Recent News

559 News Items found
An illustration of sugar being sprinkled on a cancer cell.
In the Lab
A study from investigators in the Sloan Kettering Institute uncovers the details of how a key protein called GRP94 becomes disrupted, leading to cancer and other diseases.
Confocal microscopy image of a female fruit fly brain.
In the Lab
How Fruit Flies Know When They've Mated
Research from investigators at the Sloan Kettering Institute shows how a brain circuit controls mating behavior in fruit flies.
CT scan showing lymphoma in the abdomen between the liver and the gallbladder.
In the Lab
New research from Sloan Kettering Institute investigators pinpoints altered cell metabolism as a cause of B cell lymphoma.
Fluorescent image of CAR T cells in mouse liver fibrosis
In the Lab
From atherosclerosis and diabetes to liver fibrosis and osteoarthritis, senescent cells are at the root of many debilitating diseases. Scientists increasingly have them in the crosshairs.
Mohita Tagore, a postdoctoral fellow in the Sloan Kettering Institute
Q&A
Dr. Tagore is a postdoctoral fellow in the Cancer Biology and Genetics Program at the Sloan Kettering Institute studying cell communication in cancer.
MSK leadership on the stage in the Zuckerman Research Center auditorium.
Event
Memorial Sloan Kettering’s 41st annual ceremony recognized graduates and award winners with an online event.
X and Y chromosomes in mice
In the Lab
One’s big, one’s small. Somehow, they make it work.
A fluorescent image of cells undergoing differentiation in a mouse model.
In Brief
The discovery links metabolism to the way cancer stem cells form tumors.
Learn about the eight students who successfully defended their dissertations and will be awarded PhD degrees during the Gerstner Sloan Kettering Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences commencement ceremony on May 27.
Chromosomes from a human male
In the Lab
During meiosis, small chromosomes risk being lost in the shuffle. Here’s how they hold their own.