Department News

News about about MCB faculty, students and staff.

Revolutions in Morphogenesis

When one hears the phrase 'egg-shaped', an oval immediately comes to mind. Chicken eggs are oval, and so are the eggs laid by many land-dwelling animals. But how do oval eggs get that way? Starting from this deceptively simple question, MCB Associate Professor David Bilder and graduate student Saori Haigo report in the journal Science the discovery of a new type of tissue movement that shapes animal organs.

Tjian receives Glenn T. Seaborg Medal & Grand Prix Charles‰ÛLÌ©opold Mayer

Robert Tjian, MCB Professor and HHMI President, received the 2010 Glenn T. Seaborg Medal from the University of California, Los Angeles for oustanding accomplishments in chemistry or biochemistry. Dr. Tjian was also awarded the 2010 Grand Prix Charles‰ÛLÌ©opold Mayer from the French Academy of Sciences for his research on how genes are turned on and off.

Savage receives 2011 Alfred P. Sloan Research Fellowship

Assistant Professor of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology David Savage has been awarded the 2011 Alfred P. Sloan Research Fellowship.

The Sloan Research Fellowships seek to stimulate fundamental research by early-career scientists and scholars of outstanding promise. These two-year fellowships are awarded yearly to 118 researchers in recognition of distinguished performance and a unique potential to make substantial contributions to their field.

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Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute

The Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute (HWNI) at the University of California, Berkeley, is seeking a senior, internationally recognized scientist working in any area of neuroscience to serve as Director of the HWNI.

The HWNI is a multi-disciplinary institute comprising over 50 Berkeley Neuroscience faculty in nine academic departments (see http://neuroscience.berkeley.edu). Research in HWNI faculty laboratories span the entire spectrum of Neuroscience, from molecules and cells, to synapses and circuits, computation and theory, animal behavior, and human cognition. The HWNI oversees the Neuroscience Ph.D. Graduate Program and supports four technology centers in human brain imaging, molecular imaging, functional genomics, and theoretical neuroscience.