Eric Klein has multiple publications from his research lab dealing with bacterial microbes. Stankeviciute G. and Klein, E.A. Purification and HPLC Analysis of Cell Wall Muropeptides from Caulobacter crescentus. Bio-protocol. (2019), 9(21): e3421. https://doi.org/10.21769/BioProtoc.3421. Klein, E.A. Bacterial sphingolipids: Perhaps not as rare as we thought? ASBMB Today (2019).http://www.asbmb.org/asbmbtoday/201910/News/Lipidnews/ Stankeviciute G.,…
…5 Eric Klein Area of research: bacterial pathogenesis and microbial adhesion eric.a.klein@rutgers.edu https://ericklein.camden.rutgers.edu/ Option 6 Kwangwon Lee Areas of Interest: genetics of circadian (daily) and circaannual (seasonal) rhythms kwangwon.lee@rutgers.edu https://kwangwonlee.camden.rutgers.edu/ Option 7 Maria Solesio Area of research: mammalian mitochondrial cell biology m.solesio@rutgers.edu https://solesio.camden.rutgers.edu/ Option 8 Nathan Fried Area of Interest:…
…Material, Nanotherapeutics youwen.zhang@rutgers.edu https://sites.rutgers.edu/youwen-zhang/ Option 15 Jinglin Fu Area of research: Nucleic Acids Nanotechnology, Bio-mimetic Nanoreactors, Molecular Sensing Circuits and Nanoparticles Drug Delivery and Gene Editing. jf604@camden.rutgers.edu https://jinglinfu.camden.rutgers.edu/ Cooper Lab CMSRU options Option 16 Darren Boehning Area of research: Calcium signaling and dysfunction in disease. boehning@rowan.edu https://www.boehninglab.com/research Option 17 Diana…
…that is derived from a monolayer of follicular epithelium surrounding the developing oocyte within the female ovary. The bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) signaling pathway is essential for controlling the patterning and morphogenesis of the eggshell. We found that the type II BMP receptor is necessary for epithelial cells’ development. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S001216061200677X#…
…ecology. To gain more understanding of Neurospora ecology, experiments were performed using natural substrates for ecological questions. Data in this paper supports the view that indigenous ascospores are likely source of inoculum for the colonization of Neurospora after wild fire and sensing light-perception in fungi is a fitness trait. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1754504811001036…