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Posts by Anne-Ruxandra Carvunis

It is Friday. Time for a new edition of #Autism: the #evidence. After spending some time talking about the consensus on what is behind the increase in #prevalence, and what does NOT cause autism, this week I am going to talk about what does, starting with #genetics

4 months ago 13 7 1 0

It's Friday. This means it is time for a new post on #Autism : The Evidence. If you missed last week, I discussed what is TRULY behind the rise in prevalence. Today I am going to talk about what it is not: #VACCINES . They are SAFE and EFFECTIVE, but where did this idea come from?

5 months ago 14 8 2 4

Today I am starting a weekly post titled "Autism: The Evidence". I hope it helps someone fight the colossal wave of misinformation that is drowning us. Part 1: I heard Autism prevalence has gone up. Is that true? If so why?

5 months ago 35 16 2 3

Its subtle but "pervasive / spurious translation" can be used to refer to the translation itself rather than its products too. Meaning that the translation is not regulated and/or for "pervasive", widespread.

6 months ago 0 0 0 0
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After testing virtually all reasonable permutations of sample prep, spectra acquisition, database selection, data processing...

This team (convincingly, I think) demonstrates that ~85% of the small, *annotated* bacterial proteins are undetectable by mass spec—much less non-annotated ones. (1/4) 🧵

6 months ago 8 2 2 0

Yes!!

9 months ago 3 0 1 0
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The findings at the recent trial and today's Columbia chaos is pushing me to the edge.

I just sent the following email...

10 months ago 522 111 25 7

I heard this morning that my informatics colleague Dr. Atul Butte passed after a battle with cancer. He was a giant in the field & inspired many of us over his distinguished career. He was a passionate champion of the power of big data & his impact on our field is immeasurable. RIP Atul & thanks.

10 months ago 203 60 19 4
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Rapid Response Bridge Funding Program In the face of recent abrupt shifts in federal funding for education research, including large-scale terminations of National Science Foundation (NSF) research grant awards, we have developed a rap...

Very smart, high ROI initiative from the Spencer Foundation.

Providing bridge funding for canceled NSF grants:

1) directs funds to projects already screened by a top-noch review process.
2) avoids imposing proposal prep costs on researchers.
3) ameliorates the disruption from GOP sabotage.

10 months ago 776 334 6 10
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Interview with a Harvard graduate student from Harvard about some of the consequences of the administration's current policies.

10 months ago 20 4 1 0
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Senator Durbin noted that some (I believe Republican Senators) had indicated the US had been doing more than its share of biomedical research and it was time for other countries take a turn.

I felt I had to interrupt to respond...

10 months ago 360 106 20 14

I appreciate the offers from other scientists to help Harvard (students, labs, etc) through this attack, but what would be most helpful is for you to use your position to contact your elected representatives and make it clear this fight isn't just Harvard, it will affect you, and their districts too

10 months ago 491 186 8 7
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Deep homology and design of proteasome chaperone proteins in Candida auris A central tenet of biology is that protein structure mediates the sequence-function relationship. Recently, there has been excitement about the promise of advances in protein structure modeling to gen...

I'm so excited to share a new preprint on exploring sequence, structure, and function relationships and how we can use evolutionary information to help us design new proteins that work in the native context of a cell
www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1...

11 months ago 34 7 1 1
Post from PO about NSF

Post from PO about NSF

An NSF PO on its upcoming 75th anniversary: "In nature, systems evolve towards minimum of energy, following the laws of physics. In the US today things evolve to a location of maximum pain, violating the laws of the land." www.linkedin.com/posts/tomasz...

11 months ago 50 24 0 1
A letter from Jeremy Berg to NIH Director Jayanta Bhattacharya about the need to award grants promptly.

A letter from Jeremy Berg to NIH Director Jayanta Bhattacharya about the need to award grants promptly.

As a follow-up to the Kaiser interview, here is my exchange with Dr. Bhattacharya starting Sunday evening...

1/n

11 months ago 317 125 8 19
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Eugenics is on the rise again: human geneticists must take a stand Scientists must push back against the threat of rising white nationalism and the dangerous and pseudoscientific ideas of eugenics.

I wrote about how we must stand and fight against the threat of eugenics.

Fueled by white nationalism and scientific racism, these beliefs are factually wrong and ethically abhorrent.

This fight includes supporting efforts to diversify our workforce & science. To stop now would be a deep betrayal.

11 months ago 301 166 8 8
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Join our lab to study transcriptional regulation in mouse germ cells and embryonic stem cells at @haskoliislands.bsky.social in beautiful Reykjavík!
Apply here: tinyurl.com/34y6jcrd
#epigenetics #TranscriptionFactors #transcriptomics #stemCells #pluripotency

11 months ago 21 15 0 1
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a person is holding a red object in their hand . ALT: a person is holding a red object in their hand .

