
Paul Bump
@paul_bump
Currently postdoc with @acoel_hofstenia. Previously Ph.D. with @lab_lowe. From stem cell biology to classical zoology. Advocate for Inverts. (he/him)
ID: 402599207
http://paulbump.info 01-11-2011 09:40:28
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Now for HEMICHORDATES!!! Paul Bump Hopkins Marine Station Stanford University now tells us about the transition from a tornaria larvae to a juvenile enteropneust worm, as seen from single cell sequencing data!! These were followed with beautiful HCR to label specific cell types!


Thanks News from Science for covering my presentation SICB! A special shout out to StrebLab and Martín-Durán lab for organizing the special symposia and the other excellent marine larval and genomics enthusiasts. Stay tuned for more soon on this topic!

I've been enjoying this paper since it was a preprint and now it's amazing to see the final product published in Nature using comparative genomics to study the evolution of life history stages in some cool marine invertebrates! Congrats to Martín-Durán lab and the entire team! 🥳




Ctenophores or sponges? We identified chromosomal changes that support ctenophores as the sister group of all other animals. In nature w/ stevehaddock.bsky Dan Rokhsar et al. Support from MBARI U.S. National Science Foundation European Research Council (ERC) 🔗nature.com/articles/s4158…



🚨We are recruiting a PostDoc and a PhD to investigate how larvae evolved! Supported by The Leverhulme Trust, join a terrific group of people Queen Mary University of London QM_SBBS to investigate fascinating marine 🪱🪱! PhD ad: alturl.com/i64ue DM/e-mail ([email protected]) for more info!


This is what a team of talented undergrads can do! 👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾Reed College



Please check out our recent perspective paper, “Pluripotency of a founding field: rebranding developmental biology.” A huge thanks to the 50 scientists who traveled to California to discuss the future of #DevBio and who contributed to this paper! 1/ journals.biologists.com/dev/article/15…

A cool new preprint and also a great write up from Isabella Cisneros about the stem cell populations in Nematostella. Definitely worth checking out!

Have you ever wondered what GFP might be doing out in the wild? You gotta check out this sweet paper from nat clarke and colleagues that combines the power of natural history and molecular biology.

I had the pleasure of getting to try this back when they were first developing it. Here is one of my personal favorites, a cleared hermit crab that was brooding a number of eggs (check out the cute baby crabs!) Props to the rockstar team of nat clarke and @FormeryLaurent

