I'm here to follow structural biology (mostly EM). Probably won't post much.
23.11.2024 09:32 — 👍 4 🔁 0 💬 1 📌 0
OKC sludge.
Check out our Linktree for contact info and other important stuff.
https://linktr.ee/chatpileband
Assistant Professor at iNANO and MBG, Aarhus University, NNF Hallas-Møller Emerging Investigator
Science & Technology
International collaborations⠀⠀⠀ ⠀
C-level leadership
Advice | Board | Consult
linkedin.com/in/kristian-pedersen-37b98382/
🇸🇪 Sweden's national center for molecular biosciences
👩🔬 Infrastructure with unique technologies and expertise
👥 Research community
🥼 Life science 🌱
💻 Often data-driven
https://www.scilifelab.se/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/scilifelab/
RCSB PDB (RCSB.org) promotes a structural view of biology. Funded by NSF, NCI, NIAID, NIGMS, NIH, and DOE
Structural neurobiology, biophysics, natural sciences - politics, nature
CryoEM, membrane proteins and whatnot
Danish Research Institute of Translational Neuroscience and the Danish node of the Nordic EMBL Partnership
Consortium formed by Harvard Medical School, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston Children’s Hospital, and Massachusetts General Hospital.
cryoem.hms.harvard.edu
Scientist. Structure and function of cell-cell communication with a special interest in neurons & cryo-EM. All opinions are my own.
The Nogales Lab @ UC Berkeley. #CryoEM #Transcription #Microtubules #ChromatinModification Bluesky account managed by lab members.
Postdoc in Elena Seiradake's lab, Oxford Biochem (PhD @ Poul Nissen's lab, Århus, 🇩🇰)
Assistant Professor at Aarhus University, Denmark. Working with Zebrafish to understand the gut-brain axis
Department of Molecular Biology and Genetics
Institut for Molekylærbiologi og Genetik
Aarhus University, Denmark
https://mbg.au.dk/en/
RNA geek, cake enthusiast, science writer.
Alumna of @MolBiolAU, @IMBA_Vienna, @EMBOjournal and @CellPAT_AU, now scientific coordinator @MolBiolAU
Assistant Professor at MolBiolAU - Interested in membrane protein structure and function
A center of excellence supported by the DNRF. We use DNA origami, plasmonics and super-resolution microscopy to study pattern recognition in cell communication