Ariel Bazzini, Ph.D.
Associate InvestigatorStowers Institute for Medical ResearchAssociate ProfessorThe Graduate School of the Stowers Institute for Medical Research
The Graduate School of the Stowers Institute for Medical Research
Talented faculty and staff offer tireless help, guidance, and encouragement to support the success of developing scientists — while they’re here at Stowers, and in their scientific careers
Associate Investigator
Stowers Institute for Medical Research
Development and Regeneration, Genetics and Genomics, Molecular and Cell Biology
Gene Expression: Transcription to translation; Laboratory Rotation; Thesis laboratory
Ariel Bazzini joined the Stowers Institute in 2016. His research focuses on gene regulation in development and disease and in unraveling the intricacies in RNA stability and translation.
President Emeritus and Professor Emeritus
The Graduate School of the Stowers Institute for Medical Research
M.D., University of Kansas
Dr. Betty Drees was appointed as the President of The Graduate School of the Stowers Institute for Medical Research in Spring 2018. She served on the Board of Directors of the Graduate School prior to appointment as president. She is on the faculty at the University of Missouri-Kansas City (UMKC) School of Medicine where she is Dean Emerita after serving thirteen years as dean (2001-2014) and acting provost and vice chancellor for academic affairs (2007-2008). She is a professor in the Department of Internal Medicine and the Department of Biomedical and Health Informatics at the UMKC School of Medicine. She is a board-certified endocrinologist who practices at Truman Medical Centers in Kansas City, MO. She is a member of Alpha Omega Alpha and Phi Kappa Phi honor societies, and is a Fellow in the American College of Physicians and the American College of Endocrinology. She is the 2020 president of the Kansas City Medical Society. She has been recognized by Ingram’s Magazine as one of Kansas City’s Most Accomplished and Successful Women (2008) and as an Icon of Education (2019).
Drees has served in multiple regional and national roles in education, including the Liaison Committee on Medical Education, Chair of the Governance Council of the American Medical Association’s Academic Physician Section, and Chair of the Missouri State Medical Association’s Commission on Continuing Medical Education. She is currently the Program Director for the UMKC Fellowship in Endocrinology, Diabetes, and Metabolism. She received teaching awards in the UMKC internal medicine residency and the endocrinology fellowship in 2018 and 2019. She was co-Principal Investigator on a learning collaborative project funded by the NIH on building institutional capacity for health equity.
Drees received her medical degree from the University of Kansas and did her residency training in internal medicine and fellowship in endocrinology at the Kansas University Medical Center. Following her fellowship, she did postdoctoral research training in the Veterans Affairs Career Development Program. She has received funding through the NIH and the Health Forward Foundation on diabetes prevention projects. She was the Principal Investigator for the Kansas City site in the Enhanced Lifestyles for Metabolic Syndrome (ELMS) Multi-Site Trial funded by the William G. McGowan Charitable Fund. She is active in community service in diabetes, including serving as facilitator for a diabetes ECHO (Extension for Community Health Outcomes) funded by the Missouri TeleHealth Network. This project provides outreach to primary care providers to meet professional development needs. She is the immediate past president of the Community Leadership Board of the Kansas City area American Diabetes Association.
Administrative Coordinator
The Graduate School of the Stowers Institute
B.A., Education, University of Central Missouri
Kim Dziedzic joined the executive office of the Stowers Institute in 2007 and moved to her current position in 2010. Her previous experience includes four years at the Lee's Summit, Missouri School District and 17 years at Pfizer Animal Health.
Dziedzic received a B.S. in education with a concentration in biology from the University of Central Missouri. The combination of Dziedzic's educational and work experiences makes her a valuable resource for the predoctoral researchers.
kad@stowers.org |
Gene Expression: Transcription to Translation
Laurence Florens established the Systems Mass Spectrometry Center, formerly known as Proteomics, at the Stowers Institute in July 2003 with Mike Washburn, and was named Director in 2022. Florens has developed, adopted, and applied advanced mass spectrometry-based approaches to drive biological discovery in a wide array of collaborative projects, leading to over 240 peer-reviewed publications with 46 different labs.
Jim and Virginia Stowers Fellow
Stowers Institute for Medical Research
Genetics and Genomics, Molecular and Cell Biology
Genomic and Computational Approaches to Understanding Gene Expression
Alexander Garruss, Ph.D., is an inventor and biotechnology researcher, and most recently served as the Principal Scientist of Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning (AI/ML) at Sail Biomedicines, a Flagship Pioneering Company. Prior to Sail Biomedicines, Garruss was a Senior Scientist of Machine Learning at Exact Sciences. He returned to the Stowers Institute in Spring 2024.
