Anna Monzel (@annamonzel) 's Twitter Profile
Anna Monzel

@annamonzel

Computational scientist | Cell biologist | Mitochondriac @columbiapsych. Studying mitochondrial diversity in the human body. MitotypeExplorer.org

ID: 1324740576

calendar_today03-04-2013 14:48:47

46 Tweet

213 Followers

186 Following

Xiaolei Liu (@erin_liuxiaolei) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Perspective: ISR is an energetic checkpoint evolved to prevent OxPhos-deficient cells from engaging in excessively costly transitions, and allow ISR-positive cells to recruit systemic energetic resources.academic.oup.com/lifemeta/advan…

Martin Picard (@mitopsychobio) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Why are transitions always difficult? Whether a conscious, thinking, feeling organism; or a single cell; life transitions are always hard because they cost energy. We discuss the energetic cost of transitions, the ISR, and GDF15: academic.oup.com/lifemeta/artic…

Why are transitions always difficult?

Whether a conscious, thinking, feeling organism; or a single cell; life transitions are always hard because they cost energy.

We discuss the energetic cost of transitions, the ISR, and GDF15:
academic.oup.com/lifemeta/artic…
Cell Metabolism (@cell_metabolism) 's Twitter Profile Photo

#NewIssue On the cover: In this issue of Cell Metabolism, Li et al. reveal that sick neurons release lipids to the glia, causing lipid droplet accumulation and neuroinflammation. The artwork, inspired by Van Gogh's Starry Night, depicts a brain with lipid droplets. Artwork by

#NewIssue On the cover: In this issue of Cell Metabolism, Li et al. reveal that sick neurons release lipids to the glia, causing lipid droplet accumulation and neuroinflammation. The artwork, inspired by Van Gogh's Starry Night, depicts a brain with lipid droplets. Artwork by
Martin Picard (@mitopsychobio) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Is brain mitochondrial biology linked to our positive and negative psychosocial experiences? Caroline Trumpff looked into this question using a brain multi-omic postmortem dataset from individuals who reported their subjective experiences yearly until they died.

Is brain mitochondrial biology linked to our positive and negative psychosocial experiences?

<a href="/CarolineTrumpff/">Caroline Trumpff</a> looked into this question using a brain multi-omic postmortem dataset from individuals who reported their subjective experiences yearly until they died.
Nico Dosenbach (@ndosenbach) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Psilocybin's powerful short- and long-term effects on your brain are revealed by this intrepid precision imaging drug trial published in nature. As one of the scientists I was also a study volunteer. Spending hours in an MRI scanner, while tripping on 25 mg was the experience

Psilocybin's powerful short- and long-term effects on your brain are revealed by this intrepid precision imaging drug trial published in <a href="/Nature/">nature</a>. As one of the scientists I was also a  study volunteer. Spending hours in an MRI scanner, while tripping on 25 mg was the experience
Sam Payne (@byu_sam) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Well. It REALLY happened. The plagiarized paper got published. my paper from 2021 - pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33915259/ new one from 2024 - pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38700052/ We'll look at figures in the 🧵 below.

Martin Picard (@mitopsychobio) 's Twitter Profile Photo

All mitochondria in your body comes from the same "mother" population in the egg/oocyte, later differentiating into distinct mitochondrial phenotypes or "mitotypes" (like cell types) In the end, we are made of dozens of different specialized mitotypes New preprint where

All mitochondria in your body comes from the same "mother" population in the egg/oocyte, later differentiating into distinct mitochondrial phenotypes or "mitotypes" (like cell types)

In the end, we are made of dozens of different specialized mitotypes

New preprint where
Michel Thiebaut de S (@micheltds) 's Twitter Profile Photo

🧠 Just out in Nature: A human brain map of mitochondrial diversity. A powerful collaboration with Mosharov and Martin Picard. Big step toward bridging cell biology and neuroimaging! 🔗 nature.com/articles/s4158… 🧬 #MitoBrainMap #neuroscience

Anna Monzel (@annamonzel) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Such a fun project! I enjoyed processing and mitotyping the single nuclei RNAseq data. Chapeau to Eugene, Ayelet, Michel Thiebaut de S, Martin Picard and all co-authors for creating the first MitoBrainMap 👏

Martin Picard (@mitopsychobio) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Grateful to work with so many talented and passionate people to build the foundation for how we think about mitochondria, energy, health, and healing Kudos Anna Monzel for coming up with the "motherboard" analogy Thank you Jan Ellison Baszucki scientificamerican.com/article/why-mi…