ATTENTION

I am hearing from several sources that "NIH" sent out termination notices for most or all "diversity" awards yesterday to coincide with the new Notice.

If you were affected by this and are willing to share, please DM me or reach me on Signal (jeremymberg.78)

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11 months ago 120 100 4 7
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April is #Autism Awareness Month. This is a month to accept, understand and love those in the Autism Spectrum. Above all accepting that someone is different and respecting their differences is the most important thing we can do. Here are some facts to help understand (a thread):

1 year ago 14 8 1 1
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a man with curly hair and glasses is making a funny face and saying huh . ALT: a man with curly hair and glasses is making a funny face and saying huh .

Another moment of WTF...

The evolution of the www.covid.gov site...

Warning: May be jarring!

1/4

1 year ago 74 32 5 6
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After 21 years at my dream job, I’m very sad to announce my early retirement from the National Institutes of Health. My life’s work has been to scientifically study how our food environment affects what we eat, and how what we eat affects our physiology.

1 year ago 2627 602 142 127
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All snails have tentacles. Some have 1 pair, other 2 pair. In some (but not all) snails, the eyes are placed at the end of one of these pairs of tentacles, called an 'ommatophore' or eyestalk.

And, as you can see, they can fully RETRACT (evert) them at will.

1 year ago 147 24 3 6

What?!?!? @jeremymberg.bsky.social I'm so sorry. Still faculty i hope?

1 year ago 4 0 1 0

💐 To NIH and NSF program officers, and anyone else trying to keep those institutions alive:

Thank you for trying to do an impossible job in an impossible time. I’m sorry for all of us that this is the world we’re living in. 1/n

1 year ago 168 56 1 1
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Three more Pitt researchers lose NIH funding ‘I don’t understand the politics.’

New story about grant terminations in Pittsburgh

www.post-gazette.com/business/hea...

1/2

1 year ago 115 56 4 3
Medscape Medical News

What Not to Say to People With Complex Chronic Illness
Miriam E. Tucker
March 18, 2025

1
25
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For people with complex chronic diseases such as long COVID, myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS), and dysautonomia, a clinician’s inadvertently hurtful language can compound suffering and derail effective communication.

photo of  Dr Svetlana Blitschteyn
Svetlana Blitshteyn, MD
To address this, Svetlana Blitshteyn, MD, a neurologist who is the director of Dysautonomia Clinic at Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, University of Buffalo, and Nancy J. Smyth, PhD, professor and former dean at the School of Social Work, University at Buffalo, both in Buffalo, New York, co-authored a paper entitled Language Matters: What Not to Say to Patients with Long COVID, Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, and Other Complex Chronic Disorders. In it, they provided a table of 16 “never words” that clinicians should avoid saying to patients, explanations of why the phrases are problematic, and proposed alternatives for more effective and empathetic communication.

Medscape Medical News What Not to Say to People With Complex Chronic Illness Miriam E. Tucker March 18, 2025 1 25 Add to Email Alerts For people with complex chronic diseases such as long COVID, myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS), and dysautonomia, a clinician’s inadvertently hurtful language can compound suffering and derail effective communication. photo of Dr Svetlana Blitschteyn Svetlana Blitshteyn, MD To address this, Svetlana Blitshteyn, MD, a neurologist who is the director of Dysautonomia Clinic at Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, University of Buffalo, and Nancy J. Smyth, PhD, professor and former dean at the School of Social Work, University at Buffalo, both in Buffalo, New York, co-authored a paper entitled Language Matters: What Not to Say to Patients with Long COVID, Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, and Other Complex Chronic Disorders. In it, they provided a table of 16 “never words” that clinicians should avoid saying to patients, explanations of why the phrases are problematic, and proposed alternatives for more effective and empathetic communication.

🧵
From Medscape (widely read by health professionals):

"What Not to Say to People With Complex Chronic Illness"

www.medscape.com/viewarticle/...
(may require free registration)

#MEcfs #LongCovid

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1 year ago 50 12 1 3

That's great, thank you!

1 year ago 0 0 0 0
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I know that the mRNA is larger than the protein it codes for but I don't believe it

1 year ago 170 41 9 10

If you are wondering why universities and academic medical centers seem so stressed, one major reason is these imposed cash flow challenges.

These funds were expected in good faith (and based on past practices), but have not been forthcoming.

12/n

1 year ago 60 10 1 0
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NIH to terminate or limit grants related to vaccine hesitancy and uptake The order covers more than 40 awards to researchers around the country seeking to understand why vaccine acceptance has declined.

Why wouldn't you want to understand vaccine hesitancy?(Gift link)

wapo.st/3Dw7WG0

1 year ago 84 28 5 4