Investigator and Dean of the Graduate School
Stowers Institute for Medical Research
Genetics and Genomics, Evolutionary Biology, Molecular and Cell Biology
Genetics; Laboratory Rotation; Thesis Laboratory
Jennifer Gerton, Ph.D., is a molecular and cellular biologist focusing on chromosome dynamics and behavior during cell division. She joined the Institute in 2002 and currently serves as an Investigator.
Investigator and President of the Graduate School
Stowers Institute for Medical Research
Development and Regeneration, Genetics and Genomics, Evolutionary Biology, Systems Biology
Evolution and Model Systems; Laboratory Rotation; Thesis laboratory
Matt Gibson, Ph.D., is a developmental biologist and an Investigator at the Stowers Institute. Gibson joined Stowers in 2006 and was named President of the Graduate School in 2024 after serving as Dean since 2019.
Manager, Computational Biology
B.S., Computer Science, University of Kansas
Programming Pre-Course
Madelaine Gogol is a Manager in the Computational Biology Core Facility at the Stowers Institute for Medical Research. She has been teaching the Programming Pre-Course since 2012.
In her current role, she leads a small team of analysts within the core, helping set directions on analysis, guide communication, troubleshoot problems, and identify how to best handle new or complex data types. She also continues her role as primary analyst on several projects. She teaches many other courses within Stowers so everyone can learn how to analyze data. Through the International Society for Computational Biology, she has been one of the organizers of bioinfo-core, a group for people in bioinformatics core facilities to help share good ideas and get help and advice from others worldwide.
Born and raised in Manhattan, Kansas, Gogol earned a B.S. in computer science from the University of Kansas. She worked for a year after college in bioinformatics at the University of Delaware and returned to the Kansas City area to work for Stowers since 2005, transitioning to a management role in 2021.
Associate Investigator
Stowers Institute for Medical Research
Development and Regeneration, Genetics and Genomics, Molecular and Cell Biology, Systems Biology
Cell Biology; Laboratory Rotation; Thesis Laboratory
Randal Halfmann, Ph.D., is an Associate Investigator at the Stowers Institute focusing on the biophysics of protein self-assembly. Halfmann joined the Institute in 2015 as an Assistant Investigator.
Jim and Virginia Stowers Fellow
Stowers Institute for Medical Research
Development and Regeneration, Regeneration, Synthetic Biology, Genome Engineering
Evolution and Model Systems
Nelson Hall, Ph.D., is a bioengineer and naturalist who combines a passion for unusual organisms with expertise in manipulating and engineering biological systems. He was introduced to Synthetic Biology while earning his bachelor’s degree at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he designed and tested synthetic genetic circuits to control cellular behavior by harnessing processes like exosomal biogenesis and CRISPR-based anti-phage defense.
Investigator
Stowers Institute for Medical Research
Genetics and Genomics, Evolutionary Biology, Molecular and Cell Biology
Genetics; Laboratory Rotation; Thesis Laboratory
Scott Hawley, Ph.D., joined the Stowers Institute in 2001, and is an Investigator for the Institute and Dean Emeritus for the Graduate School. Hawley is a noted researcher for his groundbreaking work on meiosis and a dedicated teacher, having trained more than 400 undergraduates over his career.
Assistant Investigator
Stowers Institute for Medical Research
Cell Biology, Genetics and Genomics, Molecular and Cell Biology
Gene Expression: Transcription to Translation
Kostova joined the Stowers Institute in fall 2024, bringing with her an established research program unraveling the mysteries of ribosomes. After completing her Ph.D., in 2018, Kostova took an atypical career path, starting her own laboratory as a Staff Associate (Independent Fellow) at the Carnegie Institution for Science, Department of Embryology. There, Kostova developed a research program focusing on changes in ribosome composition.
Investigator and Scientific Director Emeritus
Stowers Institute for Medical Research
Development and Regeneration, Genetics and Genomics, Evolutionary Biology, Molecular and Cell Biology, Neuroscience
Gene Expression: Transcription to Translation; Laboratory Rotation; Thesis Laboratory
Robb Krumlauf, Ph.D., a world-renowned developmental biologist, joined the Stowers Institute in 2000 as the first Scientific Director and Investigator. He currently serves as an Investigator and Scientific Director Emeritus for the Institute and holds multiple faculty positions at the University of Kansas, the University of Kansas School of Medicine, and the University of Missouri-Kansas City Dental School.
