ScaddenLab

71 posts

ScaddenLab banner
ScaddenLab

ScaddenLab

@ScaddenLab

Official account of the Scadden Lab at Harvard University and MGH. We study the hematopoietic system in health and disease. Posts by Dr. Scadden are signed DS.

Katılım Ekim 2018
131 Takip Edilen1.5K Takipçiler
ScaddenLab retweetledi
Broad Institute
Broad Institute@broadinstitute·
Broad has launched the Biology of Adversity Project, led by @JD_Buenrostro a 2023 @macfound fellow, to uncover how adverse life experiences can inflict molecular “scars” in the genome and body and increase risk of heart disease and other disorders. broad.io/BAP
Broad Institute tweet media
English
1
10
46
10.6K
ScaddenLab
ScaddenLab@ScaddenLab·
Defining Thymic niche cells published today in Nature Biotechnology. Congratulations Karin and wonderful collaborators!! nature.com/articles/s4158…
English
2
2
17
991
ScaddenLab
ScaddenLab@ScaddenLab·
David Scadden has been named to Clarivate’s 2021 global list of Highly Cited Researchers. His papers rank in the top 1% of citations for his field in the Web of Science database, demonstrating the impressive reach of his influential work.
English
0
4
72
0
ScaddenLab
ScaddenLab@ScaddenLab·
Paul Frenette was a cherished colleague and friend whose creativity changed forever how we think about hematopoiesis and the bone marrow niche. His greatness in science was matched by his warmth, kindness and humor. We deeply mourn his loss and celebrate his life. @PaulFrenette
English
2
12
141
0
ScaddenLab
ScaddenLab@ScaddenLab·
Congratulations to Nick van Gastel who is en route to his own new lab in the deDuval Institute, Brussels, Belgium.
English
3
0
32
0
ScaddenLab
ScaddenLab@ScaddenLab·
Delighted to be part of a superb study by Aaron Burberry and Kevin Eggan defining how common ALS variant C9orf72 affects immune response to gut microbes. Microbiome speaks to the brain through blood cells and alters neurodegeneration! Nature 2020 Jun;582(7810):89-94.
English
0
4
31
0
ScaddenLab
ScaddenLab@ScaddenLab·
Very happy to have contributed to this study, although most praise should go to @GeertLab and first author @nickvangastel (now a postdoc in @ScaddenLab) for this wonderful and exciting work!
Science in Boston@ScienceinBoston

Scientists in the @ScaddenLab at @harvardstemcell have discovered that the presence of fatty acids in blood at a fracture site drives conversion of #SkeletalProgenitorCells to bone-forming cells, while the absence generates cartilage cells. bit.ly/2T8oqdz

English
0
3
15
0