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Illinois researchers are first to count growth factors in single cells

Laura Schmitt

Whether healthy or diseased, human cells exhibit behaviors and processes that are largely dictated by growth factor molecules, which bind to receptors on the cells. For example…

Launch of new Center for Genomics in Business and Society at IGB

Emily Scott

The Carl R. Woese Institute for Genomic Biology (IGB) is excited to announce the launch of the Catherine and Don Kleinmuntz Center for Genomics in Business and Society, which…

Bees and Beekeeping Short Course


Bees and Beekeeping Short Course at the University of Illinois - May 21st, 2022 Registration Instructions

You can register for the short course by following this link.

In responding to predation risk, secondhand experience can be as good as new

Claudia Lutz

Throughout the living world, parents have many ways of gifting their offspring with information they will need to help them survive. A new study in Nature Ecology and Evolution…

In microbe populations, bioengineers find balance of opposing genomic forces

Claudia Lutz

Sergei Maslov, a professor of bioengineering and physics at the University of Illinois, sees a “universe in a grain of sand.” His research seeks to explore that universe by…

A new way to do metabolic engineering

Emily Scott

A novel method developed by a group of IGB researchers could change the way metabolic engineering is done.

Researchers from the IGB’s Biosystems Design theme, including…

Cancer drug starts clinical trials in human brain-cancer patients

Diana Yates

A drug that spurs cancer cells to self-destruct has been cleared for use in a clinical trial of patients with anaplastic astrocytoma, a rare malignant brain tumor, and…

Light green plants save nitrogen without sacrificing photosynthetic efficiency

Claire Benjamin

The top leaves of crops absorb far more light than they can use, starving lower leaves of light. Scientists designed plants with light green leaves with hopes of allowing more…

Theory: Flexibility is at the heart of human intelligence

Diana Yates

Centuries of study have yielded many theories about how the brain gives rise to human intelligence. Some neuroscientists think intelligence springs from a single region or…