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Pollen Power concludes its first online camp

Ananya Sen

The Pollen Power camp, which takes place over the summer, targets 6th-8th grade students from underrepresented populations in STEM with the goal of training them to observe thei

Some birds steal hair from living mammals

Diana Yates

Dozens of online videos document an unusual behavior among tufted titmice and their closest bird kin.

iGEM 2021: Designing better enzymes to break down plastic

Ananya Sen

Polyethylene terephthalate, or PET, is a type of plastic that is widely used for packaging food and beverages, including soft drinks, juices, and water.

$2.4M NIH grant will develop biomaterials to repair skulls, promote regeneration

Claire Benjamin

A new research project led by the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign aims to develop biomaterials that are strong, malleable, and support stem cell growth to transform skul

Should the government implement a vaccine passport system?

Phil Ciciora

Vaccine passports strike the right balance between letting life go on for those who have been vaccinated against COVID-19 while still being realistic about the ongoing public he

New approach eradicates breast cancer in mice

Diana Yates

A new approach to treating breast cancer kills 95-100% of cancer cells in mouse models of human estrogen-receptor-positive breast cancers and their metastases in bone, brain, li

How does the structure of cytolysins influence their activity?

Ananya Sen

Although Enterococcus faecalis is usually an innocuous member of the bacterial community in the human gut, it can also cause several infections, including liver disorde

New grant awarded to develop better in vivo DNA-editing techniques

Ananya Sen

The National Institutes of Health have awarded a $2.2 million grant to researchers at the Carl R. Woese Institute for Genomic Biology.

U.S. corn and soybean maladapted to climate variations, study shows

Marianne Stein

U.S. corn and soybean varieties have become increasingly heat and drought resistant as agricultural production adapts to a changing climate.

Chemical reactions break free from energy barriers using flyby trajectories

Lois Yoksoulian

A new study shows that it is possible to use mechanical force to deliberately alter chemical reactions and increase chemical selectivity – a grand challenge of the field.

Frequent COVID-19 testing key to efficient, early detection, study finds

Ananya Sen

The chance of detecting the virus that causes COVID-19 increases with more frequent testing, no matter the type of test, according to a new study.

Ting Lu jointly presented with €1 million Future Insight Prize

Huan Song

Ting Lu (BCXT/BSD/CABBI/MME), a professor of bioengineering at The Grainger Colle