Recent News

559 News Items found
SKI immunologist Gretchen Diehl
Researchers at the Sloan Kettering Institute have found that gut microbes shape the immune system of mice in an unexpected way.
MSK computational biologists Christina Leslie and Yuri Pritykin
In the Lab
The tool will aid basic and translational researchers interested in understanding why immune cells stop working.
Memorial Sloan Kettering computational biologist Ed Reznik.
In the Lab
DNA in the mitochondria of cancer cells may yield insights that lead to more accurate prognoses and new treatment strategies.
Researchers Gary Dixon (on TV monitor), Heng Pan, Olivier Elemento, and Danwei Huangfu in the lab
Finding
Sloan Kettering Institute scientists report new findings about a gene that helps regulate DNA methylation.
Sloan Kettering Institute molecular biologist Scott Keeney
The DNA breaks that occur during meiosis are necessary but dangerous. Scientists now have a better handle on how cells control the chaos.
SKI Developmental Biology Program Chair Kat Hadjantonakis
The event featured scientific talks from leading women in science, including winners of this year’s Kravis WISE fellowships.
MSK molecular biologist Agnel Sfeir
Meet molecular biologist Agnel Sfeir, who joined SKI's Molecular Biology Program in March 2021.
Developmental biologist Kathryn Anderson
Feature
Remembering Kathryn Anderson, the founding chair of the Developmental Biology Program in the Sloan Kettering Institute.
Roberta Zappasodi, Taha Merghoub, and Jedd Wolchok. Photo credit: Flynn Larsen for Ludwig Cancer Research
More sugar available for immune cells could mean better immune responses against cancer.
Hans-Guido Wendel
Originally explored as a cancer drug, the tree-derived chemical is now being mined for its antiviral properties.