Biological engineering
A caring mind
May 17, 2013
Red blood cells, dengue fever and greenhouses have been on MIT senior Paula Trepman’s mind as she tackles problems in global health care.
Also labeled: Global, Profile, Public service, Research, Student life, Students, Undergraduate, Volunteering, outreach, public service
Study IDs key protein for cell death
May 14, 2013
Findings may offer a new way to kill cancer cells by forcing them into an alternative programmed-death pathway.
Potential flu pandemic lurks
May 10, 2013
MIT study identifies influenza viruses circulating in pigs and birds that could pose a risk to humans.
A different view of cancer cells
April 22, 2013
New study measures physical changes in tumor cells as they become metastatic.
Hop, skip or jump? Study says no to all of the above
April 17, 2013
MIT engineers find that in the earliest stages of arthritis, high-impact exercise may worsen cartilage damage.
Research advances therapy to protect against dengue virus
April 8, 2013
MIT team presents a novel approach to developing a treatment using mutated antibodies.
Fox receives AAVMC Excellence in Research Award
April 8, 2013
Study reveals how melanoma evades chemotherapy
April 7, 2013
Drugs that block nitric oxide could weaken cancer cells’ resistance, researchers say.
How to minimize the side effects of cancer treatment
April 4, 2013
Measuring enzyme levels in patients may reveal healthy cells’ ability to survive chemotherapy.
Six faculty recognized for Russian engagement
April 2, 2013
Institute names inaugural Skolkovo Foundation Professors.
Four professors named 2013 MacVicar Fellows
March 15, 2013
Griffith, Miller, Schulz and Teng awarded the Institute’s highest undergraduate teaching honor.
Boyden to share prestigious brain prize
March 11, 2013
Ed Boyden honored for his work on optogenetics; will share 1 million Euro prize with five other researchers.
Research update: Imaging fish in 3-D
February 12, 2013
Automated system for high-speed analysis of vertebrate larvae could aid drug development.
Also labeled: Genetics, Zebrafish, Electrical Engineering & Computer Science (eecs), Medicine, Drug screening, Research
Cell circuits remember their history
February 10, 2013
MIT engineers design new synthetic biology circuits that combine memory and logic.
Bringing a new perspective to infectious disease
February 8, 2013
Enlisted in the fight against HIV, MIT engineers and scientists contribute new technology, materials and computational studies.
A safer way to vaccinate
January 27, 2013
Polymer film that gradually releases DNA coding for viral proteins could offer a better alternative to traditional vaccines.
Also labeled: Health, HIV/AIDS, Medicine, Polymers, Vaccination, Vaccines, Materials Science and Engineering, Health care
Microbiologists eavesdrop on the hidden lives of microbes
January 21, 2013
Scientists track ocean microbe populations in their natural habitat to create a ‘day in the life’ montage.
Possible role for Huntington’s gene discovered
January 16, 2013
Mutant forms of the gene disrupt chemical modifications that control access to genes necessary for normal brain cell function.
Also labeled: Biology, Disease, Huntington's, Gene regulation, Brain and cognitive sciences, Faculty, Graduate, postdoctoral, Health, Research
Tiny tools help advance medical discoveries
January 8, 2013
MIT researchers are designing tools to analyze cells at the microscale.
Also labeled: Diagnostic devices, Mechanical engineering, Metamaterials, Microfluidics, Nanoscience and nanotechnology, Biomedicine, Engineering Health, Health, Health care, Health sciences and technology, Institute for Medical Engineering and Science (IMES), Medicine, Membranes, Imaging, Lab-on-a-chip, Cancer, Cells, Tumors, Optogenetics, Graduate, postdoctoral, Innovation and Entrepreneurship (I&E), Research
Two MIT professors win prestigious Wolf Prize
January 4, 2013
Michael Artin and Robert Langer honored for groundbreaking work in mathematics and chemistry.
Also labeled: Awards, honors and fellowships, Chemistry and chemical engineering, Faculty, Global, Mathematics
Professor Roger Kamm visualizes sneaky tumor cells with 3-D assay
December 26, 2012
Kamm is studying the mechanics of metastasis, the process of cancer-cell migration from one location in the body to another and the cause of more than 90 percent of cancer deaths.
Also labeled: Biology, Microfluidics, Cancer, Health, Mechanical engineering, Metastasis, Tumors, Cells, Bioengineering and biotechnology, Faculty, Graduate, postdoctoral, Research
Evolution: It’s all in how you splice it
December 20, 2012
MIT biologists find that alternative splicing of RNA rewires signaling in different tissues and may often contribute to species differences.
Also labeled: Biology, Evolution, Genetics, Genome, Alternative RNA splicing, Genomic sequencing, Proteins, Research, Graduate, postdoctoral
Tissue engineering: Growing new organs, and more
December 14, 2012
Research could lead to better ways to heal injuries and develop new drugs.
Precisely engineering 3-D brain tissues
November 30, 2012
New design technique could enable personalized medicine, studies of brain wiring.
Also labeled: Brain and cognitive sciences, Health sciences and technology, McGovern Institute, Media Lab, Microfabrication, Neurons, Tissue engineering, Artificial tissue, Medicine, Photolithography, 3-D tissues, Biomedicine, Mechanical engineering, Tissue implants, Stem cells, Bioengineering and biotechnology
The music of the silks
November 28, 2012
Researchers synthesize a new kind of silk fiber — and find that music can help fine-tune the material’s properties.
When it comes to fostering innovation, student group says 'Do it!'
November 19, 2012
Lady Gaga collaborator and Interscope executive highlights do.it@MIT’s wide-ranging approach.
Fighting bacteria with mucus
November 8, 2012
Study shows that key proteins in mucus prevent bacterial adhesion to surfaces, could help prevent growth of biofilms.
MIT team builds most complex synthetic biology circuit yet
October 7, 2012
New sensor can detect four different molecules, could be used to program cells to precisely monitor their environments.
15 MIT students named Siebel Scholars
September 10, 2012
Graduate students in computer science, bioengineering and business honored.


























