Grad student Kanchaka's TBBPA paper was recently published in Comparitive Biochemistry and Physiology, Part C- Toxicology and Pharmacology. Read the paper here
Ferdous wins this prestigious award for 2025, awarded to a Clemson Environmental Toxicology PhD student for their excellence in research
We attended the Society of Toxicology Meeting, where multiple lab members presented. Ferdous won a Platform presentation award from SESOT and a Graduate student award from MSBSS
Sunil's work on developmental effects of PPAR gamma inhibitor GW-9662 published in Comparitive Biochemistry and Physiology, Part C- Toxicology and Pharmacology. Read the paper here
Sunil's work on IPP developmental toxicity published in Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety! Read the paper here
A book chapter on zebrafish screening and a mini-review paper on DNA methylation effects of flame retardants, both led by Sunil, were published this month.
The lab had a stellar time at Southeastern SOT. Ferdous and Kanchaka attended, and Ferdous won the Best Platform 2nd place award!!!! Qudos!
Rose's work on TBBPA and maternal to zygotic transition is now published in Journal of Hazardous Materials! Congrats to all authors! Read the paper here.
The Dasgupta Lab had a fantastic time at the Birth Defects Research and Prevention (BDRP) conference in Pittsburgh. Sunil and Kanchaka's talks and Ferdous' poster were all well appreciated!
We have been awarded an NIEHS R03 grant to work on chromatin remodeling effects during zygotic genome activation on developmental exposures to TBBPA!
Sunil and Kanchaka's abstracts get selected for the platform presentations, while Ferdous' gets selected as a poster for the Annual BDRP (Birth Defects Research and Preventation) Conference. Plus- all of them got travel awards! See everyone in Pittsburgh this June!!
Postdoc Sunil Sharma received 2 awards- one for Best Poster at the Southeastern SOT last Fall (2nd position) and the other as Best Abstract (3rd position) from the Molecular and Systems Biology Specialty Section. Congrats!!!
We received a 2-year Pilot Project grant from Clemson's Center for Human Genetics to study chemically-induced disruption of maternal-to-zygotic transition in zebrafish