LSUHSC NOLA Graduate Studies

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LSUHSC NOLA Graduate Studies

LSUHSC NOLA Graduate Studies

@LSUHealthNOGS

The official Twitter feed for the School of Graduate Studies at LSU Health Sciences Center in New Orleans. Managed by the Office of the Dean. RTs ≠ endorsements

New Orleans, Louisiana Katılım Temmuz 2022
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LSU Health New Orleans
LSU Health New Orleans@LSUHealthNO·
LSU Health New Orleans Names Five Deans: Deans of Medicine, Graduate Studies, Public Health, Allied Health Professions and Dentistry lsuhsc.edu/news/lsu-healt…
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LSUHSC NOLA Graduate Studies@LSUHealthNOGS·
We'd like to give a warm welcome to all of our incoming graduate students. Sixteen students entered into our Biomedical Sciences PhD, MS, MD/PhD, and Bioinformatics programs. Here's to a smooth fall semester here at LSUHSC!
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LSUHSC NOLA Graduate Studies@LSUHealthNOGS·
The retreat closed with a networking hour hosted by the MD/PhD Planning committee: Dr. @_donwhite, Dr. Jake Doiron, Taylor Fitzpatrick-Schmidt, Stephanie Lee, Nicholas Harris , Patricia Mensah, and Katherine Copenhaver.
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LSUHSC NOLA Graduate Studies@LSUHealthNOGS·
The Program Director Panel consisted of Drs. Jeffrey Carter (Burn Surgery), Chelsey Sandlin (Pediatrics), Brian Copeland (Neurology), and Jessica Zagory (Pediatric Surgery).
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LSUHSC NOLA Graduate Studies@LSUHealthNOGS·
This summer, our MD/PhD program hosted their 2nd annual MD/PhD Retreat. The MD/PhD Retreat serves as an invaluable platform for aspiring physician scientists to come together, share ideas, and foster interdisciplinary collaboration.
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Mike VII
Mike VII@MikeTheTiger·
Welcome back to campus, Tigers! Have a great semester!
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LSUHSC NOLA Graduate Studies@LSUHealthNOGS·
Welcome back, graduate students! Remember to come grab a bite and socialize this afternoon 💜💛
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Niko McCarty.
Niko McCarty.@NikoMcCarty·
Day 14 of great synthetic biology papers. Storing a video in DNA. “CRISPR–Cas encoding of a digital movie into the genomes of a population of living bacteria,” by Shipman et al. (2017). This is the GIF that made synthetic biology go viral. But how did it actually happen? ***** DNA is an incredible way to store information. It is information dense (it can store nearly 1.5 terabits per square millimeter of space, 800-times more dense than a hard drive) and extremely durable (last year, scientists sequenced a 2.4 million-year-old DNA sequence from an ice sheet in Greenland.) Another way to think about this, from my prior essay: "a coffee mug filled with nucleic acids could store all the data produced in the last two years.” (readcodon.com/p/biotech-grat…) Despite the promise of DNA storage, this 2017 paper is the first demonstration of a movie being encoded in a living cell. The video itself is a recreation of Eadweard Muybridge’s running horse movie, which was made by stitching together still images in the late 1800s. But how was it made? *** To encode a video inside of living cells, we must first make the DNA. DNA includes four letters, or nucleotides: A, T, G, and C. Each letter can be used to encode a distinct color, such as white, light gray, dark gray, or black. That is four colors in total; one for each letter. It is possible to encode more colors if you use pairs or triplets of nucleotides. So that’s our colors sorted. But how do we know which color goes where in the image? In other words, how do we encode spatial information in DNA? The secret is that DNA itself contains spatial information. We often say things like, “Gene A is encoded on Chromosome 6,” or “Gene B is located upstream of Gene C.” We can take advantage of DNA's natural spacing to encode our video. If you wanted to encode a 50 x 50 pixel image in DNA, for example, you would first map out the color of each pixel. Let’s say A = white, T = light gray, and so on. Then, you would synthesize a DNA strand, 50 letters long, for each row in the image. Next, you would insert these DNA strands into the genome in the order of their rows, such that the sequence located furthest upstream corresponds to row 0, and the strand located furthest downstream in the genome corresponds to row 49. The challenge, of course, is getting the DNA snippets into the genome in the correct order, so that this spatial information is preserved. But there's an easy way to do that, too. *** If you insert all the strands into the genome at random places, there will be no way to read them back out and reconstruct the image. The spatial information will be lost. But there is a solution for this. In a 2016 Science paper, Shipman and co. figured out a clever way to insert DNA into the genome in a specific order. This technology has made all the difference for embedding videos in DNA. (science.org/doi/10.1126/sc…) The 2016 paper shows that two proteins, called Cas1 and Cas2, can grab onto snippets of DNA that are electroporated into cells (literally, a pulse of electricity forces DNA into the cell) and then integrate them in the genome. These special proteins ALWAYS insert DNA in the same location, such that the first DNA snippet is inserted at position 0. A second DNA snippet is inserted at position 0, and the first DNA snippet moves to position 1. And so on. After Cas1 and Cas2 have inserted dozens or hundreds of DNA strands into the genome, the final outcome is that the DNA snippet located furthest from position 0 must have been the first one to be acquired by the cells! For the 2017 paper, Shipman synthesized all the DNA needed to encode the various pixels for each frame in the running horse paper. He then "shocked" this DNA into a population of cells. These cells took in the DNA snippets, embedded them in their genomes, and went about their day as if little had happened. When the researchers later sequenced these DNA arrays and averaged the results over mllions of cells, the team was able to retrieve the video’s information with >90% overall accuracy. This paper is a beautiful demonstration of how a simple discovery (DNA acquisition via Cas1 and Cas2) can be used to capture and inspire people’s imagination. I like it a lot.
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