The voyage of the Katrin neutrino detector through the streets of Karlsruhe made for some amazing images.
Posts by Gilberto Alvarez
CREsted: an efficient and user-friendly toolbox for analysis, modeling and design of cell-type-specific enhancers.
www.nature.com/articles/s41...
When conference participants take part in a human experiment...
How to get a group of humans to spontaneously synchronize their walking behaviours in the absence of "leaders" (watch out for the one who was attempting to cheat the system!)
What are the most important cues here? 😏
#EESBioOsc
Its wrong to droop Drosophila !
www.biorxiv.org/content/10.6...
Extremely happy to see this wonderful story out! 🔬
Here, we describe how Ki-67 anchors chromatin to nucleoli, leading them to acquire irregular shapes!!! 🫧🧬
This great story was led by Daja Schichler & Yuki Hayashi from the Cuylen Lab @embl.org
link.springer.com/article/10.1...
One of my favorite transposon facts. Think LTR retrotransposons are a homogeneous group? The two main kinds -- Ty1 and Ty3 -- are as evolutionary diverged as GIANT SQUID and PINE TREES.
It is good news, but the fact that a headline like this is even possible is very grim news indeed.
😍
🔗 to paper: journals.biologists.com/dev/article/...
Are you a developmental biology researcher working with complicated volumetric data?
Discover LimbLab, an open-source tool that can help you to visualise and analyse 3D data for developmental processes.
www.embl.org/news/science...
It was always clear this was an injustice - but now we know by how much. Absolutely shameful, and as bad as the Nobel neglect of Lise Meitner, if not worse.
So there you have it: AlphaGenome is a great start, and will surely be a valuable tool. Whether it will lead to clinical advances remains to be seen. Its applicability will be limited by its very nature. And we still need to do the basic science. 32/32
… as the researchers say, because they involve “broader biological processes… beyond the direct sequence-to-function scope of the model”. Let me say that more plainly: they are not predictable from genomic sequence, because that is not where the predominant causes lie. /31
Great book! I am enjoying the dynamics of regulation and TAD section a lot! 🙌 😊
(If only someone had written a book explaining all this stuff about the complexities of gene regulation, regulatory sequences, noncoding genes etc… A book about "how life works" 😉). /18
But not only is more of our genome functional than we once thought; also the distinction between what is functional and what isn’t is rather blurry, and there’s no cut-and-dry technique for distinguishing them. /15
This was never really the case. We have known since the 1960s that some of our non-coding DNA has a crucial role in gene regulation: turning the expression of coding genes on & off. It’s been clear for decades that the regulatory DNA is at least comparable in proportion to the protein-coding DNA. /5
I recommend this as a great summary of the debates and the state of play in eukaryotic regulation. I particularly commend the discussion of causation.
The call for Health + Life Science Alliance post doctoral fellowships has just opened: lnkd.in/dw9zxKSN.
Joint with my group @embl.org , Victoria Ingham Uni. Heidelberg, and Felix Hol at Radboud Univ., we are exploring how climate and chemistry shape mosquito behaviour for next-gen. vector control
We mourn the passing of Peer Bork, EMBO Member since 2000: www.embl.org/news/embl-announcements/...
interesting case of human creativity
Great photo. Her omission from the 1944 Nobel Prize for the discovery of nuclear fission is said to represent "one of the worst examples of blatant racism and sexism by the Nobel committee."
theconversation.com/lise-meitner...
A photo of the physicist Lise Meitner.
Always loved this picture of Lise Meitner looking like she doesn't take any shit from anyone.
Biologist Elias Barriga studies how frog embryos generate electrical fields to guide cell migration. The study of bioelectricity, formerly stranded in biology’s backwaters, is “coming back like crazy,” he said. www.quantamagazine.org/cells-use-bi...
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For decades, it was thought animals arose via a rapid burst of genetic innovation. But by sequencing their closest unicellular relatives (our beloved protists), we now know most of those genes originated before animals evolved. We have tons of data on that! 😀
The Greenland shark, the longest-living vertebrate, inhabits the dim, frigid depths of the Arctic Ocean. A study in Nature Communications finds that its vision remains intact and well-adapted for life in dim light, revealing remarkable preservation of sensory function across centuries. 🧪
🤩
New preprint! Here, we highlight the role of motifs during the Toxoplasma host cell invasion, predict thousands of motifs in its effector proteins, and validate the binding of TRAF6 motifs. Our results are intended to catalyse further research on motifs and parasites.
www.biorxiv.org/content/10.6...
First hours of embryonic zebrafish development. Credit to Mona Wellhäusser, Timo Schreiber, & @lennarthilbert.bsky.social. #ZebrafishZunday 🧪
In October, the International Society for Artificial Life recognized several SFI researchers and co-authors with the ISAL Award for Outstanding Publication of 2024.
The award celebrates the paper “Fundamental constraints to the logic of living systems," which was published last fall.