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  1. James Ferrell. Professor of Chemical and Systems Biology and of Biochemistry. james.ferrell@stanford.edu. (650) 725-0765. CCSR, Room 3155A. Website. Lab Website. Publications. MD and PhD in Chemistry (Stanford University) The Ferrell Lab is studying several biological processes, including cell cycle regulation, apoptosis, and cellular organization.

  2. James Ellsworth Ferrell (born November 3, 1955) is an American systems biologist. He is a Professor of Chemical and Systems Biology and Biochemistry at Stanford University School of Medicine . He was Chair of the Dept. of Chemical and Systems Biology from its inception in 2006 until 2011.

  3. James Ferrell is a professor at Stanford University with expertise in RNA biology and biochemistry. He has a B.A. from Williams College and an M.D. from Stanford University, and he is a member of several academic and research institutions.

  4. James Ferrell. Stanford University School of Medicine. Verified email at stanford.edu - Homepage. Systems biology cell cycle protein phosphorylation. ... ML Kim, W Do Heo, JT Jones, JW Myers, JE Ferrell, T Meyer. Current biology 15 (13), 1235-1241, 2005. 2581: 2005: Mechanisms of specificity in protein phosphorylation. JA Ubersax, JE Ferrell Jr ...

  5. Untitled Document. The Ferrell lab is working to understand the design principles of biochemical switches, timers, and oscillators, especially those that control the cell cycle. We make use of quantitative experimental approaches, modeling, and theory. * * * NEWS * * *. Mar 2024: Third paper of the month (!):

  6. 1 de ago. de 2007 · James E. Ferrell Jr. Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology 8 , 530–541 ( 2007) Cite this article. 1002 Citations. 178 Altmetric. Metrics. An Erratum to this article was published on 01 August...

  7. Dr. Ferrell's laboratory studies the mitosis and meiosis cycle. Their goal is to understand the design principles of this system, and perhaps to gain insight into the systems that drive other biological oscillations (e.g. heart beats, calcium oscillations, circadian rhythms).