Senior Research Scientist
The Stowers Institute
B.S., Chemistry, Truman State University
Ph.D., Analytical Chemistry, Kansas State University
Microscopy; Cellular Biology; Genetics; Gene Expression: Transcription to Translation; Scientific Communications
Jeffrey J. Lange, Ph.D., is the Senior Research Scientist in the Electron and Light Microscopy Technology Center at the Stowers Institute.
Originally from St. Louis, Missouri, Lange attended Truman State University in Kirksville, Missouri where he earned a B.S. in chemistry in 2004 before joining the lab of Dan Higgins, Ph.D., at Kansas State University for his doctoral studies. His Ph.D. work involved investigating the material properties of Poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS), a material commonly used in medical and microfluidics devices, using single molecule fluorescence microscopy and other spectroscopic techniques. From 2009-2011, Jeff worked to learn the fundamentals of cellular biology as a postdoctoral fellow in the lab of Philip D. Stahl, Ph.D., at Washington University in St. Louis where he worked on illuminating the function of a hominoid specific oncogene, TBC1D3.
Lange joined the institute in 2011 in the Microscopy core as a Research Specialist I. In his time at the institute, his goal has been to collaborate with Investigators and laboratory researchers to plan experiments, acquire and analyze data, interpret results, and assist in writing publications relating to the researcher’s biological questions. This has sometimes led to employing techniques branching outside traditional microscopy including PDMS based microfluidics, Fourier Transform InfraRed (FTIR) Spectroscopy, High Performance Liquid Chromatography (HPLC), and macro imaging using large field of view cameras. Lange has worked in his current role since, August 2022.
Senior Manager, Research Development Support
B.S., Biochemistry, Colorado State University
Ph.D., Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of Nebraska Medical Center
Science Communications; Research Ethics Pre-course; Responsible Conduct of Research
Michelle Lewallen, Ph.D., is the Senior Manager of Research Development Support for the Stowers Institute. In this role, she oversees the external grants program at the Institute, beginning at the proposal stage through the award management stage. In addition to the administration of external funding, a major focus of the Research Development Support team is on training in proposal preparation and strategic development of grant projects.
Lewallen has a B.S. in biochemistry with a chemistry minor from Colorado State University. She received her Ph.D. in biochemistry and molecular biology from the University of Nebraska Medical Center, researching pancreatic cancer in the laboratory of Tony Hollingsworth, Ph.D. After completing postdoctoral research in the laboratory of Ting Xie, Ph.D., at the Stowers Institute, Lewallen transitioned into a role leading the strategic development of grant proposals for the Institute. Her role has now expanded to overseeing the administration of external grants. In addition to experience in grant program management, Lewallen emphasizes training of predoctoral and postdoctoral researchers in the critical skill of grant writing. Lewallen also led development of the Responsible Conduct of Research course at Stowers.
Programming Pre-Course
Hua Li joined the Stowers Institute in 2006 and completed her postdoctoral training in 2007. During that time, Li applied bi-variate analysis to improve the power of genome-wide association studies and constructed a Bayesian network using relaxed gene ordering. She became the Computational Biology group leader in 2009 and Head of Computational Biology in 2017. With over 10 years of bioinformatics experience, Hua was appointed Director of Computational Biology, Bioinformatics, and Biostatistics in 2019.
Investigator
Stowers Institute for Medical Research
Development and Regeneration, Genetics and Genomics, Molecular and Cell Biology
Laboratory Rotation; Thesis Laboratory
Linheng Li, Ph.D., joined the Stowers Institute in 2000 and focuses on stem cell and cancer research. He is an Investigator and faculty member for the graduate school in addition to co-leading the Cancer Biology initiative at the University of Kansas Cancer Center.
Assistant Investigator
Stowers Institute for Medical Research
Molecular and Cell Biology, Genetics and Genomics, Microbiology, Bacterial Community Development
Genetics; Laboratory Rotation; Thesis Laboratory
Ameya Mashruwala, Ph.D., is a bacterial biologist and geneticist who joined the Stowers Institute in January 2024 as an Assistant Investigator. Mashruwala’s research involves understanding the development and function of bacterial communities.
