Events for October 13, 2025 - April 7, 2025

  • QCBio Research Seminar: Aliya Lakhani (Park)

    ZOOM CA, United States

    TITLE: "Integrating metabolomics and fluxomics to study cancer metabolism in low glucose environments." ABSTRACT: Metabolomics and fluxomics are integral tools for quantitative metabolic analysis. By combining mass spectrometry, isotope tracing, and mathematical modeling, we can quantify metabolite concentrations and fluxes in cancer cells. Using these tools, we are investigating the coordination of bioenergetics, biosynthesis, and redox […]

  • QCBio Research Seminar: Juan de la Hoz Gomez (Olde Loohuis & Freimer)

    ZOOM CA, United States

    TITLE:“Longitudinal phenotyping of Severe Mental Illness from Electronic Health Records.” ABSTRACT:Electronic Health Records (EHRs) offer an exciting avenue for large-scale genetic studies of psychiatric disorders in globally diverse populations. As a potential source of inexpensive and longitudinal phenotypes, they are key for the study of severe mental illness trajectories. The Clinica San Juan de Dios […]

  • QCBio Research Seminar: Alec Chiu (Sankararaman)

    ZOOM CA, United States

    TITLE: "Population structure inference for biobank-scale data." ABSTRACT: Inferring the structure of human populations from genetic variation data is a key task in population and medical genomic studies. While a number of methods for population structure inference have been proposed, current methods are impractical to run on biobank-scale genomic datasets containing millions of individuals and […]

  • QCBio Research Seminar: Ashfaq Ahmed (Venugopal)

    ZOOM CA, United States

    TITLE: "Mechanisms of robust entrainment of biological oscillators involved in gastric peristalsis.” ABSTRACT: Oscillator entrainment is a widely observed phenomenon in natural systems. Using a computational modeling approach, we decipher […]

  • QCBio Research Seminar: Alexis Weber (Geschwind & de la Torre-Ubieta)

    ZOOM CA, United States

    TITLE: "Defining chromatin accessibility and molecular dysregulation in Down Syndrome." ABSTRACT: Despite accumulating almost two centuries of medical information, the exact mechanisms underlying Down Syndrome (DS) developmental pathology remain unknown. DS is caused by trisomy of chromosome21 (T21), but without pinpointing the way in which T21 confers molecular dysfunctions and subsequently impairs neurodevelopment, it has been […]

  • Bioinformatics/Human Genetics Seminar Series: Aaron Panofsky, PhD

    ZOOM CA, United States

    Associate Professor and Vice Chair of Academic Personnel, UCLA Institute for Society and Genetics “Citizen Scientific Racism: White Nationalist Appropriations of Genetic Research” Hosted by Christina Palmer