Gladstone in the News
September 6, 2024
Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology News—Gladstone Investigator Seth Shipman and his team developed a new technology using retrons to engineer bacteria-fighting viruses known as phages, which could be used to kill antibiotic-resistant bacteria.
Gladstone Experts
Shipman Lab
Gladstone in the News
August 12, 2022
Wired—Measuring which genes are on and which are off in a cell usually requires killing it, meaning any measurement is simply a snapshot in time. Seth Shipman explains how his lab has circumvented this problem by re-engineering parts of a bacterial immune system to create a record of molecular events within a cell.
Gladstone Experts
Data Science and Biotechnology
Shipman Lab
CRISPR/Gene Editing
Gladstone in the News
August 2, 2022
Singularity Hub—Genomics tools allow scientists to get a glimpse of what genes are turned on in a cell at one particular moment, but understanding how genes are turned on or off over time, and in what order, has been impossible. Gladstone Investigator Seth Shipman has developed a biological recorder that keeps track of these events, offering a window into how cells change over time.
Gladstone Experts
Data Science and Biotechnology
Shipman Lab
CRISPR/Gene Editing
Article
June 21, 2022
Graduate Student Will Flanigan shares the importance of LGBTQ+ representation in STEM
LGBTQ
Jain Lab
Shipman Lab
Article
October 1, 2019
Gladstone Assistant Investigator Seth Shipman is on this year’s Science News list of 10 Young Scientists to Watch. Shipman invented a system to store information in the genome of living cells. He is using tools from genetics and synthetic biology to understand fundamental aspects of cell biology and brain circuitry.
Awards
Data Science and Biotechnology
Shipman Lab