Dan Liang was selected to give a talk on the genetic influences of chromatin accessibility during human neuronal differentiation at the UNC genetics retreat in Wilmington, and won the best student talk of the Bioinformatics and Computational Biology program. Congrats Dan! Mike Lafferty presented a poster on miRNAs involved in human neurogenesis and won a best student poster award for the Bioinformatics and Computational Biology program. Congrats Mike!
Moving to Mary Ellen Jones Building at UNC
We are moving on March 19th, along with the UNC Neuroscience Center, to the newly renovated, window filled, Mary Ellen Jones Building! Looks really beautiful and will be a great place to do some genetics and brain science.
Undergraduates in the Stein lab off to bigger and better things!
Congratulations to Tianyi Liu, who joined our lab in 2017 and just was admitted to the UNC Biostatistics PhD program.
Also, congratulations to Leo Zsembik, the first undergraduate in the Stein lab, who was just admitted to the Oxford Neuroscience Master’s program.
We wish you both best of luck in your next scientific adventures!
Teaching middle schoolers about the brain
Today we taught some middle school students about how genetics shapes the brain, and let them explore a human brain in virtual reality.
Andrew S. Rachlin UNC Neuroscience Symposium
The Stein lab co-organized the Andrew S. Rachlin UNC Neuroscience Symposium this year. Thanks to Dan Geschwind and Flora Vaccarino for coming as our keynote speakers, and to all the local speakers for a fascinating seminar! Hope it leads to future collaborations and projects on tackling neuropsychiatric disorder genetics here in the triangle area.
Stein lab at the Walk for Hope
We ran the 5k (Jason) and 10k (Tianyi) at the Walk for Hope to raise money for the Foundation of Hope. This is a great organization supporting research into mental health, including supporting some of our work. https://walkforhope.com/
Rose Glass awarded T32 Neuroscience Curriculum Training Grant
Congratulations to PhD candidate Rose Glass for receiving a T32 Neuroscience Curriculum Training Grant through UNC!
UNC ARVR Interest Group meeting 6/28/18: Mapping the Mouse Brain in 3D using Virtual Reality
Stein Lab and our collaborator Dr. Guorong Wu were invited to speak at the UNC ARVR Interest Group Meeting to demo our work with mapping a mouse brain in 3D and visualizing human brain networks using virtual reality.
"Come and join us for a talk by Dr. Jason Stein and Dr. Guorong Wu of the Neuroscience Center at UNC-Chapel Hill. Dr. Stein will be talking about his work using Virtual Reality to map the mouse brain in 3D. The mouse brain has over 100 million nuclei, and current approaches that to mapping each nucleus, which involves combining 2D data, is slow and cumbersome. Dr. Wu will demo his lab’s work on visualizing the human brain network. They will present a 3D virtual reality (VR) environment to visualize the human brain connectome data for neuroscience and clinical application. Their VR environment provides a user-friendly interface and allows users to interact with the display of region-to-region connectivity in the whole brain. In addition, they integrate computational component of brain network analysis, multi-channel data fusion scenario, and a set of auxiliary functions into our VR environment. These features make their VR environment an efficient and innovative platform to analyze human brain connectome data. All are welcome."
Zach Humphrey showing a fellow Tarheel our virtual reality system.
ENIGMA Chair meeting 2018 in New York City
Pictured here in central park on our way to lunch.
We Welcome Rose Glass to Stein Lab!
Rose Glass is a graduate student in the Biological and Biomedical Sciences Program in the Neuroscience Department at UNC-Chapel Hill. Welcome Rose!
Tianyi Liu awarded Summer Undergraduate Research Fellowship (SURF)
Congratulations to our undergraduate student Tianyi Liu for being awarded the Summer Undergraduate Research Fellowship (SURF) from UNC-Chapel Hill! Tianyi was selected by Honors Carolina to receive a William W. and Ida W. Taylor Honors Mentored Research Fellowship within SURF. The competition for this award was intense, 135 applications from a variety of fields were received and only 62 were awarded. Stein Lab and SURF are looking forward to seeing the results from the fellowship.
Oleh Krupa receives travel award
Congratulations to Biomedical Engineering graduate student Oleh Krupa, who received a trainee travel award to attend the April 2018 BRAIN Initiative PI meeting in Washington, DC!
Paper published in Cell on the Dynamic Landscape of Open Chromatin during Human Neurogenesis
Our paper was just published in Cell on the Dynamic Landscape of Open Chromatin during Human Neurogenesis. In this paper, we've mapped previously unknown regulatory elements to genes during human neurogenesis - including with genetically engineered validation of novel regulatory elements of EOMES and FGFR11, we identified some novel transcription factors that may be related to human neurogenesis, and finally we found that genetic variation within proliferation related regulatory elements impacts adult brain size and risk for neuropsychiatric diseases.
Jason wins a UNC Junior Faculty Development Award
The Committee on Faculty Research and Scholarly Leaves at UNC has awarded Jason a Junior Faculty Development Award!
We welcome Brandon Le to Stein Lab!
Brandon Le joined Stein lab in Fall 2017 to help facilitate high throughput human neural progenitor cell culture projects. Welcome Brandon!
Mike Lafferty receives BCB Training Grant
Congratulations to Mike Lafferty for receiving the Bioinformatics and Computational Biology NIH-supported training grant (T32 GM 067553)! Mike is a second year graduate student working on QTL analyses.
Slides up from the Introduction to Imaging Genetics course
You can find here all the slides from the Introduction to Imaging Genetics course at the Organization for Human Brain Mapping 2017 in Vancouver, Canada. A picture of all the faculty from the course is below.
We welcome Mike Lafferty to the Stein lab!
Mike Lafferty is a graduate student in the Bioinformatics and Computational Biology program who will be working on QTL analyses. Welcome Mike!
A brief description of the ENIGMA consortium
Here is a brief description of what we're doing in the Enhancing Neuroimaging Genetics through Meta-analsysis (ENIGMA) consortium. Thanks to Paul Thompson, Aggie McMahon, and Sophia Thomopoulos for putting this together!
Genome-wide association of hippocampal volume in ~33,000 subjects published
Through a collaborative effort between the CHARGE and ENIGMA consortia, we identified 6 loci influencing the structure of the human hippocampus. Interestingly, genetic variants decreasing hippocampal volume in the general population are associated with increased risk for Alzheimer's disease. The study was published in Nature Communications.