Difference between revisions of "Team:Arizona State/Team"

 
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<center><img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2017/4/4b/Party_name.png" width="1000" height="450"></center>
 
                 <h2>Amber Mani</h2><img height="215px" src=
 
                 <h2>Amber Mani</h2><img height="215px" src=
 
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                 <h2>Cassandra Barrett</h2><img height="215px" src=
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                 <h2>Stefan Tekel</h2><img height="215px" src=
                 "https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2016/5/52/CassB.jpeg">
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                 <p  class = "justify scroll">Cassandra is a second year PhD student
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                 <p  class = "justify scroll">Stefan Tekel is PhD student from northern Virginia and is currently researching chromatin protein engineering and drug delivery. He received his B.S. in biotechnology from James Madison University in 2012, and started at Arizona State University in the Biological Design program in 2013. Stefan enjoys watching DC sports, cooking, and playing hockey in his free time.</p>
                at ASU in the Biological Design Program. Besides working with
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                iGEM students, she spends her time in the Haynes' lab working
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                on controlling chromatin dynamics in cancer cells. She is
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                interested in mammalian synthetic biology, the relationship
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                between epigenetics and neurodegeneration, and the use of
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                synthetic biology in food. Outside of the lab, she enjoys
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                writing poetry, roller derby, and participating in terrain
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                races with her labmates.</p>
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                 <h2>Rene Daer</h2><img height="215px" src=
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                 <h2>Alyssa Henning</h2><img height="215px" src=
                 "https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2016/c/c8/ReneD.jpg">
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                 "https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2017/c/c8/Alyssa_Henning_3.jpg">
                 <p class = "justify scroll">René is a sixth year graduate student in the Haynes Lab at ASU. At the bench, René is developing and testing protein tools to engineer human chromatin. One day, this work may lead to therapies that address disease at the chromatin level, rather than at the symptom level. Outside of the lab, she plays basketball, is a lifelong amateur guitarist, and enjoys an alarming amount of cheese. She's excited to mentor the ASU iGEM team because she loves sharing the joy of exploring new data with young researchers.</p>
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                 <p class = "justify scroll"> Alyssa is a Ph.D. student in the ASU Biological Design graduate program and is a member of Dr. Karmella Haynes' lab. She is also participating in the Responsible Innovation in Science, Engineering, and Society (RISES) certificate program under Dr. Emma Frow's mentorship and will include a science policy research chapter in her dissertation. She was a member of Cornell University's first iGEM team, participated in iGEM in 2009 and 2010, and has volunteered as an iGEM judge since 2012. She is also a member of the iGEM Gender Diversity Committee and a co-director of the iGEM Mentorship Program.</p>
 
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                <h2>Dr. David Nielsen</h2><img height="215px" src=
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                "https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2016/3/39/T--Arizona_State--drdavidnielsen.png">
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                <p class = "justify scroll">Dr. David Nielsen joined Arizona State University in August 2009 and is currently an Assistant Professor of Chemical Engineering in the School for Engineering of Matter, Transport and Energy. Prior to joining ASU Dr. Nielsen was a Natural Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada Postdoctoral Fellow at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Previously, Dr. Nielsen obtained both his Ph.D. and B.S. degrees in Chemical Engineering from Queen’s University at Kingston (Canada) and the University of Colorado at Boulder, respectively.</p>
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                <h2>Dr. Xiao Wang</h2><img height="215px" src=
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                "https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2016/1/12/T--Arizona_State--drxiaowang.png">
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                <p class = "justify scroll">Dr. Xiao Wang earned his Ph.D. in 2006 from University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, while earning his BS. in 2000 from Tongji University in China.  Dr. Xiao Wang’s lab is interested in understanding and exploiting the effects of nonlinear dynamics and stochasticity in engineered gene networks in microbes, and extrapolating this knowledge to the understanding of cell differentiation and development in higher organisms.synthetic multistable gene networks, systems biology on small network motifs with feedbacks, role of noise in cell differentiation and development, molecular evolution</p>
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Latest revision as of 21:31, 1 November 2017