Telomeres are shown in yellow at the ends of chromosomes in a human cell. - Dr. Chris Counter Pharmacology of Lithium: A ribbon diagram of the common core structure shared by a family of lithium targets and the site at which lithium binds (the yellow sphere.) - Dr. John York Merged confocal image showing the localization of tubulin (green), DNA (blue), and DAH protein (red) demonstrates that DAH is concentrated in the fronts of the cleavage furrows. - Dr. Tao-shih Hsieh Taste neurons of the labellum, the main taste organ of Drosophila, that express the gustatory receptor Gr5a, which mediates sensitivity to trehalose, a sugar. - Dr. Natasha Thorne
The CMB Training Program has been an important component to graduate education at Duke University since 1975. It grew from a Biochemistry Training Program into a Training Program that became highly interdisciplinary and included all the departments of the basic biological sciences at Duke. In an effort to be inclusive and to provide the highest level of training over the broad range of cell and molecular topics, currently there are about 140 faculty participants in the Training Program. At present there are about 100 predoctoral students in the Program, and well over 250 predoctoral students have been supported by the Program since its inception.
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