UCSF/Angi Chau
From 2008.igem.org
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I'm a 5th year(!!) graduate student in the UC Berkeley/UCSF Joint Graduate Group in Bioengineering, working in Wendell Lim's lab. In my non-iGEM life, I investigate how eukaryotic cells break symmetry and polarize into cells with fronts and backs, i.e. what kind of signaling networks can cause this behavior? I do most of my work on the computer, so I've been helping out with the modeling/computation portion of this year's iGEM project. This is my first year being involved in iGEM but right before iGEM started, I was the scientific mentor on the Lincoln High SMART team. Go Lincoln! | I'm a 5th year(!!) graduate student in the UC Berkeley/UCSF Joint Graduate Group in Bioengineering, working in Wendell Lim's lab. In my non-iGEM life, I investigate how eukaryotic cells break symmetry and polarize into cells with fronts and backs, i.e. what kind of signaling networks can cause this behavior? I do most of my work on the computer, so I've been helping out with the modeling/computation portion of this year's iGEM project. This is my first year being involved in iGEM but right before iGEM started, I was the scientific mentor on the Lincoln High SMART team. Go Lincoln! | ||
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Latest revision as of 21:00, 27 October 2008
I'm a 5th year(!!) graduate student in the UC Berkeley/UCSF Joint Graduate Group in Bioengineering, working in Wendell Lim's lab. In my non-iGEM life, I investigate how eukaryotic cells break symmetry and polarize into cells with fronts and backs, i.e. what kind of signaling networks can cause this behavior? I do most of my work on the computer, so I've been helping out with the modeling/computation portion of this year's iGEM project. This is my first year being involved in iGEM but right before iGEM started, I was the scientific mentor on the Lincoln High SMART team. Go Lincoln!