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Damaged liver cells undergo reprogramming to regenerate

Steph Adams

In Greek mythology, Zeus punishes the trickster Prometheus by chaining him to a rock and sending an eagle to eat a portion of his liver every day, in perpetuity. It was the…

Author David Quammen to speak about new book featuring Carl Woese

Jodi Heckel

Science writer David Quammen will be at the University of Illinois to speak about his most recent book that features prominently the revolutionary work of microbiologist Carl R…

Scientists search for coral’s new home

Emily Scott

Coral reefs have long faced problems like overfishing, global warming and pollution — but they’re also threatened by how slow they regenerate.

To reproduce, coral…

Researchers develop microbubble scrubber to destroy dangerous biofilms

Lois Yoksoulian

Stiff microbial films often coat medical devices, household items and infrastructure such as the inside of water supply pipes, and can lead to dangerous infections. Researchers…

$5M DOE Grant for Energy Crops Study

Institute for Sustainability, Energy, and Environment

An Illinois Crop Scientist will lead a team of researchers on a five-year study of new crops that could contribute to the production of affordable, sustainable sources for…

Harnessing microbial communities’ division of labor for biofuel, chemical production

Emily Scott

Much like human society, microbial communities have a division of labor. In these complex groups of microorganisms, different microbes are responsible for different tasks, such…

Kidney stones have distinct geological histories

Diana Yates

A geologist, a microscopist and a doctor walk into a lab and, with their colleagues from across the nation, make a discovery that overturns centuries of thought about the…

Unusual biosynthetic pathway offers a key to future natural product discovery

Cluadia Lutz

Bacteria are master engineers of small, biologically useful molecules. A new study in Nature Communications (DOI: 10.1038/s41467-018-06083-7) has revealed one of the tricks of…

Workshop seeks common ground in development and behavior research

Emily Scott

A workshop held at the IGB this summer set out to bridge the gap between research in animal development and research in animal behavior.

The two-day workshop brought…

Researchers develop “cytological ruler” to build 3D map of human genome

Ben Short, Rockefeller University Press

It has been almost 20 years since the human genome was first sequenced, but researchers still know little about how the genome is folded up and organized within cells. In a new…

A professor not afraid to cross academic boundaries

Craig Chamberlain

Ask Ruby Mendenhall about the scope of her activities, and you’re quickly overwhelmed. Ask her to illustrate how they all connect, and you’ll soon have a page full of circles,…

New CRISPR technique skips over portions of genes that can cause disease

Liz Ahlberg Touchstone

In a new study in cells, University of Illinois researchers have adapted CRISPR gene-editing technology to cause the cell’s internal machinery to skip over a small portion of a…