Berg Lab at UNC-CH
194 posts




1. One of formative experience of grad school for me was when our lab moved across the hallway to a bigger space & I realised my research didn’t really matter in the grand scheme of science & that this actually made me love science even more. So here is a thread about that.

Finally uploaded! LabGuy Billie Eilish Parody #BillieEilish #BadGuy @billieeilish @amanda_braddock m.youtube.com/watch?feature=…




@cecilejanssens We have a required full term course on social determinants of health and health disparities @bcmhouston As a geneticist totally agree with you that is more important than @EricTopol suggestion of everyone sequencing their genome.



@Larry_Svenson @CaulfieldTim @ConversationEDU Perhaps they can ask 5 more experts!


#CCG19 Ever expanding influence and contributions worldwide - great effort!



Some hope for patients with Huntington's disease: Targeting Huntingtin expression. Via @NEJM. nejm.org/doi/full/10.10…


Today #DNADay19 @TheACMG discouraged using "ACMG59" around screening tinyurl.com/y3qoukse (even trademarking it!). Important to distinguish OPPORTUNISTIC vs POPULATION screening (tinyurl.com/y6f48e2x) but @ACMG statement ignores growing evidence for screening benefits!

@elise_fiala @AlexisCarere Perhaps @BergLabUNC has some input on this? He and I had a good convo about screening for these kinds of genes at #ACMG19.

"No matter how good our understanding of the genetics of intelligence gets, we will never be able to predict intelligence of individuals with accuracy from genomic information." says @WiringTheBrain Never accurate. Not even close. blogs.scientificamerican.com/observations/i…



@GENES_PK @WBUR Is your suspicion population-level programs > impact than targeting high genetic-risk kids based on evidence (i.e., proven efficacy of population-level programs for obesity) or just a hypothesis?


