Allison Kann
@apkann.bsky.social
330 followers 340 following 11 posts
Postdoc in the Srivastava Lab studying organ morphogenesis during whole-body regeneration. PhD in muscle stem cells in the Krauss Lab. Jane Coffin Childs Fellow '23. https://allisonkann.wordpress.com
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apkann.bsky.social
One of the coolest projects I've seen in years - huge congrats to Çağrı and the McKinley team!
Reposted by Allison Kann
natclarke.bsky.social
🚨 My lab is hiring at all levels!

Interested in animal origins & evolutionary cell biology?

I'm recruiting a postdoc, PhD students & a research assistant to study the molecular evolution of cell adhesion using marine invertebrates + comparative genomics.

🔗: clarkelab.com/join/

Please repost!
Reposted by Allison Kann
rachaelott.bsky.social
For #FluorescenceFriday, RhoA (blue) and the actin cytoskeleton (magenta) are shown in a set of primary microglia 🔬 #Neuroscience #Microscopy
RhoA (blue) and the actin cytoskeleton (magenta) are shown in a set of primary microglia.
apkann.bsky.social
Absolutely gorgeous work from Kate - I loved reading the full paper!
katecavanaugh.bsky.social
See this? This = implanting mouse embryo. Usually this happens inside its mother and is invisible to us, but we can actually watch implantation ex vivo with the hope of understanding why implantation goes awry in embryos of older women. A 🧵...
Reposted by Allison Kann
arnausebe.bsky.social
Happy to share the Biodiversity Cell Atlas white paper, out today in @nature.com. We look at the possibilities, challenges, and potential impacts of molecularly mapping cells across the tree of life.
www.nature.com/articles/s41...
Reposted by Allison Kann
aaronhgriffing.bsky.social
New preprint from some of my postdoc work on lungs! Co-led with Kaleb Hill, we studied smooth muscle and epithelial development in lizard lungs. Stay tuned for more!
www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1...
brightfield images of three lizard embryos of approximately the same developmental stage. Below each embryo image is an immunofluorescence image labeling E-cadherin (green) and alpha-smooth muscle actin (magenta) of their developing lungs
apkann.bsky.social
Today's #FluorescenceFriday is featuring the peripheral muscle of Hofstenia miamia 💪
Peripheral muscle fibers (pseudocolored in magenta) and nuclei (in gray)
Reposted by Allison Kann
wallaceucsf.bsky.social
Cells can form patterns within themselves just like embryos do. How? Connie Yan's new preprint shows how the anterior-posterior cytoskeleton pattern in Stentor is dictated by regionalized scaffolding proteins

www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1...
Reposted by Allison Kann
jcellsci.bsky.social
Why would anyone want to be a scientist?

Check out our new Essay from Martin Schwartz: journals.biologists.com/jcs/article/...
Screenshot of Essay from Martin Schwartz on 'Why would anyone want to be a scientist'. An anniversary article from The Company of Biologists published in Journal of Cell Science.

