Recent News

559 News Items found
An illustration of a reel of film
In the Lab
Grab your popcorn and pull up a chair for these video shorts of cell signaling in early mouse development.
MSK immunologist Ming Li.
In the Lab
Targeting the cancer environment, rather than the cancer itself, could be a new avenue for immunotherapy.
MSK developmental biologist Lorenz Studer
Q&A
In an interview in September 2020, Dr. Studer spoke about what he hopes he and his fellow investigators can accomplish with this generous support.
Regulatory proteins (gold balls) bind to enhancer regions (light blue) and promoter regions (pink) of DNA to form clusters that enable transcription (purple).
Scientists at the Sloan Kettering Institute are learning how far-flung regions of genes connect to start the process of making proteins.
An illustration of a beta-amyloid plaque among the neurons in a brain.
Article
An enzyme that contributes to plaque formation in the brain also serves as a first line of defense against bacteria and viruses, suggesting a link between the two.
Black blobs on a white background
In the Lab
Researchers shed light on how aberrant cell division can cause the kind of mutations often found in cancer cells.
Having two mutated copies of the TP53 gene — as opposed to a single mutated copy — is associated with worse outcomes in a blood cancer called myelodysplastic syndrome, according to a new study led by researchers at Memorial Sloan Kettering.
Section of a lung cancer tumor in mice
Finding
Identified in mice, this unusual cell state emerges early during tumor evolution and gives tumors enormous malleability.
Charles Sawyers in his lab
Scientists have found a protein that empowers prostate tumors to resist hormone therapy.
MSK physician-scientists Michael Glickman and Gil Redelman-Sidi
BCG has been used to treat bladder cancer for more than 30 years. Scientists are still learning how it works.