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IGB member elected to National Academy of Sciences

Lois Yoksoulian

Wilfred van der Donk (MMG), the Richard E.

K-12 Shield Playbook offers guidance for reopening schools

Liz Ahlberg Touchstone

A new resource is available to help guide teachers and school administrators as they reopen schools amid the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, assembled by researchers and experts at t

In pig brain development, nature beats nurture

Lauren Quinn

Before humans can benefit from new drug therapies and nutritional additives, scientists test their safety and efficacy in animals, typically mice and rats.

COVID-19 peaks reflect time-dependent social activity, not herd immunity

Ahmed Elbanna

Scientists at the U.S.

Ozone pollution harms maize crops, study finds

Ananya Sen

Although stratospheric ozone protects us by filtering out the sun’s ultraviolet radiation, tropospheric ozone is a harmful pollutant.

New grant awarded to study genomic privacy attitudes

Ananya Sen

The concept of genomic privacy has recently become important due to the rise of sequencing services, which can inform people about their ancestry or genetic predispositions to h

New computational models to understand colon cancer

Ananya Sen

Although the development of secondary cancerous growths, called metastasis, is the primary cause of death in most cancers, the cellular changes that drive it are poorly understo

Fast-acting, color-changing molecular probe senses when material about to fail

Lois Yoksoulian

Materials that contain special polymer molecules may someday be able to warn us when they are about to fail, researchers said.

SHIELD Illinois and SHIELD CU expand innovative COVID-19 saliva-based testing


SHIELD Illinois and SHIELD CU expand innovative COVID-19 saliva-based testing to underserved K-12 schools in Illinois through a $1.4 million grant from The Rockefeller F

Vaccine study now open for student enrollment

Lizzie Roehrs

Students at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign who have not yet been vaccinated against COVID-19 can enroll in a study to help understand the effectiveness of vaccines

Researchers hunt for drugs that keep HIV latent

Ananya Sen

When the human immunodeficiency virus infects cells, it can either exploit the cells to start making more copies of itself or remain dormant—a phenomenon called latency.

Microscope that detects individual viruses could power rapid diagnostics

Liz Ahlberg Touchstone

A fast, low-cost technique to see and count viruses or proteins from a sample in real time, without any chemicals or dyes, could underpin a new class of devices for rapid diagno