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Join us for The Enduring Legacy of Sol Spiegelman


In honor of University of Illinois microbiologist Sol Spiegelman and his work with recombinant DNA technology, the Carl R.

Researchers awarded NSF grant to fund 3D bioprinter

Emily Scott

A team of researchers from the IGB’s Regenerative Biology and Tissue Engineering (RBTE) theme was a

Researchers discover unique property of critical methane-producing enzyme

Emily Scott

An unexpected discovery has given scientists a greater understanding of an important methane-producing enzyme.

The time is RIPE to transform agriculture and feed the world

Claire Benjamin

University of Illinois receives grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, FFAR, and DFID to catalyze photosynthetic improvements, increase yields for farmers world

Airlines could fly thousands of miles on biofuel from new promising feedstock

Claire Benjamin

A Boeing 747 burns one gallon of jet fuel each second.

Researchers use computation and genomics to battle tooth decay

Laura Schmitt

An expert in using computational and experimental techniques to combat infectious diseases, Illinois Bioengineering faculty and MMG member

Seeing Emergent Physics Behind Evolution

Jordana Cepelewicz

Quanta magazine recently interviewed Swanlund Professor of Physics and leader of IGB's Biocomplexity research theme, Nigel Gold

Scientists discover spring-loaded mechanism in unusual species of trap-jaw ant

Diana Yates

Researchers reveal how a group of trap-jaw ants can snap their jaws shut at speeds of up to 50 miles per hour – just fast enough to capture their elusive prey.

NSF awards Illinois $3M for interdisciplinary graduate student training

Samantha Jones Toal

The National Science Foundation recently granted the University of Illinois $3 million for an interdisciplinary graduate student training program to help form new insight on the

Workshop “bridges” empirical, theoretical understandings of climate and crop yield

Claudia Lutz.

The societal stakes for assessing climate change impacts on agriculture and food supply are incredibly high.

Combating antiviral drug resistance with dynamic therapeutics

Emily Scott

Antiviral drug resistance has long been a problem in modern society.

Slowing dangerous bacteria may be more effective than killing them

Steph Adams

Researchers at the University of Illinois have discovered a mechanism that allows bacteria of the same species to communicate when their survival is threatened.