In the News

1855 News Items found
Graduates and speakers pose on a stage
Event
Degrees were presented and awards were given at the 38th annual ceremony held on May 18.
Blue cells containing small red dots on a green and black background
Science Byte
Learn about what DNA repair looks like under a microscope.
Female instructor leading a “chair yoga” class with female patients seated with back to camera and arms stretched to side.
Q&A
Integrative medicine specialists determine which complementary therapies appear to be most effective.
Scientists at the Sloan Kettering Institute are learning why some immune cells are stubbornly hard to revive with immunotherapy.
In the Lab
By looking at how DNA is packaged in cells, scientists are teasing apart a long-standing conundrum about the immune response to cancer.
MSK Symposium Honors Dinshaw Patel, Titan of Structural Biology
Announcement
Scientists came to MSK to celebrate the 75th birthday of a leader in the field of structural biology.
Cancer biologist and pediatric oncologist Alex Kentsis
In the Lab
Researchers have discovered a genetic mechanism that may trigger most childhood cancers.
A new discovery made by Memorial Sloan Kettering researchers and published in the journal <i>Nature Genetics</i>, identifies a mechanism for the triggering of solid tumors — including most types of cancers that affect children and young adults. For more information or to arrange interviews, e-mail Rebecca Williams at [email protected].
Mount Rushmore viewed through face-detection software.
Taking a cue from smartphone technology, scientists are using face-recognition algorithms to improve RNA interference.
A cell in the process of dividing
In the Lab
MSK researchers are learning how cells are able to recognize and correct errors that occur during cell division.
An illustration of CRISPR-Cas9
In the Lab
A freely accessible software program provides researchers with an easy way to optimize a popular genome-editing tool.