Lead researcher Aydogan Ozcan, Howard hughes medical institute chancellor professor at UCLA, sat down with Bioscience Technology to talk about this advancement and its implications for resource-poor labs,
Besant and his team, including his supervisor Professor Shana Kelley of the Institute for Biomaterials & Biomedical engineering and the Faculties of Pharmacy and Medicine,
and Professor Ted Sargent of The Edward S. Rogers Sr. Department of Electrical & Computer engineering, drew on their collective expertise in electrical
says Professor Sargent. e see this as an effective tool for faster diagnosis and treatment of commonplace bacterial infections.
Ph d.,professor and chair of UCSF Department of Physiology. Julius collaborated with Yifan Cheng, Ph d.,associate professor of biochemistry and biophysics,
and design, said David Agard, Ph d.,professor of biophysics and biochemistry and a Howard hughes medical institute (HHMI) investigator,
a UCLA professor of bioengineering and chemistry who is affiliated with CNSI, the multidisciplinary team also included Michel Gilliet of Switzerland Lausanne University Hospital and Jure Dobnikar and Daan Frenkel of the University of Cambridge.
said lead author Jill Banfield, a professor of earth and planetary science and of environmental science, policy and management. hese new groups of bacteria and Archaea are changing our understanding of the number and arrangement of branches on the tree of life.
a professor in Salk Molecular and Cell biology Laboratory and senior author of the new paper. hope people start to accept
biocompatible materials, said co-senior author Zhen Gu, Ph d.,a professor in the Joint UNC/NC State department of Biomedical engineering.
and is now a postdoctoral fellow in the lab of Professor Aaron Wheeler. Ng and his team's method allows the scientists to deliver a quick-fire sequence of chemicals to small groups of cells stuck to the surface of the board.
said principal investigator Arturo Alvarez-Buylla, Ph d.,UCSF professor of neurological surgery, Heather and Melanie Muss Endowed Chair and a principal investigator in the UCSF Brain tumor Research center and the Eli and Edythe Broad Center of Regeneration Medicine and Stem Cell Research. t may be unwelcome
Invented by Microchips Biotech cofounders Michael Cima, the David H. Koch Professor of Engineering, and Robert Langer, the David H. Koch Institute Professor, the microchips consist of hundreds of pinhead-sized reservoirs,
each capped with a metal membrane, that store tiny doses of therapeutics or chemicals. An electric current delivered by the device removes the membrane,
. E. P. Taylor Professor of Pain Studies at Mcgill University and Director of the Alan Edwards Centre for Research on Pain. he realization that the biological basis for pain between men and women
said Michael Salter, M d.,Ph d.,Head and Senior Scientist, Neuroscience & Mental health at Sickkids and Professor at The University of Toronto,
The array has been optimized in collaboration with Professor Jacqueline Schoumans from the Lausanne University Hospital in Switzerland, an expert in both acgh and cancer genomics.
because theye so hard to study, said Tony Hunter, American Cancer Society Professor, holder of the Dulbecco Chair in the Salk Molecular and Cell biology Laboratory and senior author of the new paper.
who also is a professor of microbiology, immunology and molecular genetics and a director of the signal transduction and therapeutics program at the Jonsson Cancer Center. his demonstrates the effectiveness of our treatment
who also is distinguished a UCLA professor of chemistry and biochemistry and a pioneer in the design and synthesis of multifunctional mesoporous silica nanoparticles u
a professor of biological engineering at MIT. e wanted to work with strains like B. thetaiotaomicron that are present in many people in abundant levels,
said Kevin Healy, a UC Berkeley professor of bioengineering, who is co-senior author of the study with Dr. Bruce Conklin,
a senior investigator at the Gladstone Institute of Cardiovascular disease and a professor of medical genetics and cellular and molecular pharmacology at UC San francisco. his technology could help us quickly screen for drugs likely to generate cardiac birth defects,
. the Gary Jobson Professor in Medical Oncology at the University of Maryland School of medicine. ur findings provide a strong foundation for further research in the field of cellular immunotherapy for myeloma to help achieve even better
vice president for medical affairs at the University of Maryland and the John Z. and Akiko K. Bowers Distinguished Professor and dean of the University of Maryland School of medicine. his trial is also an excellent example of significant
. professor in Microbiology-Immunology and Medicine-Infectious disease. hese findings lay the foundation for future studies to further understand the mechanisms for how the escape to the bloodstream occurs.