The first few lines are: It is difficult to fathom why anyone intelligent enough to be a scientist would actually choose to be one. Doing good science requires the utmost exertion of body, mind and spirit, yet is consistently filled with failure and rejection. But, strange even to myself, I not only don't question the unfavorable risk-to-reward ratio but consider myself astonishingly lucky to be a scientist. There are three fundamental pleasures that have sustained me through 50 years of this madness.
Reposted by Allison Kann
michalis-averof.bsky.social
Latest paper elifesciences.org/articles/107... closes an important cycle in our efforts to study regeneration: week-long recordings allow us to observe the behaviour of cells during the entire course of regeneration in a crustacean leg – bright objects in movie are fluorescent nuclei of cells. 1/6
Reposted by Allison Kann
socdevbio.bsky.social
✨Development meets design in this embryonic chameleon lung 🫁 🦎. Smooth muscle swirls 🟣 and branching tips and cartilage 🟢 come together in reptilian lung morphogenesis. Image taken by @drkatiegoodwin.bsky.social 🔬🧪
#FluorescenceFriday #DevBio
apkann.bsky.social
Our transgenic acoel embryos are beautifully mosaic 😍 showing off the developing epidermis for #FluorescenceFriday
Fluorescent embryo showing the developing epidermis, pseudo-colored with the ICA LUT in FIJI
apkann.bsky.social
Congratulations Tim!! So exciting!
apkann.bsky.social
The GRC on Cell Contact & Adhesion was truly fantastic (and in such a beautiful place!) - thanks to everyone involved for building such a great community.
Reposted by Allison Kann
tedpavlic.bsky.social
Reminder: Nobel-prize winning PCR (1983), used in basically all genetic tech today, was only possible because of extremophile bacterium discovered in 1964 in Yellowstone funded by a small ~$80k NSF grant with no obvious application at the time. #science 🧪
www.richmondscientific.com/how-a-discov...
How a discovery in Yellowstone National Park led to the development of PCR - Richmond Scientific
A discovery in Yellowstone National Park led to the development of PCR, the gold-standard COVID-19 tests used to fight the global pandemic.
www.richmondscientific.com
Reposted by Allison Kann
mathpreu.bsky.social
1)
Branching morphogenesis is fundamental to animal development, shaping complex organs like lungs, kidneys, and vascular networks. Gills are another highly branched organ. Yet, the developmental processes behind gill formation in zebrafish remain poorly understood.

#zebrafish #gills #microscopy
Reposted by Allison Kann
jcellsci.bsky.social
If you need to attend a microscopy or bioimage analysis training course to support your #cellbio research but don't have funding, check out our JCS–FocalPlane Training Grants.
🔬🖥️https://www.biologists.com/grants/jcs-focalplane-training-grants/
Microscopy Training Grants
Supporting microscopy training for early-career researchers in cell biology
Apply for a grant of up to £1,000
Cartoon of a person looking down a microscope, which is next to a computer
Journal of Cell Science logo and FocalPlane logo
apkann.bsky.social
I had a fantastic time at the annual @jcchildsfund.bsky.social symposium. It’s always a treat to be surrounded by brilliant and passionate people, and even more so in the midst of so much chaos. Thank you all for the conversations, the community, and (of course) for sharing your amazing science.
Reposted by Allison Kann
beebrookshire.bsky.social
This is just so incredibly sad to me.

It's not just that people think they are clever for hacking their way through school without work.

It's that they don't WANT to learn new things. They don't WANT to improve skills. They don't WANT EDUCATION. nymag.com/intelligence...
Everyone Is Cheating Their Way Through College
ChatGPT has unraveled the entire academic project.
nymag.com
Reposted by Allison Kann
cfidd.bsky.social
"On a weekly basis more than 90% of people use weather forecasts, job market reports, food safety warnings and other information that is based on federal science. But only 10% ... are concerned that cuts to federal support for science might impact their access to [it]."
www.npr.org/2025/05/06/n...
Most Americans use federal science information on a weekly basis, a new poll finds
Most Americans frequently use federal science information. But few are concerned that cuts to federal science spending could affect their access to such information, a new poll finds.
www.npr.org
Reposted by Allison Kann
maxkozlov.bsky.social
Harvard will no longer receive ANY federal research money, per letter to the school:

"Harvard should no longer seek GRANTS from the federal government, since none will be provided. Harvard will cease to be a publicly funded institution, and can instead operate as a privately-funded institution."
Trump Administration Disqualifies Harvard From Future Research Grants
A letter from Linda McMahon, the education secretary, said the college leaders must demonstrate more responsible management of the university before receiving additional federal grants.
www.nytimes.com
Reposted by Allison Kann
epimechfc.bsky.social
Oil form droplets when mixed with alcohol, your monolayers dewet to form spherical aggregates, your friends dancing in a club form a circle, why?

I’m @challopeau.bsky.social and I will tell you about the origins and consequences of interfacial tension in tissues.