🧬Register for the GRS on DNA Damage, Mutation & Cancer🧬
Feb 28–Mar 1 2026, Ventura CA
Accepting abstracts for oral presentations!
📍 Apply here 👉 grc.org/dna-damage-mutation-and-cancer-grs-conference/2026 (www.grc.org/dna-damage-m...)
#DNADamage #GRC#GRS #CallForAbstracts
Posts by Karlseder Lab
Another great read from the lab (this time with @joenassour.bsky.social) on how telomere crisis stands at the crossroads of cancer suppression and evolution 🧬
Our lab’s latest “hot take” is out in Genes & Development!
We argue for looking beyond senescence to understand how telomeres connect aging, tumor suppression, and inflammation.
Great job @sambloom28.bsky.social!
👉 DOI: 10.1101/gad.353122.125
genesdev.cshlp.org/content/earl...
🧵 1/10 Excited to share our latest study in @naturecomms.bsky.social
"A CPC-shelterin-BTR axis regulates mitotic telomere deprotection" t.co/VypPsLBJCR
1/Out today in @naturecomms.bsky.social,
“A CPC-shelterin-BTR axis regulates mitotic telomere deprotection”.
Here we identify the mechanism that unwinds telomere-loops (t-loops) during mitotic arrest to activate the DNA damage response and signal mitotic stress.
www.nature.com/articles/s41....
Great opportunity for those looking for a faculty position!
Huge thanks to Hannah Trost, Gabriel Matos Rodriguez, Roger Greenberg, and Hilda Pickett for an amazing Mammalian DNA Repair GRS/GRC in Ventura! Already excited for the next one!
1/Delighted to announce the newest paper from our lab, “Homologous recombination promotes non-immunogenic mitotic cell death upon DNA damage”, is out today in @naturecellbiology.bsky.social, www.nature.com/articles/s41....
We highlight novel ‘humanized’ mouse models addressing these differences, which allow for a direct comparison with human telomeres in the research context of aging and disease. Congratulations to co-authors Corey and Laura on this excellent work!
With our lab’s inaugural Blue Sky post we celebrate our latest publication, a review in Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology (@natrevmcb.bsky.social) 🥳
Here, we review our current understanding of telomere biology, discussing differences between human and mouse.
www.nature.com/articles/s41...