Gladstone NOW: The Campaign Join Us on the Journey✕
As the first part of the Newton Webinar Series, Benoit Bruneau, PhD, director of the Gladstone Institute of Cardiovascular Disease had an intimate conversation with Robert Wicks, vice president of philanthropy at Gladstone.
Benoit shared how his lab is working to better understand the role genes play in building a heart and the code guiding the process. He also explored congenital heart defects, how they develop, what can be done to stop them before they start, and the implications for other cardiovascular diseases.
The Newton Webinar Series is inspired by the story of Isaac Newton’s extraordinary intellectual output while in quarantine during the Great London Plague of 1665, and offers an alternative to all the news related to COVID-19. Each week, we will feature a conversation with Gladstone’s scientists and explore their moonshot ideas, how they approach their work, and what they think medicine may look like 10, 20, and 50 years from now.
Your gift to Gladstone will allow our researchers to pursue high-quality science, focus on disease, and train the next generation of scientific thought leaders.
Graduate Student Emily Bulger describes her work in the Bruneau Lab, her family roots in science, and the scientist she'd like to have a conversation with
Profile Bruneau LabA Q&A with Gladstone Investigator Benoit Bruneau
Research (Publication) Congenital Heart Disease Cardiovascular Disease Bruneau LabRemoving one gene from developing heart cells suddenly makes them turn into brain cell precursors, making researchers rethink cellular identity
News Release Research (Publication) Cardiovascular Disease Bruneau Lab Stem Cells/iPSCs Hota