Developmental Biologist I Organ Form and Function, Heart Morphogenesis I Group Leader @crick.ac.uk I India - Australia - Germany - UK
Rashmi Priya
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A unique opportunity to lead the most wonderful company in scientific publishing (I might be slightly biased here). The Company of Biologists are searching for a CEO.
www.inspiredselection.com/jobs/jo00000...
Finished your PhD & looking for a Postdoc position? Intrigued by #zebrafish heart morphogenesis? Job available in the @rashmi-priya.bsky.social Lab at @crick.ac.uk (Initial 4 years funding w/ potential for 2 additional years)🐟❤️ More details: crick.wd3.myworkdayjobs.com/External/job... Please share 🧪
New paper alert!🤩Super proud that our story led by superstar postdocs @liujinghui.bsky.social and @nerlielisa.bsky.social is finally out! We found how electrical signals are key for promoting organ regenerative growth!!! A thread 🧵https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/sciadv.aec0687
How does tissue mechanics drive the evolutionary diversity of forms/morphology we see around us?
Our views and review of literature on the importance of studying forms, and more
authors.elsevier.com/sd/article/S...
Our study on shape diversity in cnidarians is now published. The final version includes extensive new data that substantially extend the original bioRxiv preprint. Congrats to everyone who contributed to this work! www.cell.com/cell/fulltex...
@embl.org
#WomanInScience
We are very proud to present our newest paper on the role of Wnt signalling in abscission dynamics in stem cells! A brief thread to entice you to read Snježana’s exciting foray into signalling.
"...I have learnt that success does not overcome bias. Women are doubted until they overdeliver... the glass ceiling remains. Cracked it might be, but it still holds..." www.nature.com/articles/d41...
🐟!JOB ALERT!Duke, Durham, NC!🐟 We are looking for a research tech (our current tech is starting grad school this Fall (Yay!)). The candidate will contribute to our ongoing research projects on tissue morphogenesis using zebrafish. Please RT🙏
www.munjallab.com/join-us
Planarians also reproduce asexually by fission – pulling their body in two & then regenerating the missing halves.
Breaking occurs all over development; see this recent @dev-journal.bsky.social Review from @torres-sanchez.bsky.social, @rashmi-priya.bsky.social & colleagues: doi.org/10.1242/dev....