Anthony Cesnik
@anthonycesnik
Computational proteomics postdoc, working with Emma Lundberg. Also interested in Nordic skiing, oboe and music performance, climbing and more! 🏳️🌈
ID: 569237542
02-05-2012 16:33:08
1,1K Tweet
338 Followers
623 Following
I am excited to finally share Bento, our toolkit for subcellular analysis of spatial transcriptomics data! Noorsher Ahmed biorxiv.org/content/10.110… (1/8)
This will be a great meeting on proteomics in cell biology and disease with an amazing lineup of speakers! I’m organizing it together with Matthias Mann Lab, Angus Lamond and Ileana Cristea. Come join us!
I presented today's chemistry seminar Gustavus Adolphus College, and it was so much fun! The students had a bunch of stellar questions even hitting on big open questions in the field, e.g. the inheritance of cell-to-cell variability & the degree to which isoform variation defines cell types.
I am getting an opportunity of a lifetime: I will start as an assistant professor at UWChemistry in the second half of 2023. The Riley Research Group group will explore questions about extracellular biology using mass spec, glycoproteomics, and chemical biology.
Join us for Anthony Cesnik's seminar Feb. 16 on "Driving proteoform systems biology with tools to highlight functional differences within proteoform families" #proteomics Neil Kelleher Ying Ge Research Lab Mowei Zhou Julia Chamot-Rooke Anthony Cesnik Joe Loo us06web.zoom.us/meeting/regist…
We are #hiring PhD students and Postdocs in #AI, #deeplearning #computationalbiology, #bioimaging, #robotics and #wholecellmodeling I recently joined KTH Royal Institute of Technology as an assistant professor and starting a new research group ( AICell Lab: aicell.io) at SciLifeLab
Cool job posting in Stanford Pathology: "aspire to groundbreaking research in high-resolution, non-destructive optical imaging methods and integrated computational-analysis strategies for disease diagnosis, prognostication, and clinical decision support" facultypositions.stanford.edu/cw/en-us/job/4…
Ever wonder why genetically identical cells respond so differently to treatments?New study reveals nearly 40% of metabolic enzymes vary b/w cells, reshaping our understanding of resistance and treatment strategies. Congrats Christian Gnann Anthony Cesnik Emma Lundberg & team!1/2
Ever wondered about the distribution of the metabolic proteome in and between single cells? 40% of enzymes display cell-cell heterogeneity and over half localise to multiple cellular compartments. ➡️biorxiv.org/content/10.110… Anthony Cesnik Emma Lundberg Human Protein Atlas and others
Congratulations to Anthony Cesnik, a member of the #PostdocJEDIChampions2024 cohort! This award recognizes Anthony’s #JEDI efforts in creating a new program resulting in community building among Stanford Bioengineering postdocs. #bioengineering Learn more at: brnw.ch/21wNEV3.