DNA is a lot like a genetic recipe: change up the order of the ingredients, and you might get an entirely different dish. At the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, bioresearchers are cooking up some new results that better explain the effects of modifying DNA and what that means for evolution as a whole.
Read MoreTags: University of Michigan Ann Arbor, 2015, Ann Arbor, BioResearch Product Faire Event, MI, UMich
Movies like "Happy Feet" and "March of the Penguins" often remind us of how cute penguins are in the cold, Antarctic conditions where they live. These movies, however, fail to mention another species of penguin that reside in warmer climates and is slowly dying out: African penguins. Although they are on track to be extinct within the next 20 years, the Pueblo Zoo in Colorado and Colorado State University, Fort Collins recently performed cancer treatments on the oldest living African penguin in the world, ensuring that the penguin will be healthy enough to live a longer life. (Image of African penguin (not Tess) courtesy of Wikimedia Commons).
Tags: veterinary medicine, Southwest, Colorado State University, 2015, BioResearch Product Faire Event, CO, Colorado, CSUFC, CoSTU, African Penguin, radiation therapy
Polycystic Kidney Disease (PKD) is considered to be one of the most fatal genetic diseases that affects more then 500,000 people in the United States. This disease, caused by a mutation in certain genes, causes the growth of cysts on the kidneys, which lead to kidney enlargement and failure. The are currently no treatments to permanently cure or halt the progression of this disease. Current solutions for PKD are receiving either a kidney transplant or staying on dialysis for the rest of ones life, neither of which are ideal situations.
Read MoreTags: CA, new research funding, Southwest, University of California Santa Barbara, 2015, UCSB, Santa Barbara, kidney disease, Polycystic Kidney Disease
Already the nation’s leading university for medical research, UCSF continues to expand thanks to a generous and recent donation.
Tags: CA, Life Science Funding, 2015, San Francisco, SFVS, Research Funding, Biotechnology Vendor Showcase, UC San Francisco, San Francisco at Mission Bay, new medical buildings
Researchers from the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania and the Novartis Institutes for BioMedical Research have discovered a potential new method for treating brain cancer using specially engineered immune cells.
According to a university press release, personalized immune cells were engineered by UPenn scientists in order to seek out and attack a type of deadly brain cancer, and were found to be both safe and effective at controlling tumor growth in mice that were treated with these modified cells.
Read MoreTags: Pennsylvania, University of Pennsylvania, UPenn, cancer research, brain research, 2015, Philadelphia, BioResearch Product Faire Event, PA, NIH funding
Tags: University of Cincinnati, 2015, BioResearch Product Faire Event, Cincinnati, OH, UCinci
With the assistance of a 5-year, $10.7 million grant from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease (NIAID), researchers from the University of Maryland School of Dentistry and the University of Maryland School of Medicine will work together to study the causes, prevention, and treatment methods for 2 commons STD's: Chlamydia and Gonorrhea. This grant renews a previous 5-year, $12 million grant Baltimore researchers received to study STDs. (Image courtesy of Acroterion, via Wikimedia Commons).
Tags: Northeast, MD, 2015, Baltimore, University of Maryland, Baltimore, UMDBalt, BioResearch Product Faire Event, NIH funding, new funding, STD Research
While not necessarily always the best course of treatment, the majority of men with prostate cancer will go with radiation treatment when confronted with options for treating the potentially deadly disease. Unlike other options, including surgery and chemotherapy, radiation treatment is a relatively “outpatient” procedure - with no anesthetic needed, targeted effectiveness, and relatively few short term side effects.
Tags: CA, University of California Los Angeles, cancer research, California, LA, 2015, LAVS, UCLA, Biotechnology Vendor Showcase Event, Prostate cancer
Many people may consider leprosy to be a defunct disease from the middle ages, but for some, it is a contemporary and terrifying condition that can result in nerve and skin damage, and even the loss of fingers or toes.
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Tags: Bioresearch, infectious diseases, Colorado State University, Foothills Research Campus, 2015, BioResearch Product Faire Front Line Event, disease research, Fort Collins, CO, CSUFC
Stuttering is a potentially embarrassing, yet somewhat common affliction that affects nearly one percent of people worldwide. Characterized as a speech pattern in which people stumble, sputter and “trip over their tongue”, stuttering is one step closer to being understood thanks to researchers at UCSB.
Tags: CA, Neurobiology, 2015, BioResearch Product Faire Front Line Event, Neurology, UCSB, Santa Barbara, university bioresearch, UC Santa Barbara

