Miriam Genuth, PhD
Associate Research Scientist, Molecular, Cellular and Developmental BiologyAbout
Titles
Associate Research Scientist, Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology
Appointments
Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology
Associate Research ScientistPrimary
Other Departments & Organizations
Education & Training
- Postdoctoral fellow
- Yale (2024)
- PhD
- University of California, San Francisco, Cell biology (2018)
- BA
- University of Chicago, Biology (2011)
Research
Research at a Glance
Yale Co-Authors
Frequent collaborators of Miriam Genuth's published research.
Publications Timeline
A big-picture view of Miriam Genuth's research output by year.
Craig M Crews, PhD
Scott Holley, PhD
4Publications
29Citations
Publications
2023
Automated time-lapse data segmentation reveals in vivo cell state dynamics
Genuth M, Kojima Y, Jülich D, Kiryu H, Holley S. Automated time-lapse data segmentation reveals in vivo cell state dynamics. Science Advances 2023, 9: eadf1814. PMID: 37267354, PMCID: PMC10413672, DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.adf1814.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH Keywords and ConceptsConceptsCell statesSingle-cell RNA sequencing dataCell state dynamicsCell behaviorEmbryonic development proceedsCell state transitionsRNA sequencing dataCollective cell behaviorIndividual cell behaviorsZebrafish tailbudLeft-right asymmetryCell tracking dataCollective cell motionGene expressionSequencing dataMolecular processesIndividual embryosDevelopment proceedsEmbryosCell motionParallel identificationBilateral symmetryReproducible patternTailbudState transitions
2022
OligoTRAFTACs: A generalizable method for transcription factor degradation
Samarasinghe KTG, An E, Genuth MA, Chu L, Holley SA, Crews CM. OligoTRAFTACs: A generalizable method for transcription factor degradation. RSC Chemical Biology 2022, 3: 1144-1153. PMID: 36128504, PMCID: PMC9428672, DOI: 10.1039/d2cb00138a.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsTranscription factorsOncogenic transcription factorGene expression circuitryTranscription factor degradationDNA binding abilityChordoma cell linesProteasomal degradationProteasomal pathwayZebrafish experimentsC-MycGeneralizable platformKey playersCell linesBrachyurySmall moleculesFactor degradationBinding abilityGeneralizable methodDegradationChimerasPathwayOligonucleotidePocketFirst generation
2018
Chick cranial neural crest cells use progressive polarity refinement, not contact inhibition of locomotion, to guide their migration.
Genuth MA, Allen CDC, Mikawa T, Weiner OD. Chick cranial neural crest cells use progressive polarity refinement, not contact inhibition of locomotion, to guide their migration. Dev Biol 2018, 444 Suppl 1: S252-S261. PMID: 29501457, DOI: 10.1016/j.ydbio.2018.02.016.Peer-Reviewed Original Research
2015
Cell Migration: Recoiling from an Embrace.
Genuth MA, Weiner OD. Cell Migration: Recoiling from an Embrace. Curr Biol 2015, 25: R566-8. PMID: 26126284, DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2015.05.015.Peer-Reviewed Original Research
Academic Achievements & Community Involvement
honor Phi Beta Kappa
National AwardDetails06/01/2011United States
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Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology
Yale Science Building rm 104, 260 Whitney St
New Haven, CT 06511
United States