Cool new study from Castaneda lab, using Hehnly Lab Microscopes!

by Heidi Hehnly in ,


Check out the cool study from Jules Riley, a recent undergraduate from the Castaneda lab who is off to graduate school at UPENN. The Hehnly lab had the pleasure to work with Jules on tissue culture and learning quantitative light microscopy. Jules and Carlos put together this beautiful study on UBQLN2 behavior under stress in cells!

Check it out on BioRxiv here:https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2020.10.17.335380v1

From Fig 1, showing UBQLN2 forms membraneless liquid-like bodies following stress.

From Fig 1, showing UBQLN2 forms membraneless liquid-like bodies following stress.

A favorite Jules shot (middle) with two Hehnly lab members, Nikhila (Left) and Julie Manikas (right, currently a grad student at NYU).  This was after ASCB in 2019.

A favorite Jules shot (middle) with two Hehnly lab members, Nikhila (Left) and Julie Manikas (right, currently a grad student at NYU). This was after ASCB in 2019.



Our study on zebrafish embryo centrosomes is online!

by Heidi Hehnly in


Our new study at Current Biology is online! Lindsay Rathbun and Abrar Aljiboury identified that in the zebrafish embryo mitotic centrosomes scale with cell size and are asymmetric in size! We had a great collaboration with the Bembenek Lab at Univ of Michigan along with his student Bai to also examine that this phenomenon is consistent in C. elegans. We had additional great contributions from undergrads to postbacs Nicole Hall and Julie Manikas. Finally we wouldn’t have been able to do any of it if the Amack Lab at SUNY Upstate didn’t introduce us to zebrafish and how awesome they are!

Check out the sweet video of zebrafish embryonic centrosomes:

Microtubules (EMTB-3xGFP) and centrosomes (Centrin-GFP)

Microtubules (EMTB-3xGFP) and centrosomes (Centrin-GFP)

You can check out the study here: Link to PDF.


Check out our new Preprint!

by Heidi Hehnly in ,


The Hehnly Lab’s 1st preprint, led by Lindsay Rathbun with the help of many people including our graduate student Abrar Aljiboury and postbac Julie Manikas, along with Josh Bembenek’s laboratory (University of Michigan with X Bai from the NIH) and Jeff Amack’s laboratory (UPSTATE Medical School, Syracuse NY). We found some crazy large centrosomes in extremely large zebrafish embryo cells that scale with changes in cell size! We didn’t leave out C. elegans either. Check it out here:

PLK1- and PLK4-Mediated asymmetric mitotic centrosome size and positioning in the early zebrafish embryo.

Also check out a zebrafish embryo dividing cells! Microtubules (EMTB-GFP) on left and centrosomes (centrin-GFP) on right.

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