Nicholas Bellono (@nbellono) 's Twitter Profile
Nicholas Bellono

@nbellono

Cell Physiology | Harvard MCB

ID: 1244352628525379584

linkhttp://www.bellonolab.com calendar_today29-03-2020 19:56:08

25 Tweet

1,1K Followers

82 Following

Cassandra Extavour (@redmakeda) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Money. Action. Time. Education. This is what is needed for change. If you thought you were all good because you took an implicit bias "test," think again. Listen to these students. Use your power to amplify them. Stop talking. Start walking.

Nicholas Bellono (@nbellono) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The octopus uses its long, flexible arms to explore the seafloor for hidden prey. Here, Lena and team investigate the ‘taste by touch’ sense of the octopus. Corey Allard, Cell Press, MCB_Harvard. cell.com/cell/fulltext/…

The octopus uses its long, flexible arms to explore the seafloor for hidden prey. Here, Lena and team investigate the ‘taste by touch’ sense of the octopus. <a href="/CoreyAHAllard/">Corey Allard</a>, <a href="/CellPressNews/">Cell Press</a>, <a href="/MCB_Harvard/">MCB_Harvard</a>. cell.com/cell/fulltext/…
HarvardBrainScience (@harvardbrainsci) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Peter Kilian and Brittany Walsh of the Bellono Lab were profiled in a Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology staff spotlight. MCB_Harvard mcb.harvard.edu/department/new… Nicholas Bellono

Koenig Lab (@eye_evolution) 's Twitter Profile Photo

For our start of twitter I want to share our new preprint on biorxiv! Co-option of the Limb Patterning Program in Cephalopod Lens Development. Amazing work by the whole lab and co-first authors Stephanie Neal and Kyle McCulloch @Kyle_Mac1 biorxiv.org/content/10.110…

For our start of twitter I want to share our new preprint on biorxiv! Co-option of the Limb Patterning Program in Cephalopod Lens Development.
Amazing work by the whole lab and co-first authors Stephanie Neal and Kyle McCulloch @Kyle_Mac1 
biorxiv.org/content/10.110…
Nicholas Bellono (@nbellono) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Postdoc openings! Explore molecular adaptations underlying unique behaviors. Octopus, sharks, jellyfish, photosynthetic animals, walking fish, more. ~Whatever is cool :) Background in cell biology, physiology, biochemistry, structure, other molecular approaches. Email me.

Nicholas Bellono (@nbellono) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Where do new senses come from? In paired studies, we explore the structural basis of sensory receptor evolution in octopus and squid. @CoreyAHallard Wendy Valencia Ryan Hibbs nature - nature.com/articles/s4158… - nature.com/articles/s4158…

Where do new senses come from? In paired studies, we explore the structural basis of sensory receptor evolution in octopus and squid. @CoreyAHallard <a href="/wendyssae/">Wendy Valencia</a> <a href="/RyanHibbs10/">Ryan Hibbs</a> <a href="/Nature/">nature</a>
- nature.com/articles/s4158…
- nature.com/articles/s4158…
Nicholas Bellono (@nbellono) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Where do new animal traits come from? We studied walking fish with “legs” to understand the evolution of novel organs and behavior. Corey Allard, Amy Herbert, David Kingsley, MCB_Harvard, Stanford Medicine, @HHMINews, Marine Biological Laboratory (MBL) - biorxiv.org/content/10.110… - biorxiv.org/content/10.110…

Nicholas Bellono (@nbellono) 's Twitter Profile Photo

How Marine Biological Laboratory (MBL) and the collaborative and curious community of Woods Hole inspired me to be a scientist and continues to shape our group's work. mbl.edu/news/ark-full-…

How <a href="/MBLScience/">Marine Biological Laboratory (MBL)</a> and the collaborative and curious community of Woods Hole inspired me to be a scientist and continues to shape our group's work.
mbl.edu/news/ark-full-…