
Caroline Langley
@__caro__line___
Postdoc @RockefellerUniv Bonilla Lab • PhD @MCBSeattle @fredhutch Emerman/Malik labs • atl native • interested in host-pathogen conflict and evolution• she/her
ID: 1163826923585376256
20-08-2019 14:55:43
219 Tweet
284 Followers
280 Following

Snippets from last week’s trip to SF for the HARC SAB meeting. My favorite part was getting to see two of my favorite scientists/mentors Molly Ohainle, Ph.D. and Jeannette Tenthorey!



sooo excited to return to the homeland of Athens, GA this week for American Society for Virology! genuinely delighted to get to show my beloved lab mates my favorite lil city as well as talk science!

#ASV2023 pl. check out talks & posters from awesome Malik/Emerman lab trainees: postdoc Tamanash Bhattacharya (Tamanash Bhattacharya), grad students Rechel Geiger (Rechel Geiger), Caroline Langley (Caroline Langley), Peter Dietzen (@PeterDietzen) & res. techs Eva Alleman, Damini Khera

This is the COOLEST story! So proud of Jessie Kulsuptrakul et al!!!

The Harmit S. Malik Lab celebrates its 20th anniversary! Friends and colleagues traveled from all over to mark the occasion. It’s been wonderful seeing so many familiar faces and hearing about all their accomplishments!

Great talk by Caroline Langley on evolution of interface between antiviral protein APOBEC3G and its antagonist in HIV/SIV retroviruses, Vif, informed by beautiful structure 👇#KSTE23 nature.com/articles/s4158…



Literally screeched when Fred Hutch Cancer Center showed up as an answer on Jeopardy tonight.






Caroline Langley (Caroline Langley) is crossing the country to start her postdoc, while Peter Dietzen, Michael Emerman & Jeannette Tenthorey have given up on X. I am happy to announce their discovery about ancient origins of antiviral Mx proteins biorxiv.org/content/10.110… 1/


Rockefeller's Steve L. Bonilla is developing integrative structural biology methods to visualize dynamic RNA 3D structures and understand how they regulate the life cycles of RNA viruses. #HispanicHeritageMonth



We’re thrilled to congratulate to Jeremy Hollis in the Melody Campbell and Harmit S. Malik Labs on being named a 2025 Weintraub Awardee! Jeremy is carrying on the late Hal Weintraub's legacy of curiosity and discovery through his research on cell surface receptors.