Morgan Alexander, professor of biomedical surfaces in the School of Pharmacy at the University of Nottingham
professor of stem cell biology in the School of medicine led the research project, iscovery of a Novel Polymer for Human Pluripotent Stem Cell Expansion and Multilineage Differentiation. he possibilities for regenerative medicine are still being reached in the form of clinical trials,
Professor Denning said: he field of regenerative medicine has snowballed in the last five years and over the coming five years a lot more patients will be receiving stem cell treatments.
said Stephen Beverley, Ph d.,senior author of one of the studies and the Marvin A. Brennecke Professor and head of the Department of Molecular Microbiology at Washington University School of medicine in St louis. n the future,
a genomics professor who's using an iphone app to study asthma at New york's Icahn School of medicine at Mount sinai."
and Jonathan Weissman, Ph d.,professor of cellular and molecular pharmacology at UCSF and a Howard hughes medical institute (HHMI) investigator.
Doudna, professor of chemistry and of cell and molecular biology at Berkeley, and an HHMI investigator,
said Professor Millán. Shared control between human and machine The brain-machine interface developed by the researchers goes even further.
Too soon to say, according to Professor Millán . or this to happen, insurance companies will have to help finance these technologies. ey,
r Royle and Professor Ian Prior at the University of Liverpool have made significant inroads into our understanding of the way in
Our specially selected scientific committee includes some of the UK leading professors, award-winning scientists and pioneering professionals.
one of the authors of the study and Professor of Biotechnology and Therapeutics at the Graduate school of Pharmaceutical Sciences at Osaka University. ecause the new patch is so easy to use,
developed by Professor Rebecca Fitzgerald at the Medical Research Council Cancer Unit at the University of Cambridge. he trouble with Barrett oesophagus is that it looks bland
explains Professor Fitzgerald. e created a map of mutations in a patient with the condition
Professor Fitzgerald and colleagues carried out whole genome sequencing to analyse paired Barrett oesophagus and oesophageal cancer samples taken at one point in time from 23 patients,
along with Dino Di Carlo, professor of bioengineering, and Omai Garner, associate director of clinical microbiology for the UCLA Health System.
who is also Chancellor Professor of Electrical engineering and Bioengineering. his mobile platform can be used for point-of-care testing,
a professor in the George W. Woodruff School of Mechanical engineering at Georgia Tech. nstead of filling the tube with a rate of liquid penetration that slows with time,
the research team included Professor Vladimir Tsukruk from the Georgia Tech School of Materials science and engineering and Rajesh Naik, Biotechnology Lead and Tech Advisor of the Nanostructured and Biological Materials Branch
Researchers said that the breakthrough could lead to the development of a vaccine that can fight all new influenza viruses. Professor Xu,
Professor Elizabeth Hartland, head of the department of Microbiology and Immunology at the University of Melbourne added that the international collaboration has brought together the immunological expertise in Melbourne
"The company also announced the appointment of Professor Pierce Chow as chairman to lead primary liver cancer-hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC)- Scientific Advisory board d
and in some cases even more effective,"said Professor Nakagawa, one of the authors of the Osaka University study.
