Category: News

  • Beth Shapiro elected to National Academy of Sciences

    Beth Shapiro elected to National Academy of Sciences

    By Mike Pena Beth Shapiro, professor of ecology and evolutionary biology at UC Santa Cruz, has been elected a member of the National Academy of Sciences (NAS). On April 29, NAS announced that Shapiro was among 120 new members elected from around the country, along with 30 new international members. An acclaimed paleo-biologist, Shapiro was…

  • UCSC Genome Browser Alumni Profile: Melissa Cline

    UCSC Genome Browser Alumni Profile: Melissa Cline

    Twenty-five years after the Human Genome Project, Melissa Cline has become a prominent figure in the field of cancer genomics. She currently manages the BRCA Exchange, the largest public resource for knowledge on genetic variations that influence heritable breast, ovarian, prostate, and pancreatic cancers. She also co-leads the Genomic Knowledge Standards Workstream for the Global…

  • Ancient DNA research aids de-extinction efforts and reveals surprising dire wolf ancestry

    Ancient DNA research aids de-extinction efforts and reveals surprising dire wolf ancestry

    UC Santa Cruz scientists worked with Colossal Biosciences to help reveal secrets in the dire wolf genome that contributed to what the startup is calling the world’s first de-extinction By Rose Miyatsu Earlier this week, Colossal Biosciences made global headlines when they announced that they had successfully brought the dire wolf back from extinction, or…

  • Brain cells are more plastic than previously thought, study shows

    Brain cells are more plastic than previously thought, study shows

    Neurons are the cells in the brain responsible for sending messages to the rest of the body, and scientists have long thought that they are settled into one subtype once they develop from stem cells, no matter what is happening in the environment around them. New research from the Braingeneers reveals that this traditional way of thinking…

  • David Deamer named 2024 AAAS fellow

    David Deamer named 2024 AAAS fellow

    Emeritus Genomics Institute affiliate David Deamer was awarded the lifetime honor along with UCSC Professors Theodore Holman and Raphael Kudela. Deamer researched the foundational science needed to create nanopore sequencing, a revolutionary method for reading DNA and RNA.

  • The Human Genome Project’s legacy is still yielding new advances

    The Human Genome Project’s legacy is still yielding new advances

    At the 25th anniversary of the Human Genome Project, the Tech Brew looks back at what it has accomplished, and how its legacy of combining computation and biology has set the stage for future applications in medicine and new advances in AI-powered life sciences at the UC Santa Cruz Genomics Institute.

  • Clinical pediatric cancer lab at UC Santa Cruz is cleared to accept and test patient samples

    Clinical pediatric cancer lab at UC Santa Cruz is cleared to accept and test patient samples

    The UC Santa Cruz Colligan Clinical Diagnostic Laboratory (CCDL) will use a newly clinically validated RNA test that they have developed that could identify life-saving treatment options, particularly for pediatric cancer patients. 

  • New biology study reveals four novel genes required for male fertility in mice

    New biology study reveals four novel genes required for male fertility in mice

    Genomics Institute affiliate Upasna Sharma has conducted pioneering research to determine how a father’s life experiences and environment can influence the health and wellbeing of his children. Her most recent discovery could have important implications for understanding male infertility.

  • Newest Genome Browser features highlight the power of generative AI and machine learning for biology

    Newest Genome Browser features highlight the power of generative AI and machine learning for biology

    The UCSC Genome Browser has added two new datasets that leverage the power of generative AI and machine learning to interpret information about genetic variants and more rapidly assess which ones might be harmful to human health. These datasets, from AlphaMissense and VarChat, are available as “tracks” on the two most widely used human reference…

  • New grant funds effort to uncover therapeutic targets for neuropsychiatric disorders

    New grant funds effort to uncover therapeutic targets for neuropsychiatric disorders

    By Emily Cerf A $10.3 million grant from the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine (CIRM), the state’s stem cell agency, will fund a multi-UC effort to better understand neuropsychiatric disorders. One in five people in the U.S. experience a neuropsychiatric disorder, with many cases starting in adolescence. Current treatments focus on managing symptoms, but there’s an…

  • Innovation Catalyst Grants propel research into real-world solutions

    Innovation Catalyst Grants propel research into real-world solutions

    Awardees include innovations in preclinical testing, drug discovery, and biosensors by Genomics Institute core member Mircea Teodorescu and affiliates Andy Yeh and Nader Pourmand.

  • New UCOP Grant to Explore Autism Spectrum Disorder Using 3D Brain Organoid Models

    New UCOP Grant to Explore Autism Spectrum Disorder Using 3D Brain Organoid Models

    The University of California’s Office of the President has awarded QB3 a $1.8 million grant by the to explore the origins of autism spectrum disorder (ASD). The funds will support researchers in the “Braingeneers” group at UC Santa Cruz, UCSF, and UC Berkeley who will use brain organoids (3D models of neural networks grown from…

Last modified: Apr 30, 2025