Professor and biochemist Jennifer Doudna and Professor and biophysicist Eva Nogales led a study that showed how a CRISPR-Cas surveillance complex in the bacterial immune system is able to target specific sites on an RNA molecule for the destruction of invaders.
Department News
Below are articles from various sources about members of MCB and their research.
Recent findings by Professor of Cell and Developmental Biology David Bilder and his lab could lead to the development of much-needed targeted therapies for wasting syndrome in cancer patients (this syndrome is called cachexia, where muscle and fat tissues are destroyed throughout the body).
An iBioSeminar presented by Howard Hughes Investigator and Professor of Genetics, Genomics and Development Nicole King has just been released. Watch now!
Professor of Biochemistry, Biophysics and Structural BiologyJamie Cate and postdoctoral fellows Amy Lee and Philip Kranzusch discover a new way that human cells control cancer gene expression at the step where genes are translated into proteins.
Assistant Professor of Cell and Developmental Biology Dirk Hockemeyer has received an American Association of Anatomists Young Investigator Award for his contributions to the field of developmental biology.
New research out of the Raulet lab suggests a mechanism explaining why Natural Killer cells are sometimes rendered ineffective, and even more excitingly, suggests a therapeutic approach for re-awakening them to attack tumors.
A newly announced biotech deal shows how basic research at UC Berkeley is leading to new therapeutic approaches for cancer.
Class of '33 Chair and Professor of Neurobiology, Ehud Isacoff, who also holds an appointment with Lawrence Berkeley Lab, and who directs the Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute, conducted a study of translucent zebrafish embryos that could lead to powerful new tools in neuroscience.
Howard Hughes Investigator and Professor of Genetics, Genomics and Development Nicole King will receive an honorary Doctor of Science from Lehigh University during the university’s 147th commencement ceremony on May 18.
Professor Jennifer Doudna and other leading bioligists authored an article calling for a worldwide moratorium on the use of her new genome-editing technique until scientists, ethicists and the public fully understand the issues surrounding the breakthrough.