or building blocks for peptide drugs, explains Jin-Quan Yu, chemistry professor at The Scripps Research Institute (TSRI),
#Biodiesel production from Sugarcane A multi-institutional team led by plant biology professor Stephen P. Long from the University of Illinois reports that it can increase sugarcane's geographic range boost its photosynthetic rate by 30 percent
"says the university of Calgary professor. While the Devines have taken the plunge and transformed the way they watch TV,
"says professor Taylor r
#Smartphones tested as tools for medical research Jody Kearns doesn't like to spend time obsessing about her Parkinson's disease.
and agriculture--for controlled delivery and release but this is one of the first demonstrations of this approach for controlled capture says Jennifer A. Lewis the Hansj rg Wyss Professor of Biologically Inspired Engineering at the Harvard School of engineering
and cheap to make says Stuart Haszeldine professor of carbon capture and storage at the University of Edinburgh who was involved not in the research.
"said Chunlei Guo, professor of optics in the University of Rochester Hajim School of engineering and Applied sciences.
"said UMD professor of computer science and director of the UMIACS Computer Vision Lab Yiannis Aloimonos."
and this is expected to build on work by an MIT professor who is currently developing'liquid armour'.
'Professor Gareth Mckinley has been working on his technology for 12 years, which is focused on the flow of unusual materials.
PROFESSOR XAVIER-MIND CONTROLAND just like Professor X in X men, it is already possible to control objects with the mind.
a CMU research professor of robotics and leader of the Tartan Rescue Team.''We are making steady progress,
a professor of catalysis, explained: e took inspiration from the human body. e've not evolved to withstand any damage
Professor wass added: e're definitely getting to the stage where in the next five or 10 years we're going to see things like mobile phone screens that can heal themselves
James Hone, professor of mechanical engineering at Columbia University said:''We've created what is essentially the world's thinnest light bulb.'
Professor Jill Banfield, an environmental scientist at the University of California in Berkeley who led the work
Professor Banfield and her colleagues sequenced the genomes of organisms found in ground water at a site beside the Colorado river in Rifle Colorado.
Professor Banfield and her colleagues found the new bacteria they discovered appear to use a simple process of fermentation to make the energy they need.
'said Professor Debashis Chanda of the University of Central Florida, who developed the technique for creating the world's first full-color,
'said Ian Graham, a professor at the University of York, who worked on the latest gene discovery.
'says Dr. Barbara Sherman, a clinical professor of behavioural medicine. Much of the technology comes off the shelf
a clinical professor of animal behavior at the NC State College of Veterinary medicine and co-author of the paper. t
'said Kevin Healy, a UC Berkeley professor of bioengineering, who is co-senior author of the study with Dr. Bruce Conklin, a senior investigator at the Gladstone Institute of Cardiovascular disease and a professor of medical genetics and cellular and molecular pharmacology at UC San francisco.'
'This technology could help us quickly screen for drugs likely to generate cardiac birth defects, and guide decisions about
Professor Paulo Stanga, consultant ophthalmologist at the Manchester Royal Eye Hospital, said: r Flynn progress is truly remarkable.
Professor Stanga said he hopes the system, developed by US firm Second sight Medical Products, might be used for patients with other vision problems.
Martin Tajmar, professor and chair for Space Systems at the Dresden University of Technology, presented his work at the American Institute for Aeronautics and Astronautics'Propulsion and Energy Forum in Orlando yesterday.
Professor Axel van de Walle, an engineer at Brown University, Rhode island, who led the research,
They worked out its melting point would be 474°C higher than Hf-Ta-C. Professor van de Walle and Dr Qijun Hong,
Professor van de Walle added: Melting point isn't the only property that's important in material applications.'
George Church, a genetics professor at Harvard Medical school oversaw one of the studies that was published Wednesday in the journal Nature,
for example, said Caltec professor Richard Andersen. o in this trial, we were able to decode these actual intents,
Professor Tilak Dias of the Advanced Textiles Research Group of the School of art & Design, claims that the embedded chips annot be seen in situ by the naked eye He has patented the technology,
Professor Dias writes: f an RFID chip is embedded into a shirt, for instance, it will provide a much greater level of anti-theft
said Professor Dias. Professor Dias also believes that in the distant future this technology could be used in conjunction with smart washing machines to warn consumers of mixed colours or inappropriate temperatures.
