Difference between revisions of "Main Page"

From Zhang Laboratory

Jump to: navigation, search
(Introduction of the Zhang Laboratory)
Line 148: Line 148:
  
  
[[File:DSBRetreat2023s2.jpg|920px|center|link=]]
+
[[File:Lab photo 2024 v3s.jpg|720px|center|link=]]
  
 
<div style="text-align:center">
 
<div style="text-align:center">
2023 Systems Biology Department Retreat (Woodloch Pines Resort, PA)
+
2024 Lab Photo - Celebrating Summer Undergrads Amanda Lopez-Ramirez and Chamari Abercrombie (Chamari will stay as a post-bac for the next two years)
 
</div>
 
</div>
 
|}
 
|}
 
  
 
==Lab News==
 
==Lab News==

Revision as of 20:27, 1 August 2024

Twitter.jpg LinkedIn.png

Javascript Slideshow


Introduction of the Zhang Laboratory

We are part of the Department of Systems Biology, the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biophysics, and the Motor Neuron Center at Columbia University Medical Center.

We are fascinated by the complexity of the mammalian nervous system and its underlying molecular mechanisms. While mammals have a similar number of genes compared to phenotypically simpler organisms (such as worms), one apparent feature of mammalian genes is their more complicated gene structures, providing an opportunity for sophisticated regulation at the RNA level.

The focus of the Zhang lab is to dissect RNA regulatory networks in the nervous system as a way to understand the mammalian complexity manifested in evolutionary-developmental (evo-devo) processes and in several neuronal disorders. The lab has a mixed dry and wet setup, and takes a multidisciplinary approach that tightly integrates high-throughput biochemistry, genomics and computational approaches applied to mouse models and in vitro neuronal differentiation systems from pluripotent stem cells. On the mechanistic side, the Zhang lab focuses on fundamental understanding of the targeting specificity of RNA-binding proteins (RBPs), how they regulate alternative splicing in various cellular contexts, especially in the nervous system, and how such regulation can be disrupted by mutations and genetic variations. On the functional side, the lab aims to uncover the roles of RBPs in determining the neuronal cell fate, morphological and functional properties during neural differentiation and maturation. The lab has also been working on translating fundamental knowledge on RNA regulation to precision genetic medicine, with a particular focus on multiple devastating monogenic diseases affecting the central nervous system.


Lab photo 2024 v3s.jpg

2024 Lab Photo - Celebrating Summer Undergrads Amanda Lopez-Ramirez and Chamari Abercrombie (Chamari will stay as a post-bac for the next two years)

Lab News

CSHA.jpg

Chaolin Zhang will co-organize the 2024 Cold Spring Harbor Asia meeting "Computational Biology of the Genome", held in Suzhou China on Oct 21-25.

  • 07/08/2024. Welcome Amanda Lopez-Ramirez (SRP program), Camari Abercrombie (CADRE program), and Bryan Shi for joining us in the summer. Camari will actually work with us as a post-bac in the next two years!
  • 07/08/2024. Welcome Tianji Yu, who officially joined the Zhang lab - Tianji is our 5th graduate student!
  • 06/27/2024. Chaolin joined Harris Wang, interim department chair, to attend the "Meet the Faculty" panel discussion with DSB trainees.
  • 06/26/2024. We are one of the four teams winning the 2024 Columbia Precision Medicine Joint Pilot grant. Thank Roy and Diana Vagelos for the generous support!
  • 06/21/2024. Preprint release - Dan Moakley (recent graduate)'s PhD work to infer neuron type-specific splicing-regulatory networks from single-cell RNA-seq transcriptome: http://doi.org/10.1101/2024.06.13.597128.
  • 06/21/2024. Our MAPT/tau spllcing evolutoin paper is officially out in Cell Genomics. http://www.cell.com/cell-genomics/fulltext/S2666-979X(24)00129-0
  • 03/26/2024. Preprint release - DeltaSplice for quantitative prediction of splicing and splicing-altering mutations.
  • 03/22/2024. Congrats Yocelyn Recinos, recent graduate from the lab, for winning the 2024 Dean's Award for Excellence in Research.




Where We Are

Columbia University Medical Center is located in the Washington Heights neighborhood of Manhattan in New York City. It is situated at the northern tip of Manhattan, at the intersection of West 168th Street and Broadway. The Medical Center is easily accessible by public transportation, with the 1, A and C trains stopping at the 168th Street station.

Washingtonheight.jpeg

Columbia University Irving Medical Center (image credit: internet)

Washington Height, NYC (image credit: @KellyrKopp/twitter)