How different cancer cells respond to drug-delivering nanoparticles
The findings of a large-scale screen could help researchers design nanoparticles that target specific types of cancer.
The findings of a large-scale screen could help researchers design nanoparticles that target specific types of cancer.
International award supports early-career scientists and engineers as they pursue interdisciplinary works.
Martin Luther King Jr. Visiting Professors and Scholars will enhance and enrich the MIT community through engagement with students and faculty.
With particles that release their payloads at different times, one injection could provide multiple vaccine doses.
Institute Professor honored for groundbreaking work in nucleic acid delivery and nanoparticles.
Earning the top spot for the 11th straight year, the Institute also places first in 12 subject areas.
MIT research highlights the opportunity to rethink global air quality guidelines.
Tested using a new brain tissue model, the particles may be able to deliver chemotherapy drugs for glioblastoma.
The advance allows the particles to be placed deeper within biological tissue, which could aid with cancer diagnosis or monitoring.
Twenty winning projects will link industry member priorities with research groups across campus to develop scalable climate solutions.
The grants total over $1 million in support of research that addresses issues in the water and food sectors.
Following the successful development of vaccines against Covid-19, scientists hope to deploy mRNA-based therapies to combat many other diseases.
Members of MIT’s Reserve Officers’ Training Corps program reflect on challenges and benefits of being an ROTC cadet and an MIT student.
The 2nd Annual Research Slam featured three-minute talks on cutting-edge research from across MIT in an engaging public showcase and competition.
Innovative brain-wide mapping study shows that an “engram,” the ensemble of neurons encoding a memory, is widely distributed and includes regions not previously realized.