RNA Collaborative Seminar Series


The RNA Collaborative seminar series goal is to cross promote RNA research and strengthen and connect the RNA scientific community. 

More information is available on the RNA Collaborative Seminar Series webpage, supported by The RNA Society.

We encourage RNA Centers across the world to join us. If your RNA Center is interested in joining this collaborative, please contact Grace Lee at glee8@bidmc.harvard.edu


SEMINARS TAKE PLACE EVERY OTHER WEDNESDAYS, either 9:00-10:00 A.M., or 4:00–5:00 P.M. (EST)

Detailed information here

Recordings available on the RNA Collaborative YouTube channel

Similar Posts

  • |

    Dus and Wilinski publish significant discovery in insulin synthesis in Nature Structural & Molecular Biology

    The discovery of insulin has saved the lives of millions of people with diabetes worldwide, but little is known about the first step of insulin synthesis. Researchers at the University of Michigan have uncovered part of this mystery. Examining messenger RNAs involved in the production of insulin in fruit flies, they found that a chemical…

  • March 27, 2020 U-M Center for RNA Biomedicine 5th Annual Symposium

    Initially scheduled for March 27, 2020, our 5th Annual Symposium “From RNA Biology to Medicine” is rescheduled for March 26, 2021 University of Michigan, Biomedical Research Science Building, 109 Zina Pitcher TOGETHER, WE SOLVE … Morning Welcome and Introduction, Mark Schlissel (President, University of Michigan) Afternoon Welcome and Introduction, Srijan Sen (Associate Vice President for…

  • |

    For the Walter Lab, the proof is in the fluorescent pudding

    How do you prove, in a laboratory setting studying objects in size just one-thousandth of the diameter of a hair, that something is doing what it is designed to do? The Walter Lab at the University of Michigan is doing just that, through single-molecule fluorescence imaging and tracking, and recently for a tiny nano engine…

  • |

    Redefining long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) to study transposons in plants

    Long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) constitute the new frontier of investigation for molecular biologists. However, lncRNA is inconsistently defined, which fails the research community in several ways. In a scientific review [2], Professor Andrzej Wierzbicki from the University of Michigan, Department of Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology, and collaborators challenge the contemporary ways of understanding lncRNAs…

  • 2022-2023 Seminars

    2022 Monday, September 12, 4:00 pm, Zhipeng Lu, USC – Link to Recording Monday, September 26, 4:00 pm, David Shechner, University of Washington  Monday, October 10, 4:00 pm, Polly Hsu, Michigan State University – Link to Recording Monday, October 17, 4:00 pm, John Cooke, Houston Methodist – Link to Recording Monday, November 21, 4:00 pm,…

  • RNA Translated 2024 is out in wide release!

    The latest issue of RNA Translated, the University of Michigan Center for RNA Biomedicine annual magazine and brief report, has been published and is available in print and to view online now!   The 2024 issue focuses on our groundbreaking efforts to build a University of Michigan “M-RNA Therapeutics” initiative, led by Michelle Hastings, Ph.D.,…