Self-assembling proteins can store cellular “memories”
Using these engineered proteins, researchers can record histories that reveal when certain genes are activated or how cells respond to a drug.
Using these engineered proteins, researchers can record histories that reveal when certain genes are activated or how cells respond to a drug.
Groundbreaking research can help alleviate the challenges affiliated with studying carbohydrates.
These immature connections may explain how the adult brain is able to form new memories and absorb new information.
Researchers harness new pooled, image-based screening method to probe the functions of over 5,000 essential genes in human cells.
Up to one-third of the carbon consumed by Prochlorococcus may come from sources other than photosynthesis.
By analyzing enzyme activity at the organism, tissue, and cellular scales, new sensors could provide new tools to clinicians and cancer researchers.
Study finds the protein MTCH2 is responsible for shuttling various other proteins into the membrane of mitochondria. The finding could have implications for cancer treatments and MTCH2-linked conditions.
MIT researchers demonstrate an intracellular antenna that's compatible with 3D biological systems and can operate wirelessly inside a living cell.
A new model that maps developmental pathways to tumor cells may unlock the identity of cancers of unknown primary.
Stacy Springs named executive director; Richard Braatz is associate faculty director.
Mathematical modeling speeds up the process of programming bacterial systems to self-assemble into desired 2D shapes.
Their swirling, clustering behavior might someday inform the design of self-assembling robotic swarms.
Insight into the way the EGF receptor sends signals into cells could help researchers design new cancer drugs that target this protein.
Researchers reveal how an algae-eating bacterium solves an environmental engineering challenge.
An anomaly-detection model developed by SMART utilizes machine learning to quickly detect microbial contamination.