Four professors named 2015 MacVicar Fellows
Bahr, Drennan, Gibson, and Sive receive the Institute’s highest undergraduate teaching award.
Bahr, Drennan, Gibson, and Sive receive the Institute’s highest undergraduate teaching award.
Discoverer of world’s most abundant and prolific photosynthetic organism delivers annual Killian Lecture.
Senior Yiping Xing’s view of health care draws upon research, public health, and policy.
Newly discovered taste receptors for hydrogen peroxide allow worms to indirectly detect light.
Peter Reddien believes human stem cells could one day be regulated to replace aged, damaged, and missing tissues.
Workshop on quantitative methods in biology draws diverse undergrads from across the country.
11 MIT affiliates and more than 30 alumni are identified as movers, makers, and game changers in their respective fields.
Rhodes Scholar Elliot Akama-Garren seeks to harness the power of the immune system to combat cancer.
When RNA-binding proteins are turned on, cancer cells get locked in a proliferative state.
Newly tenured biologist Jeroen Saeij wants to know what makes Toxoplasma gondii so unpredictable.
Elliot Akama-Garren ’15, Anisha Gururaj ’15, and Noam Angrist ’13 are among 32 winners nationwide.
Eisen was a pioneering immunologist and longstanding member of MIT’s cancer research community.
Newly tenured biologist Iain Cheeseman explores the complex structures that control cell division.
An enzyme key to DNA repair can worsen tissue damage caused by stroke and organ transplantation.