Recent News

567 News Items found
Pictured: 2012 Rock Stars of Science
Announcement
The initiative, focused on investigators from Memorial Sloan Kettering’s Geoffrey Beene Cancer Research Center, highlights the critical need for funding scientific research.
Pictured: Scott Lowe
Q&A
In the lab of cancer biologist Scott Lowe, researchers are investigating the processes that naturally inhibit cancer development.
Pictured: PET Scan
In the Lab
Researchers at Memorial Sloan Kettering are developing a new strategy for PET imaging of tumors that could result in new tools to detect and monitor prostate cancer.
Equipped for Discovery
Various facilities provide the services and technology that support Memorial Sloan Kettering’s cancer genomics studies.
Hundreds of high school students and teachers from the New York City area attend the annual seminar.
Event
For the first time, our annual seminar for high school students and teachers from the New York City area will be available to watch live from around the nation and the world.
Pictured: Scott Armstrong
Pediatric oncologist Scott A. Armstrong has been named the incumbent of the Grayer Family Chair, and stem cell biologist Kitai Kim has been named to a Geoffrey Beene Junior Faculty Chair.
Pictured: Structure of Synthesized Erythropoietin
In the Lab
Researchers have produced a fully synthetic, functional version of erythropoietin, the hormone that controls production of red blood cells.
Pictured: Alexander Rudensky
Announcement
Dr. Rudensky studies the development of white blood cells called T lymphocytes, which participate in the immune system response to infection. He joined the Sloan Kettering Institute in 2009.
Pictured: Tunneling Nanotubes
Snapshot
Tunneling Nanotubes Connect Cancer Cells
Memorial Sloan Kettering researchers have discovered a way that cancer cells may be able to exchange information by establishing long bridges between cells called tunneling nanotubes.
Pictured: Natural Killer Cells & Cancer Cell
In the Lab
In the future, more-advanced genetic testing might offer better ways to match up patients who need a bone marrow transplant with potential donors.