07
August
Brief mention of ongoing research by Drs. Harriet de Wit and Abraham Palmer in Chicago Tribune
This article showed up in the Chicago Tribune today.
This article showed up in the Chicago Tribune today.
Natalia Gonzales, who did her undergraduate work at Williams College and is currently a graduate student in the Human Genetics Graduate Program, has joined the Palmer lab. She will be the third graduate student in the lab and the second from the Human Genetics Graduate Program. She is supported by the Genetics and Regulation Training Grant. Welcome, Natalia!
The review article, “Pavlovian fear memory circuits and phenotype models of PTSD,” has been published in Neuropharmacology. Dr. Palmer is a co-author along with Luke Johnson, Jennifer McGuire, and Rachel Lazarus.
The article, “Fine-mapping alleles for body weight in LG/J × SM/J F2 and F34 advanced intercross lines,” has been published in Mammalian Genome. Dr. Clarissa Parker, Dr. Riyan Cheng, and Dr. Abraham Palmer are co-authors along with Greta Sokoloff, Jackie E. Lim, Andrew D. Skol, and Mark Abney.
This paper was a team effort to use body weight data that we’d collected as part of the methamphetamine studies. Since these animals had been selected for divergent body size prior to inbreeding, we figured there would be a number of relevant alleles.
The article, “QTLRel: an R Package for Genome-wide Association Studies in which Relatedness is a Concern,” has been accepted for publication in BMC Genetics. Dr. Riyan Cheng and Dr. Abraham Palmer are co-authors along with Mark Abney.
The article, “Genetic determinants for intramuscular fat content and water-holding capacity in mice selected for high muscle mass,” has been accepted for publication in Mammalian Genome. Dr. Riyan Cheng and Dr. Abraham Palmer are co-authors along with Stefan Kärst, Armin Schmitt, Hyuna Yang, Fernando Pardo Manuel de Villena, and Gudrun Brockmann.
The talk was called “Using Intermediate Phenotypes to Bridge the Gap Between Human and Mouse Genetics” and was part of symposium titled “Unraveling Genetic Influences on Substance Misuse: The Intermediate Phenotype”. Details can be found here.
This is the first R01 that I’ve ever had to renew, luckily I got it on the first try! The grant was funded by NIDA and is titled “Systems genetic analysis of methamphetamine’s motivational effects in a mouse AIL” and includes more than $1.4 in direct costs from 2011-2016.
The article, “Genetic analysis in the Collaborative Cross breeding population: Heritability, genetic correlation and QTL mapping,” has been accepted for publication in Genome Research. Dr. Greta Sokoloff and Dr. Abraham Palmer are co-authors are along with Vivek Philip, Cheryl Ackert-Bicknell, Martin Striz, Lisa Branstetter, Melissa Beckmann, Jason Spence, Barbara Jackson, Leslie Galloway, Paul Barker, Ann Wymore, Patricia Hunsicker, David Durtschi, Ginger Shaw, Sarah Shinpock, Kenneth Manly, Darla Miller, Kevin Donohue, Cymbeline Culiat, Gary Churchill, William Lariviere, Bruce O’Hara, Brynn Voy, and Elissa Chesler.
After a long review process, Dr. Greta Sokoloff
Professor & Vice Chair for Basic Research,
Department of Psychiatry
University of California San Diego
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La Jolla, CA 92093-0667
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Email: [email protected]
Phone: (858) 534-2093
Twitter: @AbePalmer
UCSD Profile
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PhD, Biomedical Sciences
University of California San Diego, 1999
BA, Biology
University of Chicago, 1992
Director, NIDA National Center of Excellence for GWAS in Outbred Rats