Department: Genetics
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Academic Appointments Associate Professor, Pediatrics - Cancer Biology
Member, Bio-X
Member, Stanford Cancer Institute
Member, Child Health Research Institute
Associate Professor, Genetics
Research InterestWe are interested in the links between the basic cell cycle machinery and the factors controlling self-renewal, differentiation, and regeneration. In particular, we are intrigued by the differences and the similarities between "normal" cells, cancer cells, and stem cells. We investigate the mechanisms by which normal cells become tumor cells, and we aim to understand the differences between the proliferative response in response to injury and the hyperproliferative phenotype of cancer cells.
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Academic Appointments Postdoctoral Research fellow, Genetics
Research InterestPopulation Genetics of Native Americans, Anthropology, Human Migrations Process, Ancient Populations.
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Academic Appointments Ph.D. Student in Genetics, admitted Autumn 2012
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Academic Appointments Professor, Developmental Biology
Member, Bio-X
Member, Stanford Cancer Institute
Professor, Bioengineering
Professor, Genetics
Professor (By courtesy), Biology (School of Humanities and Sciences)
Research InterestOur research is focused on the genetic regulation of animal development and its relation to birth defects, cancer, and neurodegeneration. We study mechanisms and functions of Hedgehog (Hh) signaling, which controls cell fates and growth, in the context of normal development and brain cancer. We study a neurodegenerative disease, Niemann-Pick C syndrome, that affects intracellular organelle movements and sterol homeostasis.
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Academic Appointments Ph.D. Student in Genetics, admitted Autumn 2010
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Academic Appointments Associate Professor, Genetics
Member, Stanford Cancer Institute
Research InterestEvolution and the adaptive landscape using yeast as a model; Defining yeast transcriptomes; chromosomal evolution in hybrid yeast species
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Academic Appointments Postdoctoral Research fellow, Genetics
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Research Interest
We are interested in the systems biology of molecular phenotypes, and how genetic variation affects them. The lab combines experimental approaches in developing mouse embryos as well as human cancers with computational analyses. Our main data engine is high-throughput sequencing. Please refer to our web site for more information: http://mendel.stanford.edu/SidowLab/index.html
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Academic Appointments Postdoctoral Research fellow, Genetics
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Academic Appointments Other Research Assistant, Genetics
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Academic Appointments Professor, Genetics
Member, Stanford Cancer Institute
Member, Child Health Research Institute
Member, Bio-X
Research InterestWe are presently in an omics revolution in which genomes and other omes can be readily characterized. Our laboratory uses a variety of approaches to analyze genomes and regulatory networks. Our research focuses on yeast, an ideal model organism ideally suited to genetic analysis, and humans. 1) Transcriptomes To annotate genomes, we developed RNA sequencing for annotation the yeast and human transcriptomes. We discovered that the eukaryotic transcriptome is much more complex than previously..
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Academic Appointments Postdoctoral Research fellow, Genetics
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Academic Appointments Postdoctoral Research fellow, Genetics
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Academic Appointments Professor, Biology (School of Humanities and Sciences)
Member, Bio-X
Professor, Genetics
Research InterestWe use the tools of genetics, microscopy, and biochemistry to understand fundamental questions of cell biology: How are cells organized by the cytoskeleton? How do the centrosome and cilium control cell control cell signaling? How is cell division coordinated with duplication of the centrosome, and what goes wrong in cancer cells defective in this coordination?
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Academic Appointments Postdoctoral Research fellow, Genetics
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Academic Appointments Associate Professor, Urology
Member, Stanford Cancer Institute
Member, Bio-X
Associate Professor, Genetics
Research InterestMy lab focuses on understanding the molecular mechanism of transcription factors that govern the transformation of normal mammalian cells to a neoplastic state. We are especially interested in the action of the nuclear hormone receptors and the interactions between the receptors and other signaling pathways in related human disorders.

