The Environmental Toxicology Graduate Student Association is hosting an outreach event on Tuesday, Jan. 20 from 5 to 6:30 pm at the Student Recreation Center for K-12 students. The event is entitled Tox Squad and will engage the students in solving a toxic mystery. We hope it is an enjoyable success. [The screenshot above is from an ETOX miniGSA Instagram post.]
Monday, January 19, 2026
Saturday, January 10, 2026
New Type of DNA Adduct found in Mitochondrial DNA
A new study led by Linlin Zhao, Professor of Chemistry and Director of the ETOX program, that also involved Professors Yinsheng Wang and Chia-En Chang, two other ETOX faculty members and other students and collaborators, identified a previously unknown type of DNA damage within the mitochondria. It is believed that the newly identified glutathionylated DNA adducts may provide insights into how our bodies sense and respond to stress. The study was recently published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences and was spotlighted in a UCR News article. This work builds upon earlier work conducted by an earlier ETOX graduate student Jiakei Yin and his advisor Yinsheng Wang in which they had identified GSH-DNA adducts in nuclear DNA. Our congratulations to Linlin, Yinsheng, Chia-En and their collaborators for this important research advance. [The figures above are from their PNAS article.]
Monday, January 5, 2026
Professor Zhou and Colleagues Identify Important RNA Molecule Involved in Cardiovascular Health
A research team led by Chengchang Zhou, Professor of Biomedical Sciences and an ETOX faculty member has identified a small transfer RNA-derived RNA that plays a major role in controlling cholesterol production within the body and likely plays a role in the development of heart disease. Their work was recently published in the journal Nature Communications as was the focus of a recent UCR News article. As described in in a , "the molecule, named tsRNA-Glu-CTC, could be a potential new target for future therapies aimed at lowering high cholesterol." Our congratulations to Chengchang and his colleagues for this important discovery which may open new therapeutic avenues understanding and treating cardio metabolic diseases. [The figure above is from their Nature Communications article.]



