Do you know any students who are planning to apply to graduate school this cycle? Encourage them to apply to the Biology Preview Program! We provide intensive workshops to help students w/ their applications + 1:1 mentorship.
Why do guinea pigs naturally develop collateral arteries while other species don't? Check out this wonderful preprint from our lab using in vivo Peturb-seq to discover differences in tip cell programming contribute to artery formation in guinea pig development!
Looking to join a collaborative team studying coronary artery development? Love taking pretty microscope images? The Red-Horse lab(@hhmi-science.bsky.social/Stanford) is hiring for a senior scientist to research coronary & collateral artery development apply below!:
tinyurl.com/5d85xjze
careersearch.stanford.edu/jobs/basic-l...
If this work is interesting to you, we're hiring for a Senior Scientist with post-doctoral experience and a background in RNA molecular biology or whole-organ imaging and analysis to join our small, collaborative team! Come take more pretty pictures with us! Interested applicants should apply below:
Molly Schumer
careersearch.stanford.edu
Basic Life Research ScientistThis position has been deemed critical by the School of Humanities and Sciences Dean’s Office and is exempt from the...
🚨🧪🧵URGENT INPUT NEEDED: NIH asks input for next strategic plan-including emphasis on non-animal models (NAMs) to replace animals. Per NIH insider, anti-animal responses now outnumber scientists 200-700x. Please please provide input. Deadline: May 26, 11:59 PM ET.
grants.nih.gov/news-events/...
I'm now on Bluesky!🤗 Excited to share our preprint, reviving
Kristy Red-Horse's interest in the placenta from her PhD ~20 years ago! We find using 3D imaging that the mouse placenta is far more invasive than previously thought. Furthermore, we find a surprise from our favorite chemokine CXCL12...🧵:
James Zwierzynski
Dr Kathleen Millen
A Perturb-seq screen guided by species divergence uncovers pathways for collateral artery formation https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.64898/2026.04.29.721711v1