Ashutosh Dharap

480 posts

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Ashutosh Dharap

Ashutosh Dharap

@dharap

Neuroscientist, RNA Biologist, Traveler, Nature-lover, Technophile | Asst. Prof @USFHealth studying stroke and vascular dementia | Views mine only.

Tampa, FL เข้าร่วม Mart 2023
91 กำลังติดตาม104 ผู้ติดตาม
Rohan Khadilkar
Rohan Khadilkar@RohanKhadilkarr·
Hiked with lab peeps! Monsoon transforms Western Ghats into lush greens that are soothing & their beauty unreal. This in combination with the clouds, sunrays peeping out & pouring rain & sometimes rainbows just feels like paradise 🩵 #hike #monsoons #fun
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Ashutosh Dharap
Ashutosh Dharap@dharap·
@StructBioinfo @joshiphy Interesting! I remember our one trip to Shimla a couple of decades ago and I ate a unique fruit I'd never encountered in Pune/Mumbai. But this isn't it. I guess we were in the wrong season or just totally missed this fruit in the market.
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Ragothaman Yennamalli
Ragothaman Yennamalli@StructBioinfo·
@dharap @joshiphy @dharap it tastes like tangy litchi. It highly seasonal, lasting for a week or so. As soon as you get it, you have gobble it up. Every summer, my neighbors in Shimla would give me a handful and we all would eat it voraciously.
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Himanshu Joshi
Himanshu Joshi@joshiphy·
If you happen to be in Uttarakhand during April last or May first week, do try this rare forest fruit, known as Kafal in local language. It last for very short span of time in summer
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Ashutosh Dharap
Ashutosh Dharap@dharap·
@joshiphy Intriguing. I've not had either of those berries so I'm back to square one haha. Either way, thanks for the info!
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Himanshu Joshi
Himanshu Joshi@joshiphy·
@dharap Its the taste which makes it unique, very different than blackberry. It's tangy/sour and sweet. It is close to bayberry or box myrtle.
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Ashutosh Dharap รีทวีตแล้ว
Ash Jogalekar
Ash Jogalekar@curiouswavefn·
One of my favorite examples of how a change of a single atom can cause havoc: Vancomycin, often the "antibiotic of last resort", loses efficacy by 1000-fold when a single N atom is mutated to an O by the bacterium (causing repulsion instead of a hydrogen bond).
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Ashutosh Dharap
Ashutosh Dharap@dharap·
@JasonSynaptic @McKnightFdn @alzassociation We got through it alright, but we also got super lucky with our neighborhood being spared. Most of the city didn't fare so well (lots of downed trees, power out for days, and flooding in some areas). Cleanup is still ongoing, but things are in pretty decent shape now.
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Jason Shepherd
Jason Shepherd@JasonSynaptic·
This was 90% data generated by Mitali! She worked her ass off. Of course, lots more still to do and we welcome feedback. In these days of using all the 'omics to tackle biology, we took a simple cell biology/mechanistic approach that IMO has revealed processes that the omics /9
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Ashutosh Dharap
Ashutosh Dharap@dharap·
@JasonSynaptic @McKnightFdn @alzassociation Cool work, Jason! Looks like we'll have to bring you back to USF to talk about this work. Probably for our Byrd Alz seminar series instead of the Bioscience seminar series (where you presented last time)!
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Jason Shepherd
Jason Shepherd@JasonSynaptic·
methods missed. Thanks to all the folks in the lab that contributed to this project! Also looking forward to future studies funded by @McKnightFdn (hoping we can get NIH funding one day 🤞). Early work was also funded by @alzassociation! Foundation support was critical!
GIF
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Jason Shepherd
Jason Shepherd@JasonSynaptic·
The @CSHL is ground zero for transposable elements..so can’t beat this place for a @cshlmeetings on TEs!
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Jason Shepherd
Jason Shepherd@JasonSynaptic·
IMO the academic system makes getting tenure and getting R01s/grants as THE goal for new faculty…NOT the science! This leads to stifling of creativity/risk taking…so you can’t just follow the science. I was lucky to be in an environment where I could do the latter.
Andrew Akbashev@Andrew_Akbashev

Victor Ambros was denied tenure at Harvard. But he was not a usual PI. The Harvard Crimson describes: 1⃣ He took an especially hands-on role in mentorship: “Duan recalled the experience of arriving in the U.S. for his Ph.D. as a non-native English speaker. Ambros spent time personally mentoring Duan in how to write and give presentations in English, which Duan said proved “very helpful.” Duan said Ambros also taught him how to believe in himself as a scientist. “Victor is just an intensely curious person, and that curiosity is infectious. You can’t help but be really curious around him because he’s always asking interesting questions and being provoking.” - H. Scott Silverman. 2⃣ He did not step away from lab work to focus on the administrative work and funding, unlike many other professors. “Victor is NOT a very typical PI because he has his own bench,” Duan said. “He wants to stay closer to the science. He would work side by side with all the other people who were actively doing the same.” 📍Why tenure was denied? David Baltimore’s opinion (Caltech president, 1975 Nobel laureate): “The denial of tenure was consistent with Harvard’s hiring junior faculty and then not giving them tenure. The fate of junior faculty at the University was to teach and conduct research — but ultimately be replaced by new junior faculty before they could rise through the ranks. It just underlines the foolishness of that approach to building a great department.” After Harvard, Victor Ambros moved to Dartmouth and then the University of Massachusetts. 📍 My view: Tenure track is rarely about with Nobel-level work. At most universities, tenure requires metrics to be fulfilled. This also includes recommendation letters from peers that should be excellent. As a result, most professors are VERY careful during tenure track (outside the US too). They avoid risky research and focus on metrics (more papers, more funding, more students, etc). Too much at stake. The problem is - Every university wants to have a Nobel laureate but uses a metrics-based system to filter people out. Instead of encouraging their young faculty members to pursue risky & groundbreaking research, most departments urge them to focus on other things. ❗️ Basically: Tenure = something feasible, doable, countable Nobel Prize = once thought infeasible but achieved I think this gap is what many young scientists are so upset about. Metrics are great for business, but in science it should be used with great care. #science #AcademicChatter #chemtwitter

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Ashutosh Dharap
Ashutosh Dharap@dharap·
Landfall tomorrow. We're in the neighboring county, but it's forecast to be bad everywhere around Tampa Bay! #Milton2024 #miltonhurricane
Pinellas County@PinellasGov

The @NWSNHC forecasts 10-15 feet of storm surge in Pinellas from Wed. to Thurs. That's enough to carry away a car, inundate a house, & kill you. If you are under an evacuation order, get detailed information on where to go & what to do before you leave. #PCMilton

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Ashutosh Dharap
Ashutosh Dharap@dharap·
@JSheltzer *Fire and Mello got it for RNAi, to be accurate, but miRNAs were strongly linked to the RNAi phenomenon therefore Ambros's name came up, as I remember.
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Ashutosh Dharap
Ashutosh Dharap@dharap·
@JSheltzer Hmm sounds somewhat like the UPenn and Kariko situation. I remember when Fire and Mello got the Nobel for miRNAs that Ambros's name came up a lot for having been skipped.
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Jason Sheltzer
Jason Sheltzer@JSheltzer·
Another scientist whose work initially didn't get the recognition that it deserved - Victor Ambros was denied tenure at Harvard, even after publishing the seminal work that resulted in him receiving the Nobel Prize today!
The Nobel Prize@NobelPrize

BREAKING NEWS The 2024 #NobelPrize in Physiology or Medicine has been awarded to Victor Ambros and Gary Ruvkun for the discovery of microRNA and its role in post-transcriptional gene regulation.

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