Hoatlin Lab: Difference between revisions
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We work in [http://www.pova.org/ Portland, Oregon] at [http://www.ohsu.edu/ OHSU], in the [http://www.ohsu.edu/biochem/ Department of Biochemistry & Molecular Biology]. Our Departmental web pages (not updated wiki-frequently) can be viewed [http://www.ohsu.edu/research/hoatlin/ here (web page)] and [http://www.ohsu.edu/biochem/faculty/faculty.cfm?facultyID=29 here (faculty page)]. | We work in [http://www.pova.org/ Portland, Oregon] at [http://www.ohsu.edu/ OHSU], in the [http://www.ohsu.edu/biochem/ Department of Biochemistry & Molecular Biology]. Our Departmental web pages (not updated wiki-frequently) can be viewed [http://www.ohsu.edu/research/hoatlin/ here (web page)] and [http://www.ohsu.edu/biochem/faculty/faculty.cfm?facultyID=29 here (faculty page)]. | ||
We hope that other Fanconi labs will join us at [http://openwetware.org/wiki | We hope that other Fanconi labs will join us at [http://openwetware.org/wiki/ OpenWetWare] because it might stimulate collaborative efforts, facilitate reagent distribution, and expand communication. We also believe that an understanding of the complex and enigmatic Fanconi anemia protein network could benefit from the attention of systems biologists already on OWW. | ||
*[[Hoatlin:Research Interests|Research Interests]] | *[[Hoatlin:Research Interests|Research Interests]] |
Revision as of 17:21, 7 June 2006
Welcome to the Hoatlin Lab Wiki in development
Our lab is interested in understanding how the Fanconi anemia proteins contribute to genomic stability with the goal of developing drugs that will help Fanconi patients and those who are susceptible to developing cancer. We work in Portland, Oregon at OHSU, in the Department of Biochemistry & Molecular Biology. Our Departmental web pages (not updated wiki-frequently) can be viewed here (web page) and here (faculty page).
We hope that other Fanconi labs will join us at OpenWetWare because it might stimulate collaborative efforts, facilitate reagent distribution, and expand communication. We also believe that an understanding of the complex and enigmatic Fanconi anemia protein network could benefit from the attention of systems biologists already on OWW.
- Research Interests
- Lab Members
- Publications
- Projects
- Collaborations
- Reagent Requests
- Internal Lab Site
- Our View
- Contribute to FA Research
- Courses and Curriculum Development