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UMass Medical School - Marian Walhout featured in Cell
Marian Walhout featured in Cell
‘More is different’ in systems biology, says Dr. Walhout
Jim Fessenden
UMass Medical School Communications
A leader in the field of systems biology, Marian Albertha J. Walhout, PhD, associate professor of molecular medicine, was featured this month in a special issue of Cellexploring the future of this increasingly important field. Systems biology focuses on how relatively simple cellular and molecular building
Last modified: Dec 18, 2013
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UMass Medical School researcher Marian Walhout received a $4.1 million Maximizing Investigators’ Research Award to continue study of metabolism and gene expression.
Last modified: Aug 31, 2017
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UMass Chan researcher Marian Walhout, PhD, along with collaborators at Northwestern and Cornell, have developed an animal model system to interrogate individual differences in metabolism.
Last modified: Jul 07, 2022
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Marian Walhout, PhD, and Lutfu Safak Yilmaz, PhD, present the first genome-scale reconstruction of the C. elegans metabolic network.
Last modified: May 19, 2016
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The Program in Systems Biology has been elevated to full department status, with Marian Walhout, PhD, serving as the founding chair of the Department of Systems Biology.
Last modified: Sep 28, 2021
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edition of Nature Methods describe innovative techniques for identifying the complex interactions among genes, proteins and transcription factors that comprise gene regulatory networks in worms, plants, humans and flies.
Marian Walhout, systems biology, enhanced yeast
Marian Walhout, PhD A major challenge in the field of systems biology involves understanding the complex and interconnected ways that gene regulatory networks drive development, physiology and pathology. A series of papers in the latest
Last modified: Dec 15, 2013
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April 20, 2017.
A study by Marian Walhout, PhD, and colleagues, shows that C. elegans, fed a diet of E.coli bacteria, are 100 times more sensitive to the chemotherapy drug floxuridine, commonly used to treat colon cancer, than worms fed different bacteria. These findings suggest that the bacteria residing in your digestive tract may play an important role in your ability to respond to chemotherapy. Results of the study were published in Cell.
Marian Walhout, PhD, and Aurian Garcia Gonzalez The
Last modified: Apr 20, 2017
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produce significant changes in gene expression that could negatively impact physiology and health.
gene expression and physiology, Marian Walhout
Boston Globe covers UMMS diet research A.J. Marian Walhout’s new research on how diet influences gene expression and physiology is featured in Boston Globe reporter Carolyn Johnson’s “Science in Mind” blog. Dr. Walhout tells the Globe that the work, outlined in two papers published in Cell, shows that even the smallest portions of food affect an individual
Last modified: Dec 15, 2013
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Program in Systems Biology, Albert Sherman Center, Job Dekker, Marian Walhout, 5th discipline of biology
The recently formed Program in Systems Biology is now at home in the new, state-of-the art Albert Sherman Center, where it exemplifies the interdisciplinary approach to answering deep, complex questions about science for which the Sherman Center was designed. “Teamwork is incredibly important in systems biology,” said Marian Walhout, PhD, co-director of systems biology and professor of molecular medicine
Last modified: Dec 12, 2013
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and efficiently describe genomic variations underlying complex, multi-gene diseases.
Scientists in the lab of Marian Walhout, PhD, have applied a powerful tool in a new way to characterize genetic variants associated with human disease that will allow researchers to more easily and efficiently describe genomic variations underlying complex, multi-gene diseases.
Marian Walhout, PhD, professor of molecular medicine and co-director of the Program in Systems Biology Scientists at UMass Medical School
Last modified: Apr 23, 2015