Christine Wang - Bruce and Elizabeth Dunlevie Fellow
Awarded in 2014
Home Department: Bioengineering
Faculty Advisors: Fan Yang (Bioengineering and Orthopaedic Surgery), Gerald Grant (Neurosurgery), and Michelle Monje (Neurology)
Awarded in 2014
Home Department: Bioengineering
Faculty Advisors: Fan Yang (Bioengineering and Orthopaedic Surgery), Gerald Grant (Neurosurgery), and Michelle Monje (Neurology)
Home Department: Bioengineering
Faculty Advisor: Fan Yang
Talk Title: Comparative study of primary glioblastoma (GBM) and diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma (DIPG) cells from adult and pediatric brain cancer patients cultured in 3D PEG-based biomimetic hydrogel
Event: Biomedical Engineering Society Annual Meeting 2014
Awarded in 2009
Home Department: Neurosciences
Faculty Advisors: Scott Delp (Bioengineering, Mechanical Engineering) and Karl Deisseroth (Bioengineering, Psychiatry)
Cellular replication is a defining feature of life. But how do cells reproduce themselves? Dr. Christine Jacobs-Wagner's laboratory addresses this fundamental question by probing the governing principles and the spatiotemporal mechanisms that underlie cellular replication, with an emphasis of cell morphogenesis, cell growth, chromosome dynamics and cell cycle regulation. They use bacteria as model systems for two main reasons. First, bacteria lack the complex control systems of eukaryotes (e.g., cyclin/Cdk machinery); yet their multiplication process is remarkably efficient and faithful.