Over the past 12 years, the UAB College of Arts and Sciences and the Marnix E. Heersink School of Medicine established five interdisciplinary undergraduate programs to promote STEM and biomedical ...
As a first-year student, Carter Branigan ’24 started at Lycoming knowing he belonged somewhere in the sciences, but narrowing down the field proved a bit trickier. A moment of clarity arrived when he ...
Expertise from award-winning computational biologist, human immunologist and engineer with experience from Yale, NIH, and NIAID will help advance ImmunoScape’s machine learning capabilities SAN DIEGO ...
Pixelgen's PNA delivers nanoscale spatial analysis of immune cell proteins at scale, as part of the company's Pixelgen Proxiome Kit. The technology is used by researchers looking for new avenues for ...
T cell receptors (TCRs) are fundamental to the adaptive immune system, playing a pivotal role in recognising and responding to pathogenic challenges. Generated through the process of V(D)J ...
This article explores how advanced immune imaging technologies enable real-time visualization of immune responses, improving understanding of inflammation, autoimmunity, cancer therapy outcomes, and ...
Miriam Merad, M.D., Ph.D., an esteemed immunologist at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, has been elected to the National Academy of Medicine (NAM) in recognition of her pioneering ...
In 1986, Dr. Vithal Ghanta joined the Department of Biology as an Associate Professor, making her the department’s first female tenured faculty member. In 1989, she was promoted to full professor. Dr.
When the COVID-19 pandemic struck, the Nevada State Public Health Laboratory was overwhelmed with testing. Vanessa Gutierrez ’16 (molecular microbiology and immunology), ’21 Ph.D. (cellular and ...
This four-year course is similar to BSc Cancer Biology and Immunology but will give you the opportunity to gain valuable experience in cellular and molecular medicine in commercial or government ...
People who commonly experience everyday discrimination are more likely to have higher levels of "exhausted" white blood cells, suggesting that the chronic stress of discrimination may hamper the ...