Awards

congratulations to Chromevol undergrad Michelot Michel

Posted by | Awards, Education, Epigenetics, FIU, Marine Biology, Oysters | No Comments

Our own Michelot Michel (Biology senior) has been awarded with the Exemplary Service Award from the College of Arts, Sciences and Education, congrats!!! Michelot is also one of the finalists for the Outstanding Student Life Awards that will be announced tomorrow evening in a gala dinner and also for the Cuervo Prize awarded by FIU’s Biology Department. If all of that is not enough, Michelot is giving the final touches to his Honors dissertation, focused on the epigenetic responses of the flat tree oyster Isgonomon alatus to seasonal changes in Northern Biscayne Bay. Michelot will be defending his dissertation on April 17th at WC130, MMC Campus, FIU. We all look forward for a great presentation!

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InWE/MERI Award for Victoria Suarez-Ulloa

Posted by | Awards, FIU, Graduate student, Marine Biology | No Comments

Vicky Suarez-Ulloa is on an end of year winning streak! after getting a Dissertation Year Fellowship last month, she has been presented with the outstanding InWE-MERI grad student award (FIU’s Institute of Water and Environment, Marine Education and Research Initiative). Congratulations Vicky, on track to defend your Ph.D. dissertation this summer!!!

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Ciro Rivera-Casas awarded Ph.D. prize and postdoc fellowship

Posted by | Awards, Chromatin, Education, FIU, Histones | No Comments

Ciro Rivera-Casas (Chromevol’s former Ph.D. student at the University of A Coruna) has been awarded the University’s special prize for his Ph.D. dissertation focused on the characterization of chromatin and histone variants in marine invertebrates. But the celebration is double, as Ciro has been also awarded a 2 year postdoctoral fellowship funded by the Ramon Areces Foundation to join Chromevol at FIU. Congratulations sir!!Chromevol_Picture

FIU Receives NSF Grant to Establish Center for Aquatic Chemistry and the Environment

Posted by | Awards, Marine Biology, Research, Toxicology | No Comments

Floridakeys-nasaWith a $5,000,000 grant from the National Science Foundation support (Division Of Human Resource Development), Florida International University will establish the Center for Aquatic Chemistry and the Environment (CREST). Our group participates in this 5-year project led by Biology Professor Todd A. Crowl.

Human-derived environmental contaminants are recognized as having significant effects on ecosystems and biota as well as on human wellbeing. It is critical to understand the biogeochemical processes that govern the fate of these compounds and their impacts on the ecosystem. Center for Aquatic Chemistry and the Environment research will address the sources, transport, transformation and ecosystem responses to contaminants, pollutants and other natural stressors, under changing land-use and environmental conditions. The proposed research will advance current efforts on the biological effects, transport, transformation and distribution of contaminants in the environment into new collaborative research areas that investigate the sources and transport of contaminants and pollutants in aquatic systems. The Center articulates three research subprojects organized around environmental chemistry, biogeochemistry, ecology and data synthesis and modeling as they pertain to regional water resources. In doing so, the Center for Aquatic Chemistry and the Environment will establish innovative opportunities for students to experience authentic and socially relevant environmental research and foster their development as future STEM professionals.

NSF Award Page

Congratulations to Gabriel (Lu) Diaz on getting a McNair Award!

Posted by | Awards, DNA, Education, FIU, Marine Biology | No Comments

Our own Gabriel (Lu) Diaz is a new Fellow in the 2016 Ronald E. McNair Post Baccalaureate Achievement Program (mcnairscholars.com), BIG congratulations!!! The McNair Scholars Program is a federal TRIO program funded at 151 institutions across the United States and Puerto Rico by the U.S. Department of Education. It is designed to prepare undergraduate students for doctoral studies through involvement in research and other scholarly activities. McNair participants are either first-generation college students with financial need, or members of a group that is traditionally underrepresented in graduate education and have demonstrated strong academic potential. The goal of the McNair Scholars Program is to increase graduate degree awards for students from underrepresented segments of society. The induction ceremony will take place next Tuesday, March 29th at 6pm, in the MMC Campus at FIU.

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Congratulations to Dr. Rivera-Casas!

