Congratulations to The Brain Prize winners Prof. David Ginty (Harvard Medical School, US) and Patrik Ernfors (Karolinska Institutet, SE) for their pioneering work on how the nervous system detects and processes touch and pain:
https://brainprize.org/winners/touch-and-pain-2026
The Brain Prize
HHMI
05.03.2026 15:01
👍 9
🔁 3
💬 0
📌 1
RNA Club | March 2026
Come support our trainees and engage in discussion across RNA disciplines
📅 Tuesday, March 10
⏰ 9:00 AM
📍 Bass 305, Science Hill
Coffee & bagels provided
Open to Yale and affiliated institutions
03.03.2026 23:29
👍 3
🔁 3
💬 0
📌 0
Congratulations to Dr. Lianhuan Wei in the lab for winning a poster award at the Gordon conference on FTD and related dementias! @yaleneuro.bsky.social @yalerna.bsky.social
21.02.2026 13:44
👍 4
🔁 1
💬 0
📌 0
Amazing! Congratulations Cate!
20.02.2026 17:47
👍 1
🔁 0
💬 1
📌 0
Congrats Jimmy! You're on a roll!
09.02.2026 19:28
👍 1
🔁 0
💬 0
📌 0
Amazing! Congrats!!
31.01.2026 04:20
👍 1
🔁 0
💬 0
📌 0
Happy Birthday! 🎉
29.01.2026 04:39
👍 1
🔁 0
💬 0
📌 0
That never stopped a certain family in the WH
28.01.2026 23:45
👍 2
🔁 0
💬 0
📌 0
Color photograph of Joan Steitz (Joan Argetsinger Steitz), the distinguished American molecular biologist and biochemist renowned for her groundbreaking discoveries in RNA biology, including the identification of small nuclear ribonucleoproteins (snRNPs) essential to RNA splicing. She is pictured in a close-up portrait within a laboratory or research setting, smiling warmly and directly at the camera with an engaging, approachable expression that conveys enthusiasm and expertise. Steitz has gray hair pulled back, striking blue eyes, and is wearing large, elaborate dangling earrings adorned with purple gemstones and metallic accents. She is dressed in a rich purple blouse. The softly blurred background includes scientific elements such as lab benches, equipment, monitors, charts, and partial signage, evoking the environment of her long career at Yale University where she served as Sterling Professor of Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry. #JoanSteitz #MolecularBiology #WomenInScience #Biochemistry #RNA
Biochemist/molecular biologist Joan Steitz was born #OTD in 1941.
She (& team) figured out how our cells read/use genetic instructions to make proteins. A key person who helped crack the code on RNA—the molecule that acts like a messenger between DNA & and the proteins our bodies need. #WomenInSTEM
26.01.2026 19:08
👍 742
🔁 172
💬 6
📌 8
Congratulations Cate!
24.01.2026 17:24
👍 1
🔁 0
💬 1
📌 0
Check our latest collaboration with the Kleaveland Lab (kleavelandlab.org), led by Joanna Stefano and Lara Elcavage: academic.oup.com/nar/article/... (1/2)
14.01.2026 21:11
👍 14
🔁 4
💬 1
📌 1
Excited to publish our work on how mutations in the muscle-specific ribosomal protein RPL3L drive severe heart disease. This is Part I of a larger body of work led by Michael - stay tuned for Part II on how specialized ribosomes function in normal physiology www.nature.com/articles/s44...
10.01.2026 16:09
👍 12
🔁 3
💬 1
📌 2
Awesome! Congratulations Xuebing!
13.01.2026 02:22
👍 1
🔁 0
💬 0
📌 0
The Wu Tsai Institute at Yale University is hiring!
Two faculty searches are now open for neurocomputation and neurodevelopment. If you are at #SfN25, visit booth #3724 to learn more.
wti.yale.edu/opportunities
#KnowTogether #ScienceAtYale
17.11.2025 15:37
👍 2
🔁 1
💬 1
📌 0
TDP-43 loss brings RNA to a twist ending - Nature Neuroscience
In amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), nuclear depletion and cytoplasmic aggregation of the RNA-binding protein TDP-43 cause widespread dysregulation of mRNA splicing. Two recent studies have now rev...
New article @natneuro.nature.com by @yaleneuro.bsky.social Suzhou Yang & @kavliatyale.bsky.social Postdoc Fellow @zhenlei.bsky.social, highlighting studies by @frattalab.bsky.social Gitler & La Spada labs on the role of TDP-43 on mRNA 3' end in ALS @yalerna.bsky.social www.nature.com/articles/s41...
21.10.2025 12:16
👍 22
🔁 6
💬 0
📌 0
Oxidative stress sensing by the translation elongation machinery promotes production of detoxifying selenoproteins
Selenocysteine, incorporated into polypeptides at recoded termination codons, plays an essential role in redox biology. Using GPX1 and GPX4, selenoenzymes that mitigate oxidative stress, as reporters,...
Colliding ribosomes are potent signals of cellular stress. But do cells use ‘programmed’ ribosome collisions to regulate gene expression? I’m excited to present a new story from my lab led by Frederick Rehfeld(@fred-rehfeld.bsky.social) which revealed that the answer is YES! Read on to find out how👇
14.10.2025 22:28
👍 78
🔁 28
💬 1
📌 6
Poster with QR code linking to the position
I'm very excited to announce that UNC Biology has 6 faculty positions open this year! The first is for an Asst Professor who studies organismal resilience using an integrative approach 1/n
unc.peopleadmin.com/postings/307...
12.10.2025 14:20
👍 137
🔁 150
💬 5
📌 7
Excited to see this beautiful art, commissioned from the Chinese artist 懒云居画 (@subaiweipainting on Instagram), on this month's cover of Nature Neuroscience! @natneuro.nature.com @yaleneuro.bsky.social @yalerna.bsky.social @kavliatyale.bsky.social @wutsaiyale.bsky.social
06.10.2025 19:14
👍 15
🔁 2
💬 1
📌 1
Congratulations Sinha lab!
27.08.2025 02:36
👍 1
🔁 0
💬 1
📌 0
Thank you Adam!
16.08.2025 22:57
👍 0
🔁 0
💬 0
📌 0
‘A tipping point’: An update from the frontiers of Alzheimer’s disease research
In a Q&A, Yale neuroscientist Amy Arnsten discusses the state of Alzheimer’s disease research, exciting treatment breakthroughs on the horizon, and the key role of NIH funding in making it all happen.
Amy Arnsten, PhD, Albert E. Kent Professor of Neuroscience @yaleneuro.bsky.social, shares in an interview the current state of Alzheimer's research, where the field is going, and the importance of NIH funding to keep making progress towards treatments.
11.08.2025 16:26
👍 5
🔁 2
💬 0
📌 0
Congrats!!
08.08.2025 19:35
👍 1
🔁 0
💬 1
📌 0
Nicely said. I'd also add that not knowing is equally exciting!
08.08.2025 02:28
👍 1
🔁 0
💬 0
📌 0