
Maria Galazo
@mariagalazolab
Neuroscientist @TulaneBrain studying cortical development and circuitry🧠. Thalamus enthusiast! 🇪🇸⚽️
ID: 1563323656742154241
https://sse.tulane.edu/cell/faculty/galazo 27-08-2022 00:33:33
103 Tweet
76 Followers
116 Following



Pleased to present FLARE bmcbioinformatics.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.11…, a fast and flexible workflow to identify transcriptomic regions enriched for editing, from Eric Kofman.

New preprint from the lab: A #microRNA that recently evolved in humans slows down synapse formation in #IPSC-derived neurons by keeping #mitochondrial homeostasis in check. Fantastic collaboration with Kleele lab and @bohaceklab biorxiv.org/cgi/content/sh…



Applications for the Stanford University hands-on course on human neural #organoids and #assembloids in the Stanford Brain Organogenesis Center are pouring in. Less than two weeks before the deadline. For those still working on their application, please spend some time succinctly but clearly articulating

A new Review in Science Translational Medicine looks at the complex connections between astrocytes and other types of cells in the nervous system, including neurons, oligodendrocytes, and microglia. scim.ag/4RO


Watch this fantastic video to learn more about the research of 2024 Marshall Scholar, Tulane Neuroscience major Mary Lorino! Congratulations to Mary and her Brain Institute faculty mentor Maria Galazo 👏👏👏👏👏 Tulane University Newcomb-Tulane College TulaneSSE youtube.com/watch?v=0ynAu7…


Excited to share my PhD work in Peyman Golshani 's lab designing and building low-cost miniature 2P microscopes with everyone! They cost < $10k USD (even at low production runs), are fitted with 2 on-board SiPM detectors, and are completely open-source! 1/5 biorxiv.org/content/10.110…

Two research teams successfully regenerate brain neural pathways #inmice using stem cells from rats. 🐀 🧵 @cellcellpress Jun Wu Lab Kristin Baldwin



“The brain’s complexity and diversity surprised us,” recalled Hongkui Zeng Allen Institute. She and a network of researchers charted a colorful cellular map of the mouse brain, shedding light onto thousands of cell types and their intricate connections. bit.ly/3POO3wJ





We have had a paper under review at molecularpsychiatry for 150 days (yes 5 months) without a decision. First paper I have submitted to the journal. Never experienced an editorial delay of this duration in my career. Any one else experiencing severe delays?