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Mickey Kosloff
@koslofflab
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Curiosity-driven scientist, deciphering interaction specificity in signal transduction, one amino acid at a time (G proteins rule!)
Haifa, Israel
Joined October 2019
RT @Nature: Nature research paper: De novo designed proteins neutralize lethal snake venom toxins
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RT @arcinstitute: This is the first generative protein language model trained on three protein features: sequence, structure, and function.…
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RT @rachelkolodny: Our paper just came out 🥳🥳🥳 We used a deep generative network to study codon usage in two eukary…
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RT @KLabGPCR: A popular FDA-approved drug to treat hypertension, hydralazine works, at least in part, by modulating RGS proteins! Honored t…
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RT @LindorffLarsen: Predicting absolute protein folding stability using generative models More details 🦋👇
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Very interesting, in @eLife: The membrane domains of mammalian adenylyl cyclases are lipid receptors
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RT @GabriCorso: Thrilled to announce Boltz-1, the first open-source and commercially available model to achieve AlphaFold3-level accuracy o…
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RT @OdedRechavi: For a PhD student, choosing a good lab is 10 times more important than choosing a particular topic to study
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RT @sokrypton: Come see the scientists that should've shared the Nobel Prize for "Computational Protein Design", speak:
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Some inside views on how and why the Baker lab works:
With David and the Baker Lab in the spotlight today, I wanted to share some insights into the @UWproteindesign and how it operates, a glimpse behind the curtain. I had planned to write this post-graduation, but now seems as good a time as any. (Got twitter blue free trial so this could all fit in less tweets!) First, the lab is enormous. ~60 grad students, ~60 postdocs, a handful of visitors, undergrads, and a surrounding institution of another 150 or so. Collaboration is strongly encouraged (even mandated) by David, who sets up pro-collaboration incentives. Notably, he's fine with grad students graduating without a sole first-author paper—it's acceptable to "only" have worked as a co-first author. This is a key ingredient in the secret sauce: the tight collaboration between wet lab and dry lab. It ensures that all our work is ultimately grounded in strong wet-lab validation—our "oracle" is the real world, not another computational model. While we have regular meetings for different subgroups and the entire group, much information travels through the lab via informal one-on-one interactions. In some ways, it reminds me of a classic "tribe of humans in the state of nature"—100-200 people with no clear hierarchy, passing information via "gossip". It’s maybe not the most complete way of ensuring everyone is on the same page, but saves time as we aren’t drowning in endless meetings. Does David stay in touch with all these grad students and post-docs? Remarkably, yes. Unlike some very large labs known for being run entirely by post-docs, he knows exactly what everyone is working on and the stage of their projects. Each member has monthly one-on-ones with him, and monthly subgroup meetings that David attends. If he suggests you try something at your previous one-on-one, you'd better have it done by the next. Does he actually contribute research ideas, or is he more of a detached big-picture project manager? Definitely the former. He understands the intricacies of a shocking range of topics. I'll be discussing some arcane deep learning concept with him, and then he'll turn around and talk to someone about the details of a catalytic mechanism. He's actually the most hands-on PI I've ever had—if anything, he verges on over-managing rather than being too detached. How does he keep track of everything? Partly, he's just a brilliant person with exceptional recall. But he has also built infrastructure above and below him in the lab to handle many of the details, bureaucracy, big picture, and management tasks. This allows him to spend most of his day doing what he's most passionate about and skilled at: walking around talking to people about science. He also lives very much in the moment and in his own words, “never thinks very far ahead". To keep up with tools, methods, and wet lab techniques, he does the occasional project and design campaign himself on the side when time allows. It's still a tremendous cognitive load to keep all this in his head, but as much as possible, he has offloaded non-scientific cognitive burdens. It helps that he’s in the lab in person most days of the year, rarely traveling for conferences or talks, instead doing them over Zoom or not attending. (1/2).
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RT @NobelPrize: This year’s chemistry laureates Demis Hassabis and John Jumper have developed an AI model, AlphaFold2, to solve a 50-year-o…
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RT @NobelPrize: The 2024 #NobelPrize laureates in chemistry Demis Hassabis and John Jumper have successfully utilised artificial intelligen…
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RT @NobelPrize: BREAKING NEWS The 2024 #NobelPrize in Physiology or Medicine has been awarded to Victor Ambros and Gary Ruvkun for the disc…
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