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Lab news:

May. 1 2013: Let's welcome Clare and Justin as the first students to join our lab. 

Apr. 2013: Our work on lncRNA is featured as logo for the EMBO conference on "The Non-Coding Genome".

Apr. 5 2013: We are now member of the Vanderbilt Center for Quantitative Sciences.

Mar. 5 2013: Let's welcome Erica and Nalin to their lab rotations.

Feb. 8 2013: Our lab has been featured in the Los Alamos National Laboratory News

Feb. 7 2013: Our lab has been featured in the Vanderbilt Reporter.

Feb. 1 2013: Our manuscript on 'Systematic Identification of Signal-Activated Stochastic Gene Regulation' has been published in SCIENCE.

Jan. 7 2013: Let's welcome Clare and Justin to their lab rotations.

Dec. 10 2012: Our manuscript on 'Systematic Identification of Signal-Activated Stochastic Gene Regulation' is in press in SCIENCE.

Oct. 27 2012: Guoliang Li will join our lab as Post-doctoral fellow. 

Oct. 11 2012: Our lab has been featured in the Vanderbilt Reporter.

Sep. 6 2012: Our paper on long non-coding RNA has been published in CELL.

Aug. 8-12 2012: Gregor presented at the 2012 q-bio conference.

July 2012: Several positions are now open for technicians, graduate students and postdocs.

June 2012: Our manuscript on non-coding RNAs is accepted in CELL.

Gregor accepted a position as Assistant Professor in the Department of Molecular Physiology and Biophysics, School of Medicine, Vanderbilt University.

Contact:

Department of Molecular Physiology and Biophysics
Program in Systems Biology
Center for Quantitative Sciences

School of Medicine
Vanderbilt University
Nashville, TN
gregor.neuert@vanderbilt.edu

Mailing address:
813C Light Hall
2215 Garland Avenue
Nashville, TN 37232-0615

Welcome

A hallmark of life is organisms’ ability to sense and respond to internal and external signals. Our research interests focus on quantitative and predictive understanding of dynamics in signal transduction and gene regulation using a cross-disciplinary approach of physics, biology and engineering. This approach combines quantitative single-molecule experiments in single cells with genetics and mathematical modeling. Results from this quantitative systems biology research will help to answer key questions in signal transduction and gene regulation, and will significantly deepen our understanding of fundamental biophysical and molecular principles in various research fields. More details can be found in the research section.

If you are interested in our research please contact Gregor for more details.

We have currently several open positions for undergraduate and graduate students and postdoctoral researchers.

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This page was last updated December 5, 2012 and is maintained by Gregor Neuert