Research fellow Anura Rathnayake who is involved with the project, added: n the long run this technology could be of tremendous benefit to charitable organisations
and characterized by a group headed by professor Zhou and Dr Liu at the Department of Electrical engineering at USC.
says professor Tom Nilges, head of the research group for SCIM. With an arsenic concentration of 83%the material exhibits an extremely small band gap of only 0. 15 electron volts
Research team leader Johan Liu, professor at Chalmers University of Technology, writes: The stronger bonds result from so-called functionalisation of the graphene,
and characterized by a group headed by professor Zhou and Dr Liu at the Department of Electrical engineering at USC.
says professor Tom Nilges, head of the research group for SCIM. With an arsenic concentration of 83%the material exhibits an extremely small band gap of only 0. 15 electron volts
Research team leader Johan Liu, professor at Chalmers University of Technology, writes: ut the methods that have been in place so far have presented the researchers with problems
That was close to 20 years ago. y advisor, professor Dennis Shasha, who knew a lot more about this than I did looked,
It not just people on the street, Christian says. t also true for a lot of the people at the very places developing these technologies. hristian cites the example of Stuart Russell, a professor of computer science at the University of California, Berkeley,
Professor Martin Cowie is a Cardiologist ith some patients it very tricky to get the balance right.
said professor Hele Savin from Aalto University, who coordinated the study, in a statement. e have demonstrated that in winter Helsinki,
Toyohashi University professor Ryosuke Tasaki says, n ongoing daily effort to incorporate high-tech robotics into our activities will be the best way to realize life in our future society. arlier this year,
but Cockrell School of engineering (University of Texas-Austin) researchers, led by mechanical engineering professor Dr. Carolyn Conner Seepersad
The idea is credited to Germany Karlsruhe Institute of technology professor Dr. Martin Wegener who first dabbled into cloaking before he stumbled upon negative stiffness honeycombs last year.
after taking a course in artificial intelligence supervised by Professor Shaul Markovich, of the Technion Faculty of Computer science.
A team led by professor Johan Liu from Chalmers University had shown earlier that graphene can have a cooling effect on silicon-based electronics
and in all directions up to half a metre away from the power source, said lead researcher professor Chun T. Rim.
said Professor Pieter Abbeel of UC Berkeley Department of Electrical engineering and Computer sciences, in a statement from the university. he key is that
a professor of catalysis at England University of Bristol who led the technology development, tells me that
But Professor Wass adds: he devil is in the detail and they would need to check that it doesn adversely effect other properties.
Professor Wass explains. arbon fiber composites have been used widely in Formula one and performance cars for many years,
Professor Wass notes. t the consumer end of the market that could be sports equipment, bike frames, and so on.
Sir Fraser Stoddart, Northwestern University professor and senior author of the research, said in a press release. ur inks are similar to the proprietary formulations of soft drinks.
maybe even in mid-air, explained GHOST Coordinator and University of Copenhagen Professor Kasper Hornbaek, in a statement. hrough ultrasound levitation technology, for example,
which change shape as you are using them are probably only five years off now, noted Professor Hornbaek,
lead analyst Leif Andersson, a professor of functional genomics at Uppsala University, the Swedish University of Agricultural sciences, said in a press release.
Supporting Andersson in the study, among others, was Peter Grant and his wife Rosemary, both professors at Princeton university.
a professor of optics at Rochester, explained in a recent news release. These laser treated surfaces are highly absorbent of heat
with application opportunities not only in the brain but in other parts of the nervous system and other organs as well, says the study other co-principal investigator, John A. Rogers, professor of materials science and engineering at the University of Illinois. For now,
says Stephanie Lanza, professor of biobehavioral health, and scientific director of the Methodology Center at Penn State. owever, we were surprised to find the very clear message that kids are choosing marijuana over cigarettes.
