{ "items": [ "\n\n
Post Doctoral Researcher Caitlin Naylor discusses her experiences living and working at MRC Unit The Gambia at LSHTM.
\n \n\n \n \nTherapeutic antibodies can be isolated from healthy volunteers exposed to the Ebola vaccine, but not Ebola virus itself.
\n \n\n \n \nIn our second interview based in the MRC WIMM\u2019s \u2018An evening with\u2019 events, we spoke to Professor Angela Vincent, Emeritus Professor of Neuroimmunology at the Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences. Angela kindly spoke to us about her research on antibodies and their role in neuromuscular diseases, and shared her thoughts with the next generation of scientists.
\n \n\n \n \nStudent Matt Dickinson discusses how he took the unusual decision to do a PhD in medical research following a degree (and practice) in veterinary medicine- and discusses the unexpected benefits of career changes.
\n \n\n \n \nIn this festive post, we look at how MRC WIMM researchers turned their science into decorations as part of this year's Christmas decorations competition.
\n \n\n \n \n\u2018An evening with\u2019 are informal events where established scientists with a connection to the MRC WIMM spend an evening with our students and staff, discussing their career and sharing their thoughts with the next generation of scientists. In this new feature in our blog, we interview the scientists who have kindly given their time to join this event, starting with Professor Sir Walter Bodmer, FRS, Emeritus Professor and Head of the Cancer and Immunogenetics Laboratory in the Department of Oncology.
\n \n\n \n \nHow do multiple enhancers control the activity of a single gene? A new paper from Marieke Oudelaar in the Hughes/Higgs labs presents a novel approach called \u201cTri-C\u201d, which uncovers how cis-regulatory elements interact together in higher-order structures.
\n \n\n \n \nHow do rare mutations accumulate in tissues and how can this lead to cancer? In this post, Hannah discusses a new paper from Ed Morrissey's lab that uses mathematical modelling to study this process in the human colonic epithelium.
\n \n\n \n \nAs a PhD student at MRC HIU, I usually spend my days in a white lab coat peering down a microscope, but this July I temporarily gave all that up to undertake a placement on the science desk at The Guardian newspaper.
\n \n\n \n \nErdinc explains what preprints are, why he uses them.. and why he thinks you should too.
\n \n\n \n \nTo mark Mental Health Awareness Week, Gregorio Dias shares his personal journey as a PhD student and discusses how a better work-life-balance and spending more time with friends helped him overcome the stress and anxiety that he faced during his studies.
\n \n\n \n \nBlood production by haematopoietic stem and progenitor cells is complex, with multiple proposed models of differentiation. In this blog post, Zahra Aboukhalil, Bilyana Stoilova & Dimitris Karamitros discuss how the Vyas lab is using single-cell technologies to uncover the ways in which blood progenitors generate mature cells.
\n \n\n \n \nThe intricate biological cascades that fine-tune cellular protein production are hugely complex \u2013 and so is the task of deciphering them. We found out more about a new technique developed in the Fulga lab to disentangle this regulatory web.
\n \n\n \n \nMelissa Bedard, a DPhil student in the Cerundolo Lab , writes about her research on invariant natural killer T cells, and the starring role they may be able to play in the fight against cancer.
\n \n\n \n \nLayal Liverpool, a DPhil student in the Rehwinkel lab, writes about her research on how cells are able to tell the difference between their own molecules and those of invading viruses.
\n \n\n \n \nOn 29 September the University put on its largest-ever public engagement activity across several locations and well into the evening. The Curiosity Carnival aimed to engage people from all over Oxford in the exciting and varied research that goes on within the University. Dannielle Wellington, a postdoc in the Dong lab, spent the last 4 months organising one of the highlights of the night \u2013 The Blood Factory. In this piece she tells us more about what it was like to be involved.
\n \n\n \n \nA recent study from Jan Rehwinkel\u2019s lab in the MRC Human Immunology Unit has revealed a new way in which cells sense and respond to invading viruses.
\n \n\n \n \nAn important open question in biology is how different cells get directed to the right part of this manual to find the instructions for their specific tasks. A new study, published in in Nature Cell Biology today, by a team of scientists co-led by Doug Higgs and Ben Davies shines light on the underlying structural processes that help the cells work out which part of the manual to read to establish their identity.
\n \n\n \n \nHave you ever wondered where all the different cells in the blood come from? Believe it or not it is down to one type of cell, called hematopoietic stem cells, which can give rise to which ever blood cell type the body needs. Christina Rode discusses and visually explains where these cells come from, what they do and why they are so important.
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