Assistant Investigator
Stowers Institute for Medical Research
Development and Regeneration, Genetics and Genomics, Molecular and Cell Biology, Neuroscience, Systems Biology
Neuroscience; Laboratory Rotation; Thesis Laboratory
Neşet Özel, Ph.D., a neuroscientist, will join the Stowers Institute in the fall of 2023 as an Assistant Investigator. Özel’s research combines genetics, imaging, single-cell genomics, and computational modeling approaches to understand the fundamental molecular mechanisms that control brain development in Drosophila.
Investigator
Stowers Institute for Medical Research
Development and Regeneration, Evolutionary Biology, Molecular and Cell Biology
Cell Dynamics, Stem Cells and Developmental Biology; Laboratory Rotation; Thesis Laboratory
Tatjana Piotrowski, Ph.D., a developmental biologist, is an Investigator at the Stowers Institute. She joined Stowers in 2011 as an Associate Investigator and was promoted to full Investigator in 2018.
Assistant Dean of Student and Postdoctoral Affairs
Stowers Institute for Medical Research and The Graduate School of the Stowers Institute
B.Sc., Biotechnology, University College London
Ph.D., Biochemistry, National University of Singapore
Rashmi Raj, Ph.D., is the Assistant Director of Postdoctoral Affairs at the Stowers Institute for Medical Research. She joined the institute in 2022.
Raj, originally from Singapore, completed her B.Sc. in biotechnology at University College London before returning to Singapore to earn her Ph.D. in biochemistry in the lab of Yew Wen, Ph.D, at the National University of Singapore. She completed a postdoctoral fellowship at Northwestern University in the Chemical and Biological Engineering department under Keith Tyo, Ph.D. While at Northwestern, Raj held several leadership positions with the Northwestern University Postdoctoral Association and the Postdoc Academy, focusing on postdoc professional development.
In her current role, Raj oversees postdoctoral training standards, resources and support services, and postdoctoral program development. Her passion for helping postdocs nationwide led to her appointment as an International Officer with the National Postdoctoral Association.
President, Chief Scientific Officer, and Investigator
Stowers Institute for Medical Research
Development and Regeneration, Genetics and Genomics, Evolutionary Biology, Molecular and Cell Biology
Cell Biology; Evolution and Model Systems; Laboratory Rotation; Thesis Laboratory
Alejandro Sánchez Alvarado, Ph.D., is the President and Chief Scientific Officer of the Stowers Institute. Alejandro joined the Institute in 2011, was named its Scientific Director in 2019, and named Executive Director and Chief Scientific Officer in 2021. In 2023 he was named President and Chief Scientific Director.
Assistant Investigator
Stowers Institute for Medical Research
Cell Biology, Genetics and Genomics, Molecular and Cell Biology, Biochemistry, Microbiology, Host-Microbe Interaction, Plant-Microbe Symbiosis, Metal Homeostasis
Cell Biology; Laboratory Rotation; Thesis Laboratory
Siva Sankari, Ph.D., a biochemist, microbiologist, and plant biologist, joined the Stowers Institute in 2023 as an Assistant Investigator. Her research involves the beneficial interaction between plants and microbes, and how this translates to therapeutic applications.
Investigator
Stowers Institute for Medical Research
Development and Regeneration, Genetics and Genomics, Evolutionary Biology, Molecular and Cell Biology, Systems Biology
Laboratory Rotation; Thesis Laboratory
Tatjana Sauka-Spengler, Ph.D., a physicist and developmental geneticist, is a Professor of developmental genomics and gene regulation at the University of Oxford. She joined the Stowers Institute as an Investigator in 2022.
Genomic and Computational Approaches to Understanding Gene Expression
Chris Seidel is an experienced bench biologist who leverages his experimental background when developing approaches for big data analysis. He works closely with Stowers researchers to develop and execute strategies for bringing genomics to bear on biological problems, including experimental design, data analysis, development of novel reagents, and bioinformatics.
Seidel grew up in the San Francisco Bay area and studied biochemistry and molecular biology at the University of California, Santa Cruz. He completed graduate work at the University of California, Berkeley, studying transcription elongation in the laboratory of Caroline Kane, Ph.D.. He has worked in the biotech industry as a senior scientist and led a small team of researchers to develop the first bioinformatically optimized reagents for spotted microarray production, including an array to tackle malaria in collaboration with Joseph DeRisi, Ph.D., at the University of California, San Francisco.