Mirkin is professor of chemistry in the Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences and professor of medicine, chemical and biological engineering, biomedical engineering and materials science and engineering.
professor of biomedical surfaces at University of Nottingham. hat we are doing here is paving the way for the manufacture of stem cells in large numbers
professor of stem cell biology. linical trials are still in the very early stages. However with this kind of product,
a professor of Cornell entomology and a coauthor of the study in Pest Management Science. his is an insecticide that is based on a specific gene.
a new class of microbial signaling molecules, says Pamela Ronald, a professor of plant pathology at University of California, Davis,
A research team led by ETH Zurich Professor Dimos Poulikakos and Aldo Ferrari at the Laboratory of Thermodynamics in Emerging Technologies, has succeeded now in creating bacterial cellulose with a controlled surface structure.
a professor of food and nutrition toxicology at ETH Zurich, has succeeded for the first time in amplifying gene samples containing DNA ADDUCTS
a professor of orthopedic surgery at the University of Missouri School of medicine. he benefit to patients is that more graft material will be available
says medical entomologist Gregory Lanzaro, professor in the pathology, microbiology and immunology department at University of California,
professor of psychiatry at University of Iowa. o it really providing a new picture and new insight into the composition and function of the brain in bipolar disease.
or even tissue death. any diseases result in inflammation, says Samir Mitragotri, professor of chemical engineering at University of California, Santa barbara,
a professor and chair of neuroscience at Brown University and senior author of the study. oo much excitation relative to inhibition you get a seizure,
says Guo, a professor of optics. That whole process takes less than a second. MORE SLIPPERY THAN TEFLON The materials Guo has created are much more slippery than Teflon common hydrophobic material that often coats nonstick frying pans.
Ding Xue, Ph d.,a professor in the department of molecular, cellular, and developmental biology at CU-Boulder.
Jerry W. Shay, Ph d.,professor and vice chairman of cell biology at UT Southwestern, and colleague, Woodring E. Wright, M d.,Ph d.,professor of cell biology and internal medicine, found that 6-thio-2'-deoxyguanosine could stop the growth of cancer cells in culture and decrease the growth of tumors in mice.
Drs. Shay and Wright are co-senior authors of the study nduction of Telomere Dysfunction Mediated by the Telomerase Substrate Precursor 6-Thio-2deoxyguanosineappearing in Cancer Discovery. reatment with 6-thio
professor of medicine and leader of the YODA Project. e hope this action serves as a catalyst to others to join the momentum on open science.
"said senior author Mehmet Toner, Ph d.,professor of surgery and health sciences and technology at Harvard Medical school,
Ph d.,study co-author and the Georgia Power Professor of Polymers, Fibers and Textiles in UGA's college of family and consumer sciences."
"explained co-author Dr. Joseph Ready, Ph d.,professor of biochemistry and member of the Simmons Cancer Center at UT Southwestern Medical center.
founding director of the Icahn Institute and professor of genomics at the Icahn School of medicine at Mount sinai. he approach we developed can also be used to analyze DNA VIRUSES and human MITOCHONDRIAL DNA,
. Purdue's Walther Professor of Cancer Structural biology and professor of biological sciences and chemistry who leads the research team."
"said Reuben Shaw, a senior author of the paper, professor in the Molecular and Cell biology Laboratory at the Salk Institute and a Howard hughes medical institute Early Career Scientist."
particularly in light of the huge disease burden of malaria,"explained senior author Manoj Duraisingh, Ph d.,professor of Immunology and Infectious diseases at the T. H. Chan School of Public health."
