Two DBBS graduate students - Maria Sorkin (Nusinow lab, Plant & Microbial Biosciences Program) and Kari Miller (First-year, Plant & Microbial Biosciences Program), current undergraduate Alison Greenlaw (Zaher lab), and past undergraduate Greg Harrison (former Kunkel lab and current Molecular Microbiology student in the Stallings lab) received NSF Fellowships that provide three years of annual support for graduate studies.
in the news:
![Daily rhythms depend on receptor density in biological clock](https://biology.wustl.edu/files/biology/styles/blog_thumbnail/public/People/Biology_Granados-Fuentes_D-1333673.jpg?itok=y-WMfksH)
Daily rhythms depend on receptor density in biological clock
![Micro-naps in the brain: Some regions sleep while others stay awake](https://biology.wustl.edu/files/biology/styles/blog_thumbnail/public/People/Hengen%2C%20Keith.jpg?itok=J2Q-0xHs)
Micro-naps in the brain: Some regions sleep while others stay awake
![Plant diseases flourish in city landscapes](https://biology.wustl.edu/files/biology/styles/blog_thumbnail/public/People/Biology_Penczykowski_R-1333709.jpg?itok=xyNmA5Wq)
Plant diseases flourish in city landscapes
![Scientists find that small regions of the brain can take micro-naps while the rest of the brain is awake and vice versa](https://biology.wustl.edu/files/biology/styles/blog_thumbnail/public/180124_jwb_keith_hengen_lab_022.jpg?itok=mB3IP2oY)
Scientists find that small regions of the brain can take micro-naps while the rest of the brain is awake and vice versa
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