Education

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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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

Dr. Eirin-Lopez at Ocean Life Series 2016

Posted by | Chromatin, Conference, corals, DNA, Education, Epigenetics, FIU, Marine Biology, Outreach | No Comments

Dr. Eirin-Lopez will be presenting the conference “The Epigenetics Revolution Reaches the Ocean” next Friday, April 15th, at the Murray E. Nelson Government Center in Key Largo, FL. A meet & greet will take place at 6 pm, followed by the conference at 7 pm. We’re looking forward to meet our Friends Of The Key Largo Cultural Center.

 

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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Meet new graduate student Andria Beal

Posted by | Education, Epigenetics, FIU, Graduate student, Marine Biology, Research | No Comments

We have a new Ph.D. student joining us next fall!!! We are excited to welcome Andria Beal to the group! Andria got her Bachelors of Science in Biology at Tarleton State University (2014) and will be getting her Masters of Science in Biology from Texas Christian University in Fort Worth, Texas, this spring. Andria is already working on the outline of her Ph.D. project, involving sharks, stable isotopes and epigenetics. Really cool stuff! Welcome to sunny Florida Andria!

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Chromevol’s Sean Campbell at the McNair Conference

Posted by | Conference, corals, Education, Epigenetics, Research | No Comments

Last Friday, Sean Campbell (undergraduate student volunteer at Chromevol) got his first shot at presenting in a scientific meeting! Sean presented preliminary results from the project “Epigenetic responses to nutrient loading the staghorn coral Acropora cervicornis“, on which he collaborates, at the FIU McNair Scholars Research Conference. This study is the result from fieldwork done during last summer in collaboration with Deron Burkepile’s lab at UC Santa Barbara. Our experiments with corals are consistently moving forward showing very interesting results, more info soon! Congrats Sean!!

Graduate Students wanted!

Posted by | Education, Epigenetics, FIU, Histones, Marine Biology, Omics, Research | No Comments

Graduate Student (PhD) positions available in Dr. Eirin-Lopez’s Chromatin Structure & Evolution Lab (Department of Biological Sciences, Florida International University) starting in Fall 2016.

We are looking for enthusiastic, dynamic and independent students broadly interested in studying the interface between evolution, epigenetics and adaptation in marine organisms. Students would ideally have a B.S. degree in Biology or related discipline (academic training in biology, statistics, genetics and evolution) and must be proficient in English (both spoken and written). Candidates with additional knowledge on computer science and/or bioinformatics are encouraged to apply. Our research addresses the study of chromatin and epigenetics from different perspectives, most notably evolution, development and adaptation. To this end we use marine invertebrates as model systems in the lab, as well as a wide range of eukaryote groups in molecular evolutionary analyses. Our current projects combine elements from marine biology, toxicology, molecular biology, biochemistry, next generation sequencing, bioinformatics and molecular evolution to address environmental problems in the oceans. Our work requires good organizational and computational skills and the ability to work collaboratively as part of a team. Detailed information about our research is available at our website (chromevol.com). Follow us in Facebook (facebook.com/chromevol) and Twitter (@chromevol)

Potential research topics include (but are not limited to):

1) Characterization of epigenetic mechanisms underlying environmental responses and adaptation in marine invertebrates. This research addresses the roles of DNA methylation, histone variant modifications and other epigenetic mechanisms during responses to environmental stressors, notably by using bivalve molluscs and corals as model organisms.

2) Development of high-throughput “-omic” tools improving pollution biomonitoring in coastal areas. This topic focuses on the development of methods that can be routinely used to identify early exposure of marine organisms to genotoxic pollutants (e.g., microarrays, qPCR, proteomic analyses, etc.), specially in the case of commercially relevant shellfish, marine mammals and other megafauna.

3) Molecular evolutionary and phylogenetic analysis of chromosomal proteins in metazoans. This objective builds on the molecular evolutionary tradition of our group, studying the mechanisms governing the diversification/differentiation of gene and protein families across eukaryotes and their consequences for organismal evolution.

Related research topics are also welcome. Interested students will be required to apply to the Graduate Program in the Dept. of Biological Sciences at FIU (http://biology.fiu.edu/graduate/). Acceptance in the lab will be subject to successful application for Teaching Assistantship funds (TAs). Interested students are also strongly encouraged to apply for graduate research fellowships (e.g., National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship). In order to be considered, qualified candidates must submit a statement of interest, curriculum vitae, unofficial transcripts (GPA scores), GRE scores, TOEFL scores (if applicable) and summary of research interests in a single PDF file to Dr. Eirin-Lopez (jeirinlo@fiu.edu). To receive full consideration, applications and required materials should be received as soon as possible, and never later than November 30th.

 

See ad with more details here.

Ciro Rivera-Casas’ PhD dissertation is finished!

Posted by | Chromatin, DNA, Education, Genetics, Histones, Molecular biology, Research | No Comments

Our own Ciro Rivera-Casas is about to defend his Ph.D. dissertation! we’re really excited after checking the final printed copy of his work! During the last 5 years, Ciro has been focused on the characterization of histone variants in marine invertebrates and the methodologies for the study of chromatin in these organisms. Along the way, he has discovered several interesting and unexpected features of these proteins that soon will be published as part of his Ph.D. work. Congratulations to Ciro and best of luck for the defense of his work this summer!

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