Skip to main content

News Archive

Cassava may benefit from atmospheric change more than other crops

Claire Benjamin

Carbon dioxide fuels photosynthesis, the process by which plants generate their food in the form of carbohydrates. The atmosphere's carbon dioxide levels are rapidly increasing…

$87M grant will help advance bioindustrial manufacturing

Kimberly Belser

An $87 million grant from the U.S. Department of Defense matched by more than $187 million in non-federal cost-share will fund collaborative efforts by a team of private and…

Labor, Health, Equity, Action Project (LHEAP)


The Labor, Health, Equity, Action Project (LHEAP) is a team of interdisciplinary researchers from across University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, coalescing in the Infection…

Biologists shed light on how microbes evolve, affect hosts

Sean Bettam, University of Toronto

The era of COVID-19 and the need to constantly wash one's hands and sanitize things have brought microbes to new levels of scrutiny, particularly for their impact on an…

Acid-tolerant yeast model helps guide industrial organic acid production

Liam Jackson, Penn State

Microbes and other microscopic organisms could serve as sustainable “factories” to create many types of industrial materials because they naturally convert nutrients…

Lassogen raises $4.5M in seed round to develop novel therapeutics

Alisa King

Although small molecule drugs and antibodies continue to be the standard for cancer treatment, a new class of therapeutics — lasso peptides — may prove effective, especially…

30 years of experiments simulate future crop climate response

Claire Benjamin

Five years ago, the United Nations committed to achieving the Sustainable Development Goal of Zero Hunger by 2030. Since then, however, world hunger has continued to rise.…

Nelson awarded $4.5M to study prevention, treatment of breast cancer

Alisa King

Professor of Molecular and Integrative Physiology Erik Nelson (ACPP) has won a $4.5M Era of Hope Scholar Award from the United States Department of Defense (DoD) Breast Cancer…

Illinois study tracks evolution of SARS-CoV-2 virus mutations

Lauren Quinn

Since COVID-19 began its menacing march across Wuhan, China, in December 2019, and then across the world, the SARS-CoV-2 virus has taken a “whatever works” strategy to ensure…

Congress must clarify limits of gene-editing technologies

Phil Ciciora

Genome editing of human embryos represents one of the most contentious potential scientific applications today. But what if geneticists could sidestep the controversy by…

Octopus-inspired sucker transfers thin, delicate tissue grafts, biosensors

Liz Ahlberg Touchstone

Thin tissue grafts and flexible electronics have a host of applications for wound healing, regenerative medicine and biosensing. A new device inspired by an octopus’s sucker…

Study on how bacteria obtain essential nutrients in soil, during infection

Maddie Blaauw and the MCB Communications Office

Much like humans eat food in order to obtain essential nutrients, bacteria acquire nutrients by importing them. An essential nutrient for life is zinc, which cannot be…