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Jinah Choi
Research
Our research focuses on the evolution of antimicrobial resistance. Antimicrobial resistance is a serious problem affecting thousands of lives each year. Recent outbreaks of Methicillin Resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) have illustrated the severity of the resistance problem. Reports in the popular press (New York Times, Oct 16, 2007) have identified MRSA as a greater health threat than HIV. However, the health threats posed by MRSA are only a small fraction of the antimicrobial resistance problem. The causative agents of deadly diseases such as tuberculosis and pneumonia are also becoming resistant to nearly all existing antibiotics as well. Our lab is investigating several approaches to combat the threat of resistance.
Collaborators
New publication in JBC
Our paper titled, ' Mild membrane depolarization in neurons induces immediate early gene transcription and acutely subdues responses to successive stimulus' is now published in JBC. In this paper we show how neurons react in the aftermath of milf depolarization. This study was initiated in 2019 by...
Latest Album
In- vest-ed. Fall 2023 Ramen, Isabel, Lucy, and Courtny Campus colors. Fall 2022. Ramen, Karen, Andie, and Morgan Farewell Graduating Seniors! Fall '23 Farewell to graduating seniors Lucy & Isa! With Karen, Ramen, Morgan, Mariam, Andie, and Courtny (12/06/23). Lucy's poster presentation. Spring...
Splitting hares and tortoises: a classification of neuronal immediate early gene transcription based on poised RNA polymerase II
Saha, RN, and SM Dudek. 2013. “Splitting Hares and Tortoises: A Classification of Neuronal Immediate Early Gene Transcription Based on Poised RNA Polymerase II”. Neuroscience. 247: 175-81.