Uzma Rentia

Uzma Rentia

Uzma Rentia is a third-year medical student at George Washington University. She has a background in bioinformatics techniques and has published work on ovarian cancer epigenetics, researched CAR T-cell therapies for diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma, and validated pipelines for viral genome analysis.

Articles by Uzma Rentia

A blue-gloved hand holds a red vial that will be tested for tumor markers. In the background is a lab order form with specific tumor marker tests checked off.

Decoding Cancer: How Cancer Biomarkers Aid Diagnosis and Treatment

Fluorescent microscopy image of a human body louse (appearing green) with two red ovoid shapes in its head (mCherry-expressing Yersinia pestis).

What Is Yersinia pestis and How Does It Spread?

A scientist in a lab coat analyzes data on a monitor

Introduction to Gene Ontology

Page 1 of 1 - 3 Total Items
3D illustration of a gold lipid nanoparticle with pink nucleic acid inside of it. Purple and teal spikes stick out from the lipid bilayer representing polyethylene glycol.
February 2025, Issue 1

A Nanoparticle Delivery System for Gene Therapy

A reimagined lipid vehicle for nucleic acids could overcome the limitations of current vectors.

View this Issue
Considerations for Cell-Based Assays in Immuno-Oncology Research

Considerations for Cell-Based Assays in Immuno-Oncology Research

An illustration of animal and tree silhouettes.

From Water Bears to Grizzly Bears: Unusual Animal Models

Sex Differences in Neurological Research

Sex Differences in Neurological Research

New Frontiers in Vaccine Development

New Frontiers in Vaccine Development

Products

Tecan Logo

Tecan introduces Veya: bringing digital, scalable automation to labs worldwide

Explore a Concise Guide to Optimizing Viral Transduction

A Visual Guide to Lentiviral Gene Delivery

Takara Bio
Inventia Life Science

Inventia Life Science Launches RASTRUM™ Allegro to Revolutionize High-Throughput 3D Cell Culture for Drug Discovery and Disease Research

An illustration of differently shaped viruses.

Detecting Novel Viruses Using a Comprehensive Enrichment Panel

Twist Bio