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Dr. Cecilia Moens named Raisbeck Endowed Chair for Basic Science
Funding will support her continued work studying embryonic development in zebrafish

Figuring out how our brains keep from ‘getting the wires crossed’
From the Moens Lab, Basic Sciences Division

Dr. Cecilia Moens receives prestigious NINDS Javits Award
Seven-year grant will support re-imagining of strategy used by developing interneurons to find the brain

Dr. Cecilia Moens elected inaugural member of the Society for Developmental Biology Academy
Developmental biologist studies nerve growth in the early brain

Don’t lose your nerve: choosing the right path during axon regeneration
From the Moens Lab, Basic Sciences Division

Painting the vagus topographic map with a gRAdient
From the Moens Lab, Basic Sciences Division

Helping the developing brain chart its course
New study in fish shows vitamin A derivative orchestrates timing as 'brain map' forms

Immune cells share their insides with tumors to promote cancer spread
New study in zebrafish and mice shows immune cells interact with melanoma and transfer their contents to spur metastasis

Making the mentoring relationship work
Making the mentoring relationship — or better, relationships — work

5 researchers receive awards to explore immunotherapy single-cell RNA sequencing
Projects accelerate Hutch position as early adopter of scRNA-seq technology

Good News: first Hutch United fellowships awarded; Dr. Soheil Meshinchi receives $500K AML grant
Celebrating faculty and staff achievements

The postdoc life
Brains, gusto, grit and humor on the (tenuous) path to a tenured job

The science of cancer spread
The how and why of metastasis — and what it might take to stop it

Good News at Fred Hutch
Celebrating faculty and staff achievements

Join us for Fred Hutch's 40th Anniversary Block Party
Science demonstrations, dignitaries, games, Mariner Moose and even a giant colon will be at the celebration from 4 to 7 p.m. Tuesday

Setting boundaries in the brain
Moens lab finds mechanism that repels cells may also serve to attract, depending upon the context