After building microarray robots at the University of California, Berkeley, and Children’s Hospital of Oakland Research Institute, Seidel joined the Stowers Institute where he develops novel genomic approaches and analysis pipelines and continues to do research in genomics.
Scientific Director
Stowers Institute for Medical Research
Molecular and Cell Biology, Neuroscience, Systems Biology
Neuroscience; Laboratory Rotation; Thesis Laboratory
Kausik Si, Ph.D., a developmental neuroscientist, is the Scientific Director for the Stowers Institute. Si joined the Institute in 2005, was appointed Associate Scientific Director in 2019 and Scientific Director in 2021.
Vice President of Science Operations
The Stowers Institute for Medical Research
Cell Biology; Genetics
After receiving a dual B.A. in chemistry and mathematics from William Jewell College in Liberty, Missouri, in 1999, Slaughter taught science and math before pursuing his graduate work at the University of Kansas. There he studied the biophysics of a calcium signaling protein in the lab of Carey Johnson, Ph.D., receiving a Ph.D. in chemistry in 2005. Following this, he pursued a postdoctoral fellowship in the lab of former investigator Rong Li, Ph.D., at the Stowers Institute. In 2010, he transitioned to a role as a Research Advisor, collaborating with Stowers Investigators on adapting microscopy methods for use in a wide range of research organisms. In 2015, Slaughter became Co-Head of the Microscopy Center, then Co-Director of Microscopy, Imaging, and Big Data in 2019. In 2022, he was appointed Senior Director of Research Support overseeing the various Technology Centers, including Microscopy, Sequencing, Proteomics, and Model Research Organisms, teaming with the Scientific Director and the Chief Scientific Director to oversee scientific technology at the Institute. In 2024, Slaughter was promoted to Vice President of Research Operations with expanded responsibility overseeing the scientific operations teams across the Institute.
Project Manager, Office of Scientific Leadership
Stowers Institute for Medical Research
B.S., Physics, Truman State University
Ph.D., Molecular and Integrative Physiology, University of Kansas Medical Center
Science Communications
Sarah E. Smith, Ph.D., serves as the Project Manager for the Office of Scientific Leadership at the Stowers Institute. Collaborating closely with the President, Scientific Director, and Chief of Staff, she plays a key role in the implementation of programs that advance the Institute's overarching mission.
A native of Kansas City, Smith joined the Stowers Institute after completing her Bachelor of Science in Physics at Truman State University in Kirksville, Missouri, in 2005. She conducted her graduate research under the mentorship of Dr. Rong Li, focusing on the biophysics of cell polarization, and earned her Ph.D. in Molecular and Integrative Physiology in 2013. Following her doctoral studies, Smith assumed the role of Scientist in the Microscopy Technology Center, where she developed a deep knowledge of Stowers Institute research through extensive collaboration with Institute scientists.
An expert in cell biology, biophysics, advanced imaging, and computational analysis, she has coauthored 18 peer-reviewed research publications on topics ranging from the molecular structure of the microtubule organizing center in yeast to the interaction of the immune system with cancer stem cells. She transitioned to her current role in April 2022.
Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Stowers Resource Management
B.S., Finance, Emporia State University
MBA with a finance concentration, Avila University
Penny Spence joined the Stowers Institute in 2019 as Vice President of Finance and Treasurer and was named Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer in 2021. Prior to joining the Institute, Spence spent her career in finance and treasury roles at large, privately-held, multinational organizations including 14 years at Lockton Companies where she most recently held the position of Vice President-Assistant Treasurer. Early in her career, she held other finance roles at Hallmark Cards and Black & Veatch. Spence earned her Certified Treasury Professional designation in 2006.
Spence received a B.S. in finance from Emporia State University and an MBA with a finance concentration from Avila University.
Assistant Dean for Student Affairs
The Graduate School of the Stowers Institute
B.S., Biology, The University of Texas at San Antonio
Ph.D., Biology, The Graduate School of the Stowers Institute for Medical Research
Karla Terrazas, Ph.D., is the Assistant Dean for Student Affairs for the Graduate School of the Stowers Institute for Medical Research. Prior to her current role, she worked as the Life Sciences Project Manager at Skilled KC, a non-profit affiliate of the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation that focused on workforce development and technical training. Terrazas also served as a Program Assistant for BioKansas where she developed Unlocking Science!, an educational outreach program that provided science-based learning directly from scientists to high school and middle school students.