With co-author and UW associate biology professor Jennifer Nemhauser, Ph d, . the UW team figured out how to make a sender yeast cell produce auxin,
. professor of molecular and cellular oncology at MD Anderson Cancer Center. ut exactly how this occurs has not been understood fully.
senior author Luke Lee Ph d.,professor of bioengineering at UCLA, Berkeley.""It is done usually in a lab
"says UOW's Global Challenges, Manufacturing Innovation Leader, Professor Geoffrey Spinks.""We can see many applications moving forward with areas like custom-made instruments for people with physical restrictions,
"said James Hone, Professor of Mechanical engineering at Columbia.""This new type of'broadband'light emitter can be integrated into chips
or catalysis."said Professor Hone. The results of this research were published recently in the journal Nature Nanotechnology.
and at a distance of up to 0. 5 meters (1. 6 ft). Led by Professor Chun T. Rim,
"says Babak Ziaie, professor of electrical and computer engineering at Purdue. The research team says the capsule could prove particularly valuable in treating Clostridium difficile,
professor of materials science and engineering at the University of Illinois. The research was published in the journal Cell l
so the University of Cambridge's Professor Rebecca Fitzgerald and her team have developed what they claim to be a more accurate tool for early-diagnosis. Billed as"a pill on a string,
a professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering, was created originally as a strong, lightweight material for military and transportation applications,
"said Fiorenzo Omenetto, Ph d.,the Frank C. Doble Professor of Engineering at Tufts School of engineering. The researchers doped the silk ink base with different bio-compounds to create a set of functional,
Professor Hubert Egger from the University of Linz recently unveiled research which enables patients to actually feel the bottom of their artificial feet.
Back then, cofounder and Massachusetts institute of technology professor Yet-Ming Chiang described a lean sheet of paperapproach, combining concepts from flow batteries and fuel cells,
During 24m early days, Chiang and startup cofounder and fellow MIT professor W. Craig Carter saw its semisolid electrode material--dubbed ambridge crudefor its MIT roots--as a material to be used in flow batteries,
Wang Fon-Jen Professor of Mechanical engineering at Columbia Engineering and co-author of the study. his new type of roadbandlight emitter can be integrated into chips
Yun Daniel Park, professor in the department of physics and astronomy at Seoul National University and co-lead author,
Professor Duncan wass said he expected self-healing products to reach consumers in the ery near future
Professor Wass and his team have been working with aerospace engineers at the university, who wanted to know
Professor wass said. ee not evolved to withstand any damage if we were like that we have a skin as thick as a rhinoceros
Professor wass said. The technology could also make airline safety checks far cheaper as a dye could be added to the healing agent causing any damage to an aircraft to stand out like a bruise.
Professor wass said a bruise was a ood analogybut accepted that the dye would need to be tweaked to cater for nervous fliers. e probably do it with something
Professor wass said. The research was funded by the Engineering and Physical sciences Research Council UK Catalysis Hub, a collaborative project between universities and industry.
The BMW i8 electric sports car has a carbon fibre passenger compartment to make up for the weight of its heavy battery Professor Richard Catlow of the University of London,
but Professor wass said the general principle would remain the same. ee definitely getting to the stage where in the next five
as they are damaged often by bird strikes (AFP/Getty) Professor Wass team at the University of Bristol has been focusing on the creation of self-healing versions of carbon fibre composite materials,
and growth of new tissue, explained professor Dietmar W. Hutmacher, one of the lead researchers. t allows us to more closely imitate nature way of building joint cartilage,
a professor of aeronautics and astronautics at MIT and leader of the Model-based Embedded and Robotic Systems (MERS) group,
and it's application said Andrey Kuzmin professor of physics at the Institute for Lasers Photonics
"study co-author Yonggang Huang, a professor of mechanical engineering at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois, said in a statement."
John Mekalanos, a professor of microbiology at the Harvard Medical school who was involved not in the new research,
a professor of neuroscience at the California Institute of technology and one of the researchers who developed the new prosthesis.
Krishna Shenoy, a professor of electrical engineering who studies neural prostheses at Stanford, was enthusiastic about the new prosthesis."
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