BMS graduate student Terren Niethamer presented her exit seminar to complete her Ph.D requirements! Terren joined the Bush lab in 2014 and accomplished a tremendous amount in her time in the lab. Amongst her achievements, was establishment of the first hiPSC model of a human craniofacial syndrome. She then focused on understanding ephrin-B1 signaling mechanisms in development and craniofrontonasal syndrome by combining mouse genetic models and hiPSC approaches. She published a first-author Stem Cell Reports paper, a first-author PLOS Genetics paper, a second author JCB paper, a second-author Developmental Dynamics paper, and a first-author review in Developmental Biology. She goes on to a post-doctoral position in the lab of Edward Morrisey at PENN.