Terrazas first joined the Graduate School of the Stowers Institute for Medical Research as a summer scholar and then as a predoctoral researcher in 2014 and received her Ph.D. in 2021. She has a bachelor's degree in biology with a concentration in neurobiology from The University of Texas at San Antonio.
Investigator
Stowers Institute for Medical Research
Development and Regeneration, Evolutionary Biology, Molecular and Cell Biology
Cell Dynamics, Stem Cells and Developmental Biology; Laboratory Rotation; Thesis Laboratory
Paul Trainor, Ph.D., a developmental biologist, is an Investigator at the Stowers Institute. Trainor joined the Institute in 2001, and is a leader in the fields of craniofacial, neural crest cell, and developmental biology.
Cell Biology; Genetics
Intrigued by the molecular underpinnings of life, Jay Unruh pursued a B.S. degree in molecular biology at John Brown University and later a Ph.D. in chemistry from the University of Kansas. He continued his molecular studies in living cells during his postdoctoral studies in the Laboratory of Fluorescence Dynamics at the University of California, Irvine before joining the Stowers Institute as a research specialist in 2008. At Stowers, he extended his exploration of the molecular details influencing the cellular and organismal diversity. In 2010, Unruh took on the role of research advisor, then in 2015 he was appointed co-head of the Microscopy Center. In 2019, Unruh co-directed the Microscopy, Imaging, and Big Data group and in 2022 he accepted the role of Director of Scientific Data.
Assistant Dean for Administration and Assessment
The Graduate School of the Stowers Institute
B.S., Journalism
B.A., History, University of Missouri-Columbia
M.A., Higher Education, University of Missouri-Kansas City
Lori Vitale joined The Graduate School in 2014. It is her responsibility to serve as liaison with the state of Missouri and the Higher Learning Commission. Previously, she worked in higher education for 14 years at the University of Missouri-Kansas City and Research College of Nursing.
Vitale holds a Bachelor of Journalism in News-Editorial and a B.A. in history from the University of Missouri-Columbia. She has a master’s degree and an education specialist degree in higher education administration from the University of Missouri-Kansas City.
Associate Dean for Administration and Registrar
The Graduate School of the Stowers Institute
B.A., Education, University of Nebraska, Kearney
Susan Weigel joined the Stowers Institute for Medical Research in 2000 and managed the executive office until 2010 when she was named to her current position as Associate Dean and Registrar for the Graduate School.
Prior to joining the Stowers Institute, Weigel worked with the executive office and the foundation of Aventis Pharmaceuticals and its predecessor companies in Kansas City for 11 years.
Weigel holds a B.A. in education from the University of Nebraska at Kearney. She enjoys combining her background in education with her experience in administration to support the predoctoral researchers.
Investigator
Stowers Institute for Medical Research
Genetics and Genomics, Molecular and Cell Biology, Systems Biology
Gene Expression: Transcription to Translation; Laboratory Rotation; Thesis Laboratory
Jerry Workman, Ph.D., an Investigator at the Stowers Institute, is known for his pioneering work uncovering the role of histones in the regulation of gene expression.
Investigator
Stowers Institute for Medical Research
Development and Regeneration, Neuroscience, Systems Biology
Neuroscience; Laboratory Rotation; Thesis Laboratory
Ron Yu, Ph.D., is a molecular biologist and neuroscientist and an Investigator at the Stowers Institute since 2005. His lab focuses on mammalian olfactory systems involved in perception and behavior.
Associate Investigator and Vice Dean of the Graduate School
Stowers Institute for Medical Research
Development and Regeneration, Genetics and Genomics, Evolutionary Biology, Molecular and Cell Biology
Genetics; Laboratory Rotation; Thesis Laboratory
SaraH Zanders, Ph.D., a geneticist, joined the Stowers Institute in 2016 and is an Associate Investigator. In 2019, she became the first Vice Dean of the Graduate School of the Stowers Institute for Medical Research.
Investigator
Stowers Institute for Medical Research
Development and Regeneration, Genetics and Genomics, Molecular and Cell Biology, Systems Biology
Gene Expression: Transcription to Translation; Genomic and Computational Approaches to Understanding Gene Expression; Laboratory Rotation; Thesis Laboratory
Julia Zeitlinger, Ph.D., is a developmental and computational biologist where she serves as an Investigator at the Stowers Institute.