Posted by | Awards, Chromatin, Evolution, Histones, Marine Biology, Research | No Comments

Yesterday Chromevol’s graduate student Ciro Rivera-Casas defended (with great success!) his Ph.D. dissertation entitled “Histone variants in marine invertebrates: chromatin analysis and characterization of macroH2A and H2A.Z.2 variants in bivalve molluscs”. Ciro joined Chromevol in 2010 and is the second Ph.D. student graduating under Dr. Eirin-Lopez’s supervision. We want to make you all participants of his achievement and we hope he can visit us soon in Miami to tell us more about his research!

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NSF Grants Conference, Jun 1-2, 2015 (Tampa, FL)

Posted by | Awards, Outreach, Research, Technology | No Comments

The last couple of days we have been attending the NSF Grant meeting hosted by the State University System of Florida at the University of South Florida. In addition to multiple talks and presentations facilitating key information for future NSF applications, we have had the opportunity to interact with fellow scientists and administrators sharing common research and outreach interests.
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Distinguished Glaser Seminar 2015 – Epigenetics & Chromatin – Dr. Steven Henikoff

Posted by | Awards, Chromatin, DNA, Education, FIU, Histones, Research | No Comments

Dates, time, and place January 26 – 30, 2015, noon to 1:00 PM in room WC130 on the FIU Modesto A. Maidique Campus (MMC), simultaneously broadcast to room MSB105 on the Biscayne Bay Campus (BBC). [Wednesday, January 28 the presentation will be broadcast from BBC to MMC.] A 30-minute period will be available for discussion following each presentation.

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Dr. Steven Henikoff
Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center/Howard Hughes Medical Institute/University of Washington

Member of the National Academy of Sciences and Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.

Editor-in-Chief of the journal “Epigenetics & Chromatin”

Link to Dr. Henikoff laboratory web site

Link to Dr. Henikoff National Academy of Sciences profile

BACKGROUND

For more than a century histone proteins, composed of a polymer known as chromatin, have been studied for their role in the physical organization of chromosomes. More recently interest in this complex has been greatly rekindled by the recognition of chromatin’s role in gene regulation, including acquired traits that are inherited without involving changes in the DNA sequence. In other words, chromatin plays a central role in the configuration and propagation of epigenetic information across generations. The rapid increases in “omic” data and analytical methods have provided new approaches for understanding the interaction between genetic and epigenetic information, adding a layer of complexity in DNA regulation that, while still poorly understood, will clearly be important for understanding how cells adapt to changes in external conditions.

The research of Dr. Steve Henikoff (BS University of Chicago, PhD Harvard University) and his team seeks to understand this elusive relationship between chromatin and epigenetic inheritance. Their work has applied pioneering research approaches combining molecular biology, genetics, evolution and bioinformatics to study the different mechanisms potentially encoding epigenetic information (i.e., histone variants and their chemical modifications, DNA methylation, transcription factor regulatory networks, among others). Among these works, the characterization of the mechanisms governing centromeric chromatin structure and evolution are specially groundbreaking, challenging the classic notion stating that our whole genome, our chromosomes, are filled up with nucleosomes and they’re all octamers. In recent years they have expanded their scope from chromatin structure, dynamics and evolution to interactions with other components of the epigenome including nucleosome remodelers, transcription factors and RNA polymerase II*.

LECTURE TOPICS

Monday, Jan 26: Chromatin dynamics.

Tuesday, Jan 27: Transcription and chromatin.

Wednesday, Jan 28: Centromeric chromatin.

Thursday, Jan 29: Chromatin and cancer.

Friday, Jan 30: Chromatin and centromere evolution.

*From the Henikoff lab web site.

When it comes to variants, every amino acid matters!

Posted by | Awards, Cellular biology, Chromatin, DNA, Histones, Research | No Comments
The prestigious journal Nature Reviews in Genetics has just published a paper that will probably become a reference for all scientists broadly interested in Epigenetics and most specifically in the role of histone variants in the regulation of pretty much all processes inherent to DNA metabolism. We are specially proud that Chromevol’s research on the characterization of H2A.Z variants has been cited in the present paper. Click in the image below to get a copy of this work.

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