Excited to welcome Peter Ishola to the lab! Peter is very passionate about chromatin and Polycomb repression. He joins us from Nigeria.
Excited to welcome Peter Ishola to the lab! Peter is very passionate about chromatin and Polycomb repression. He joins us from Nigeria.
Gabriela Worked with Dr. Shalini Yadav on elucidating TFL1 mechanism of action and graduated with distinction in Biology in the class of 2022. Congrats Gabriela !!!
Sammy successfully defended her thesis on 11/19/2021 and we celebrated with the plant group and her friends and family!
Today we gleefully celebrated Dr. Sarah Matar’s (possibly the best baker in Wagner Lab history) birthday with two delicious chocolate cakes. Getting innovative with cake traditions she blew out her candles using an ensemble method of allowing the wind to blow them out to waving her hand back and forth. A very impressive birthday scientist indeed!
For this years spooky season we celebrated by carving pumpkins, drinking pumpkin soup, and eating pumpkin pie. For many of us it was our first time carving pumpkins, and we had so much fun despite the wind.
After a busy year of sheltering in place and self-quarantines, Dr. Doris Wagner and Dr. John Wagner treated the lab and loved ones to a joyful dinner in her backyard. This past year+ was a bit quirky, but we made the best of what we could. Who knows what the future may bring, but for now, we are so thankful to be able to feast and socialize together again.
With so many new faces joining the Wagner lab over the last year, about half the lab has only known our lab meetings as virtual. However, now that all the members of the Wagner lab have been fully vaccinated, we can finally return to lab meetings in-person. While virtual meetings had their pros (its easier to see the minute details of a slide on your own computer) and cons (having to constantly monitor your mute button), having our first in-person lab meeting felt like an accomplishment that warranted a group selfie.
Senior at University of Pennsylvania, Adam Konkol, an undergraduate who worked in the Wagner lab, was awarded a Churchill Scholarship along with December graduate Abigail Timmel. Featured in PennToday, the Wagner Lab is excited to have been a part of Konkol’s journey and look forward to what the future has in store. For more information, see the PennToday article at: https://penntoday.upenn.edu/news/two-churchill-scholars-penn
The Wagner Lab is delighted to receive yet another fantastic addition to our team. Dr. Sarah Matar joins us after defending her PhD thesis on the vernalization-driven transition to flowering in winter rapeseed in the lab of Dr. Christian Jung of the Plant breeding institute in Kiel University in Germany. In the Wagner Lab, we look forward to her work on understanding the antagonistic roles of FT and TFL1.
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