Not exact matches
2nd — Post the citations to the peer - reviewed scientific journals
where this theory was published, preferably
Science, Nature, or
Cell.
The German - born Frank, who was inducted as a AAAS fellow in 1997, is a professor of biochemistry, molecular biophysics and biological
sciences at Columbia in New York City and the Scottish - born Henderson, who has been a AAAS member since 1996, has served as director of the MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology research facility
where hundreds of scientists work on neurobiology,
cell biology and biotechnology.
I spent the next decade completing rigorous basic
science research training: completing a high school summer internship, attending the University of Maryland, Baltimore County as a Meyerhoff Scholar, and completing my Ph.D. in the Stanford immunology program,
where my work focused on the mechanisms regulating hematopoietic and leukemic stem
cells.
Now 24, he is a first - year graduate student in the department of cellular and structural biology at the University of Texas Health
Science Center in San Antonio (UTHSCSA),
where he is studying the role of oxidative damage — the wear and tear inflicted upon the
cell by toxic molecules called free radicals — in the aging process.
Douay, for his part, is not surprised it has taken more than a century for
science to get even to this point,
where the future of subbing in stem
cells for blood products still remains little more than a reverie.
After an earlier stint as a senior writer at
Science,
where she was widely known for her coverage of the Human Genome Project, Leslie returned as a deputy news editor in 2000, specializing in public health, infectious diseases, stem
cells, and ecology.
«Young students of cognitive neuroscience are lucky to be in the midst of a new era
where we have access to amazing new tools of
science for eavesdropping on the population of
cells with a superb temporal resolution,» Parvizi says.
The lab, at times, feels like a seething primordial soup of Darwinian selection,
where only the strongest survive (i.e., publish papers in
Science,
Cell, or Nature), and the weak fade into oblivion (i.e., become anorexic, turn into technical sales reps, or go to law school).
In the cases, just this last couple of elections,
where stem
cell politics, for example, has been played out in the electoral process, stem
cell research is [has] done better than the winning candidates for offices; and I think, apart from that, I think that we do have a serious problem in general education of the
sciences and that accounts for the reluctance of a large segment of the population to accept the principles of evolution and think that there is still a debate about it, which there isn't — and that's a problem we need to solve, — but I still think there is an incredible constituency for
science in this country.
But Vivek Malhotra, an American who spent 18 years at the University of California, San Diego and is now the Coordinator of the
Cell and Developmental Biology Programme at CRG and a professor at ICREA, clarifies that when it comes to enjoying the Spanish lifestyle of
science, it really is a matter of
where you go.
Dubbed DMN - Tre, the hybrid molecule stays dark until it enters a fatty, water - repellant layer in a TB bacterium's
cell wall,
where it starts to glow, researchers report online February 28 in
Science Translational Medicine.
In May 2001, the U.S. Justice Department charged two Japanese - born scientists with conspiring to «benefit a foreign government» by stealing trade secrets in the form of
cell lines and DNA samples from a laboratory at the Cleveland Clinic Foundation in Ohio,
where one had worked from 1997 to 1999 (
Science, 18 May 2001, p. 1274).
Now, a collaboration between the RIKEN Center for Integrative Medical
Science (IMS) and other institutions in Japan and Europe have found that in immune
cells, simply blocking a transcription factor that leads to differentiation is sufficient to keep
cells in a multipotent stem
cell - like state
where they can continue to proliferate and can later differentiate into various
cell types.
He received his Ph.D. in immunology at the Gulbenkian Institute of
Science in Portugal,
where he studied regulatory T
cells, working with Jocelyne Demengeot and António Coutinho.
Researchers are also creating more citizen
science projects with high entertainment value, such as EyeWire, a new online brain - mapping game
where players compete to build 3 - D neuron structures, and GeneGame, the successor to
Cell Slider.
So my field is
science and technology, so my work is circulating tumor
cells where I isolate cancer
cells from blood of patients and isolate their DNA and RNA and try to sequence them and try to device treatments for cancer treatment and therapy.
They may also be news briefings
where the SMC works with scientists to give the national media a new story on developments within
science, whether it's a report on climate change, a paper on stem
cells being published in a leading journal, or
science funding cuts in the latest budget.
«You have other countries like Israel, China, (South) Korea, Singapore
where stem
cell science is seen to be hot and commercially valuable and something
where those countries could leapfrog over European and North American
science and get ahead.»
A collaboration between
Cell Press, UCSF, and MIT, this conference brings together leading thinkers in technology, biology, and data
science for an innovative two and a half day meeting dedicated to the burgeoning research areas
where these three fields are intersecting.
Biology Bytes author Teisha Rowland is a
science writer, blogger at All Things Stem
Cell, and graduate student in molecular, cellular, and developmental biology at UCSB,
where she studies stem
cells.
Andres Villu Maricq, M.D., Ph.D., is the founding director of the Center for
Cell and Genome
Science at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City,
where he holds the James E. Talmage Presidential Endowed Chair in Biology.