Cristina C. Clement MS PhD

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Cristina C. Clement MS PhD

Cristina C. Clement MS PhD

@us_ccClement

Biochemistry, Ph.D., CUNY, NYC-2006; MS Molecullar/Cell Biology, UMKC, KC,1998; Research Assist Prof: Albert Einstein CM 2007-May 2019;Assoc Research Prof: WCM

Weill Cornell Medicine, NY Beigetreten Ekim 2012
144 Folgt135 Follower
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Cristina C. Clement MS PhD
Cristina C. Clement MS PhD@us_ccClement·
HUPO2025, November 9-13th in Toronto, Canada! Mission accomplished! Making new connections in proteomics and related omics technologies, opening new avenues for my future research in immunoproteomics, clinical proteomics, and cellular omics to explore the signal transduction!
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Cristina C. Clement MS PhD@us_ccClement·
US HUPO 2026 in Saint Louis, Missouri, this February 20-24th was, as always, an amazing science show!
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Immunity
Immunity@ImmunityCP·
Online now: Homeostatic maturation programs drive human cDC2s into a tolerogenic state dlvr.it/TR2KPS
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Cancer Cell
Cancer Cell@Cancer_Cell·
Online Now: Lipid oxidation reprogramming in cancer-associated fibroblasts enhances CD8+ T cell cytotoxicity and therapeutic response dlvr.it/TR0yWP
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The Nobel Prize
The Nobel Prize@NobelPrize·
Barbara McClintock's discoveries were so far beyond the understanding of the time that other scientists ignored her work for more than a decade. But she persisted, trusting herself and her evidence. She was awarded the Nobel Prize "for her discovery of mobile genetic elements." Watch the very moment she received the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1983.
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Cristina C. Clement MS PhD
Cristina C. Clement MS PhD@us_ccClement·
HUPO2025, November 9-13th in Toronto, Canada! Mission accomplished! Making new connections in proteomics and related omics technologies, opening new avenues for my future research in immunoproteomics, clinical proteomics, and cellular omics to explore the signal transduction!
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Physics In History
Physics In History@PhysInHistory·
Parity violation is one of the most surprising discoveries in modern physics — that nature is not perfectly symmetrical between left and right when it comes to certain fundamental forces. To understand what this means, imagine watching an event in a mirror: if the physical laws of the universe treat both versions equally, then those laws are said to conserve parity. For most interactions, such as gravity and electromagnetism, this is true — their mirror images behave exactly as expected. But in the mid-20th century, a deep mystery arose regarding the weak nuclear force, the force responsible for processes like beta decay (where a neutron transforms into a proton, emitting an electron and a neutrino). Experimental data hinted at inconsistencies that couldn’t be explained if parity symmetry held true. By 1956, Chen-Ning Yang and Tsung-Dao Lee carefully examined all available experimental evidence concerning weak interactions. To their surprise, they realized that physicists had never actually tested whether parity was conserved in weak nuclear processes. Up to that point, parity conservation was simply assumed, based on its success in other forces. Yang and Lee proposed a daring idea — that perhaps parity symmetry was violated by the weak interaction, meaning that nature could distinguish between left-handed and right-handed coordinate systems. This was a bold and counterintuitive suggestion at the time, as symmetry principles were deeply ingrained in physics and regarded as universal. Yang and Lee didn’t stop at proposing the idea — they outlined a series of concrete experimental tests to verify it. One of these involved studying the beta decay of cobalt-60 nuclei. They predicted that if parity were violated, the emitted electrons would preferentially move in a direction related to the spin orientation of the cobalt nuclei, showing a clear left–right asymmetry. They shared this proposal with Chien-Shiung Wu, an experimental physicist with deep expertise in low-temperature nuclear measurements. Wu and her collaborators at the National Bureau of Standards performed the experiment in late 1956 under extreme cryogenic conditions. When the results came in, they were astonishing: electrons were indeed emitted more in one direction than the other relative to the nucleus’s spin. This asymmetry meant that mirror symmetry failed in nature — the universe does distinguish between left and right. The confirmation of parity violation shattered one of the most fundamental assumptions in physics. It forced a complete reformulation of the weak interaction theory and reshaped the framework of particle physics. It also laid the foundation for the V–A (vector minus axial vector) theory of weak interactions, which later became an essential part of the electroweak theory unifying electromagnetic and weak forces. The discovery was so profound that Yang and Lee were awarded the 1957 Nobel Prize in Physics, only a year after their paper. Recently Chen Ning Yang passed away at the age of 103. Photographed here is Yang and Richard Feynman in the 1950s.
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The Nobel Prize
The Nobel Prize@NobelPrize·
#OnThisDay in 1900, Max Planck presented his law of black body emission, Planck’s law. Planck's law (coloured curves) accurately describe black body radiation and resolved the ultraviolet catastrophe (black curve) a prediction of late 19th/early 20th century classical physics.
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Cristina C. Clement MS PhD
Cristina C. Clement MS PhD@us_ccClement·
I presented some of my last research data on Trp metabolites with immunosuppressive activities in the Chemical Biology & Biochemistry session at the ACS National meeting in August 2025. The ACS society is an excellent avenue for networking and making new scientific connections.
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Cristina C. Clement MS PhD@us_ccClement·
Great memories from our departmental group photo in the Belfer Building at Weill Cornell Medicine, in Manhattan, NYC, this September 2025!
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Immunity
Immunity@ImmunityCP·
Online now: Control of myeloid lineage fidelity and response to stimuli by ISWI-enforced nucleosome phasing dlvr.it/TNHpxd
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Molecular Cell
Molecular Cell@MolecularCell·
Online Now: RAD51 is chromatin enriched and targetable in BRCA1-deficient cells dlvr.it/TN0Wxs
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Cancer Cell
Cancer Cell@Cancer_Cell·
Dendritic cells function beyond antigen presentation dlvr.it/TN2TjM
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Nature Rev Immunol
Nature Rev Immunol@NatRevImmunol·
Immune-related actinopathies at the cross-road of immunodeficiency, autoimmunity and autoinflammation bit.ly/47xeroJ
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Calum Gabbutt
Calum Gabbutt@CalumGabbutt·
Cancer is an evolutionary disease, but does knowing a cancer’s evolutionary past help predict its future? Out today in @Nature, we learnt the evolution of 2000 lymphoid cancers and found it was highly correlated with clinical outcomes! (1/7, link below)
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Science Immunology
Science Immunology@SciImmunology·
Preventing METTL1-mediated m7G methylation of RNA can inhibit #macrophage metabolic reprogramming and reduce tissue injury during #septic inflammation in mice. Learn more in Science #Immunology: scim.ag/4mXmccn
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Cancer Cell
Cancer Cell@Cancer_Cell·
DNASE1L3-expressing dendritic cells promote CD8+ T cell function and anti-PD-(L)1 therapy efficacy by degrading neutrophil extracellular traps dlvr.it/TN1rzK
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