• Seminar: Yvette R. Seger, PhD

    G202 MBRB 111 Mason Farm Rd, Chapel Hill

    Yvette R. Seger, PhD Director of Science Policy FASEB (Foundation of American Societies of Experimental Biology) Career Focus: Science Policy affecting biomedical researchers and their work.

  • Seminar: David G. Harrison, MD, FACC, FAHA (Gottschalk Lecturer)

    G202 MBRB 111 Mason Farm Rd, Chapel Hill

    David G. Harrison, MD, FACC, FAHA | Gottschalk Lecturer Betty and Jack Bailey Chair in Cardiology | Director, Division of Clinical Pharmacology Vanderbilt University Medical Center Research Focus:  Understanding how inflammation and the adaptive immune response contributes to hypertension.

  • Seminar: Rejji Kuruvilla, PhD

    G202 MBRB 111 Mason Farm Rd, Chapel Hill

    Rejji Kuruvilla, PhD William D. Gill Professor John’s Hopkins University Research Focus:  Development and functions of the sympathetic nervous system.

  • Seminar: Maxence Nachury, PhD

    G202 MBRB 111 Mason Farm Rd, Chapel Hill

    Maxence Nachury, PhD Associate Professor, Ophthalmology University of California San Francisco Research Focus:  Primary cilium, a surface-exposed organelle required for vision, olfaction and developmental signaling and whose dysfunction leads to obesity, skeletal malformations and kidney cysts.

  • Seminar: Tomas Kircchausen, PhD

    1131 Bioinformatics

    Tomas Kircchausen, PhD Springer Family Chair | Senior Investigator, Program in Cellular and Molecular Medicine (BCH) Harvard University Medical School Research Focus:  Molecular mechanisms that underlie the cells sorting machineries responsible for receptor-mediated endocytosis and for secretion, and how they are highjacked by toxins, viruses and bacterial pathogens to enter cells. We also study how … Read more

  • CANCELLED: Seminar: Benjamin L. Prosser, PhD

    1131 Bioinformatics

    Benjamin L. Prosser, PhD Assistant Professor of Physiology The Perelman School, University of Pennsylvania Research Focus:  How cell stress and strain regulate intracellular calcium homeostasis and signaling through reactive oxygen species (ROS).