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- Dr. Simone Promel
Simone Promel / Promel Lab is doing on adhesion #GPCRs.
- Predicting GPCR Function: Inside the Carlsson Lab’s Modeling Toolbox
His lab sits at the crossroads of structure-based modeling, computational chemistry, and drug discovery To tackle these, the lab employs molecular docking, molecular dynamics simulations, and ligand-based For Carlsson, a prediction is only valid if it survives wet-lab testing. The “Predict, Not Explain” Ethos What sets the Carlsson lab apart is its internal rule : results must The lab has witnessed both spectacular accuracy and puzzling failures.
- From Lab Bench to Boardroom: The Unexpected Path of a Medicinal Chemist
Maria Majellaro, the transition from lab work to leadership wasn’t meticulously planned, it was a bold “I was good in the lab… but would I be good outside of it? That was the question I had to answer.
Other Pages (190)
- Dr. Simone Prömel & Dr. Ines Liebscher | Dr. GPCR Ecosystem
Simone Prömel & Dr. Ines Liebscher About Dr. Simone Prömel Simone Prömel is currently a professor of cell biology at the Heinrich Heine University health and disease, fascinated her so much that she continued working on them when she started her own lab Simone Prömel on the web Prömel Lab Pubmed Researchgate Twitter Dr. GPCR Ecosystem About Dr. Together with Simone Prömel, Ines is leading a COST Network on adhesion GPCRs: CA18240 Adher'nRise.
- What if you could map GPCR-RAMP interactions across the entire superfamily in a single experiment? That’s precisely what Dr. Kotliar from the Sakmar lab made possible! In Ep.167 of the Dr. GPCR Podcast, we chat with Drs. Tom Sakmar and Ilana Kotliar about how their lab developed: A multiplexed Luminex assay to screen hundreds of interactions at once A 220-clone DUET-tagged GPCR library, available on Addgene An online interface to search GPCR-RAMP data and antibody validations This is open-access science at its best, built for the GPCR research community. ✳️ Listen to the episode: Ep 167 with Drs. Tom Sakmar & Ilana Kotliar #GPCRresearch #DrGPCRecosystem #GPCRdrugdiscovery #GPCRtrainingprogram #GPCRpodcast | Dr. GPCR Ecosystem
Kotliar from the Sakmar lab made possible! In Ep.167 of the Dr. GPCR Podcast, we chat with Drs. Tom Sakmar and Ilana Kotliar about how their lab developed: A multiplexed Luminex assay to screen hundreds Kotliar from the Sakmar lab made possible! In Ep.167 of the Dr. GPCR Podcast, we chat with Drs. Tom Sakmar and Ilana Kotliar about how their lab developed: A multiplexed Luminex assay to screen hundreds
- A new study from the Hudson Lab at the University of Glasgow shows that the FFA receptor antagonist AH7614 is actually an inverse agonist - suppressing fat cell formation, boosting lipolysis and reducing glucose uptake. Explore how targeting FFA4 could help fight metabolic disorders. Catch up with the latest research conducted in the Hudson lab in Ep. 161 of the Dr. GPCR Podcast. Subscribe to the Dr. GPCR Newsletter 📰 and get the latest GPCR News delivered to your inbox ➡️https://www.ecosystem.drgpcr.com/gpcrs-in-cardiology-endocrinology-and-taste/inverse-agonism-of-the-ffa4-free-fatty-acid-receptor-controls-both-adipogenesis-and-mature-adipocyte-function #GPCR #drGPCR #FFA4 #metabolism #adipocytes” | Dr. GPCR Ecosystem
Home → Flash News → A new study from the Hudson Lab at the University of Glasgow shows that the FFA receptor Catch up with the latest research conducted in the Hudson lab in Ep. 161 of the Dr. GPCR Podcast. metabolism #adipocytes” Published on April 7, 2025 Category GPCR Weekly News A new study from the Hudson Lab Catch up with the latest research conducted in the Hudson lab in Ep. 161 of the Dr. GPCR Podcast.




