this at a FASEB meeting!
What a crazy innovative idea: Adapting the R2 retrotransposon to efficiently insert any custom transgene directly into RIBOSOMAL DNA ARRAYS! 🤯🤯🤯
The applications are endless....
I’m hoping you fine tune a version for long-form Italian poetry
Great work from Gloria Brar’s group on the role of paralogous RNA helicases in the heat shock response. Surprising increase in growth at high temperature and impact of a short motif! Also important implications of the role of biomolecular condensation. Awesome www.cell.com/cell-reports...
Could you add me? I think I fit the profile...
New work from the lab!
James Stowell led this project showing the importance of multivalency and phospho-regulation in mRNA decay. This has many parallels with other mechanisms in gene expression.
biorxiv.org/cgi/content/...
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Did you know the genome might have hidden protein-coding genes?
In the years since the Human Genome Project, research has been tied to a set of 20,000 protein-coding genes. But the ‘dark genome’ has ‘dark proteins’ lurking in plain sight.
🧪
💻 + 🧬
🔎 microproteins
www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1...
Exciting work from Jinyoung Kim and Nick Ingolia enabling pooled CRISPRi screens in human cells by barcoded RNA readout. www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1...
"Sensitive Compartmented Urination Facility"
Spurred on by ribosome profiling and other cool methods, translation elongation has grown into a whole field with new surprises all the time (and new relevance for vaccine mRNAs!). Here’s our latest on why synonymous codons aren’t all the same. (Thread) www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1...
Check out our paper and the accompanying perspective by Kuhlman published today in Science about the surprising role of short tandem repeats in regulating eukaryotic transcription!
www.science.org/doi/10.1126/...
www.science.org/doi/10.1126/...
A thread (1/11):