Results per Page:
Family support networks are important for cancer cells, too
From the Eisenman lab, Basic Sciences Division, and the MacPherson lab, Human Biology Division
When it comes to magnesium, bacteria and yeast are bad roommates
From the Malik Lab, Basic Sciences Division
From humans, to mice, to plants: sometimes a little poison is a good thing
From The Bradley Lab, Public Health Sciences and Basic Sciences Divisions.
Cell death on a chip: new tools for a new era of cancer biology
From The Folch Lab, University of Washington Bioengineering Department and Cancer Basic Biology Program of the Cancer Consortium
¿Por qué decae nuestro sistema inmunitario con la edad? El deterioro de la arquiTECtura del timo puede ser una causa.
Del Laboratorio Dudakov, División de Ciencias Traslacionales y Terapéuticas
A misbehaving master mitochondrial regulator causes diabetes in mice
From The Hockenbery Lab, Translational Science and Therapeutics Division
Why do our immune systems wane with age? Impaired thymus archiTECture might be one culprit.
From The Dudakov Lab, Translational Science and Therapeutics Division
Let’s give these CAR(T cell)s some pedals!
From Dr. Jacob Appelbaum, Fred Hutch Clinical Research Division and Seattle Children’s Therapeutics, Seattle Children’s Hospital
Age or HLA? Helping doctors pick the best blood stem cell donors for their patients
From Drs. Rohtesh Mehta and Stephanie Lee, Clinical Research Division
The curious case of ORF8: SARS-CoV-2 evolution is about more than just spike
From the Bedford Lab, Vaccine and Infectious Disease Division
One small step for mouse, one giant leap for representative mouse models
From the Lund Lab, Vaccine and Infectious Disease Division
Benign meningiomas can’t stop YAP-ing, but aggressive subtypes are more soft-spoken
From the Holland Lab, Human Biology Division
For overlooked cholangiocarcinoma patients, there’s a light at the end of the tunnel
From the Kugel Lab, Human Biology Division
It’s fun to stay (or move) at the Y. M. C. A.
From the Bai Lab, Basic Sciences Division
When it comes to MYC, it doesn’t take much
From the Eisenman Lab, Basic Sciences Division
From combustion chemistry to cutting-edge chromatography: an interview with Dr. Phil Gafken
From the Proteomics and Metabolomics Shared Resource
Neuron-glia love triangles at single-cell resolution
From the Singhvi Lab, Basic Sciences Division
500 replication origins in the yeast genome? Try 5000!
From the Bedalov Lab, Translational Science and Therapeutics and Human Biology Divisions
For Dr. Lena Schroeder, a (microscopic) picture is worth more than a thousand words
From the Cellular Imaging Shared Resource
CAR-T cells and checkpoint inhibitors: ripping out the breaks, or hitting the turbo?
From the Turtle Lab, Clinical Research Division