Recommended Readings: Michael Elowitz, Ph.D., Friday April 30, 2021

Recommended Readings: Michael Elowitz, Ph.D., Friday April 30, 2021

Webinar Friday Lecture SeriesMichael Elowitz, Ph.D.

(open to the Tri-I community)

Friday, April 30, 2021

Michael Elowitz, Ph.D.

Professor of Biology and Bioengineering

California Institute of Technology

Multicellular Circuit Design: Natural and Synthetic

 

 Recommended Readings:

Empirical Articles

Ma Y, Budde MW, Mayalu MN, et al. (2020). Synthetic mammalian signaling circuits for robust cell population control. BioRXiv

Chow KHK, Budde MW, Granados AA, et al. (2020). Imaging cell lineage with a synthetic digital recording system. SCIENCE. 732 (6538)

Askary, Amjad; Sanchez-Guardado, Luis; Linton, James M.; et al. (2020). In situ readout of DNA barcodes and single base edits facilitated by in vitro transcription. NATURE BIOTECHNOLOGY. 38 (1): 66-75

Frieda, Kirsten L.; Linton, James M.; Hormoz, Sahand; et al. (2017). Synthetic recording and in situ readout of lineage information in single cells. NATURE. 541 (7635): 107-111

Gao, Xiaojing J.; Chong, Lucy S.; Kim, Matthew S.; et al. (2018). Programmable protein circuits in living cells. SCIENCE. 361 (6408): 1252-1258

Yuan, Guo-Cheng; Cai, Long; Elowitz, Michael; et al. (2017). Challenges and emerging directions in single-cell analysis. GENOME BIOLOGY. 18

Review Papers

Li, Pulin; Elowitz, Michael B. (2019). Communication codes in developmental signaling pathways. DEVELOPMENT. 146 (12)

Eldar, Avigdor; Elowitz, Michael B. (2010). Functional roles for noise in genetic circuits. NATURE. 467 (7312): 167-173

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About the Author:

Ilaria Ceglia, Ph.D., Science Informationist - Ilaria joined the Markus Library Team in 2017. As science liaison between the Rockefeller scientific community and the library, Ilaria assists Rockefeller scientists find, and effectively use, the scholarly communication tools available at the library, provides customized literature searching, delivers research information reports and publications metric analysis to enhance collaborations between Rockefeller and leading scientific institutions, provides access to digital content to manage large data freely accessible. Ilaria manages a drug development database to perform clinical literature searches and drugs pipeline reports for Rockefeller research faculty, scientists and clinicians. As the NIH compliance monitor for the Rockefeller University, Ilaria helps faculty to solve scientific submission requirements issues and ensures Rockefeller remains compliant with NIH Public Access Policy. Her role also includes evaluate and select new databases to complement other resource center services, organize tutorial training sessions in areas of life sciences and on the use of reference management platforms F1000 Workspace, Scopus, Web of Science and PubMed literature searching, managing recommendation readings library blog for lectures and special seminars. Ilaria is a neuroscientist and a former Rockefeller postdoctoral and research associate of Dr. Paul Greengard’s laboratory. She was a Research Assistant Professor at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York and an Adjunct Assistant Professor at City College and Hunter College in New York, where she taught Cell Biology and Biochemistry. As an Italian expat living in New York, Ilaria is an enthusiastic proponent of Italian culture among friends and colleagues.