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  • U.S. Embassy of Sweden celebrates Victor Ambros, 2024 Nobel laureates at scientific symposium

    U.S. Embassy of Sweden celebrates Victor Ambros, 2024 Nobel laureates at scientific symposium

    The 2024 Nobel Prize Symposium in Washington, D.C., was hosted by the Embassy of Sweden and the National Academy of Sciences.

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  • Podcast: Victor Ambros on team effort behind Nobel Prize winning discovery of microRNA

    Podcast: Victor Ambros on team effort behind Nobel Prize winning discovery of microRNA

    The Conversation Weekly podcast interviewed UMass Chan Nobel Laureate Victor R. Ambros, PhD, to learn more about his role in the discovery of microRNA and what comes next. Dr. Ambros shares the 2024 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine with collaborator Gary B. Ruvkun, PhD, of Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School.  

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  • UMass Chan ‘takes pride in calling you one of our own,’ Chancellor tells Nobel-recipient Victor Ambros

    UMass Chan ‘takes pride in calling you one of our own,’ Chancellor tells Nobel-recipient Victor Ambros

    Victor Ambros, PhD, shared his gratitude to his wife and collaborator, Rosalind “Candy” Lee, as well as to the Medical School and scientific community, at a celebration of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine he co-received with Gary Ruvkun, PhD, professor at Harvard Medical School, for their discovery of microRNA.  

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  • Video: Nobel Laureate Victor Ambros celebrates with UMass Chan community

    Video: Nobel Laureate Victor Ambros celebrates with UMass Chan community

    The UMass Chan Medical School community embraced its newest Nobel Laureate on Monday, Oct. 7, after Victor Ambros, PhD, was named the co-recipient of the 2024 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his co-discovery of microRNA. See how the day unfolded in this video.

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  • Victor Ambros’ Nobel Prize win sparks worldwide media attention

    Victor Ambros’ Nobel Prize win sparks worldwide media attention

    Victor R. Ambros, PhD, has garnered international media attention after he was awarded the 2024 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his role in the discovery of microRNA.  

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  • Nobel-worthy mentorship: Students rejoice after mentor Victor Ambros wins 2024 Nobel Prize

    Nobel-worthy mentorship: Students rejoice after mentor Victor Ambros wins 2024 Nobel Prize

    Students in the Ambros lab at UMass Chan Medical School and 2006 Nobel Prize winner Craig Mello, PhD, celebrated their mentor, Victor Ambros, PhD, as he received the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine with Gary Ruvkun, PhD, for their discovery of microRNA.  

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  • Champagne toast raised as Nobel winner reacts to news

    Champagne toast raised as Nobel winner reacts to news

    Although Victor Ambros, PhD, was scheduled to move his lab into a new building today, the announcement that he and Gary Ruvkun, PhD, were awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for their discovery of microRNA, put those plans were put on hold. Read more about how his day unfolded.  

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  • Nobel Laureate Victor Ambros press conference

    Nobel Laureate Victor Ambros press conference

    Watch a video of the UMass Chan Medical School press conference on Monday, Oct. 7, held after the announcement that UMass Chan researcher Victor R. Ambros, PhD, was a co-recipient of the 2024 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his discovery of microRNA.

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  • Learn more about Victor Ambros
  • UMass Chan scientist Victor Ambros wins Nobel Prize

    UMass Chan scientist Victor Ambros wins Nobel Prize

    UMass Chan Medical School researcher Victor R. Ambros, PhD, will share the 2024 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his co-discovery of microRNA, the very short, single-stranded RNA molecules that are now understood to play a critical role in post-transcriptional gene regulation.  

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  • UMass Chan Early Independence Fellows program aims to develop future top investigators

    UMass Chan Early Independence Fellows program aims to develop future top investigators

    Two new donor-funded fellowships are being launched this year at UMass Chan to recruit recent postdoctoral scientists and, through intensive mentoring and resource support, foster their development as independent investigators. The fellowships align with the vision embodied in The Morningside Foundation’s transformational $175 million gift in 2021.  

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  • Novel siRNA backbone developed at UMass Chan enhances stability, durability of potentially therapeutic platform

    Novel siRNA backbone developed at UMass Chan enhances stability, durability of potentially therapeutic platform

    A biochemical breakthrough using simple carbon atoms by Ken Yamada, PhD, and Anastasia Khvorova, PhD, has dramatically improved the stability and efficacy of a potential oligonucleotide therapeutic platform in mice.

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  • UMass Chan BRIDGE Fund commits $2M in six faculty projects

    UMass Chan BRIDGE Fund commits $2M in six faculty projects

    BRIDGE Innovation and Business Development at UMass Chan Medical School has set aside nearly $2 million in funding for six faculty-led research projects that hold promise for translation to clinical application and commercialization.  

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  • UMass Chan scientists show ribosomes play unexpected role in blood vessel formation

    UMass Chan scientists show ribosomes play unexpected role in blood vessel formation

    Research by Andrei Korostelev, PhD, and Anna Loveland, PhD, shows that the ribosome plays an unexpected role in the activation of angiogenin, allowing it to cleave transfer RNA, thereby halting protein production. These findings shed new light on angiogenin functioning and may have important implications for the design of cancer therapeutics and neurodegenerative disease treatments.  

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  • UMass Chan, QurAlis Corporation partnership expands on biomedical research by Joel Richter

    UMass Chan, QurAlis Corporation partnership expands on biomedical research by Joel Richter

    UMass Chan Medical School and QurAlis Corporation, a clinical-stage biotechnology company investigating treatments for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, frontotemporal dementia and other neurodegenerative and neurological diseases, have formed a collaboration to investigate an antisense oligonucleotide technology for the potential treatment of fragile X syndrome.  

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  • ScienceLIVE helps answer ‘What the Heck is Biotech?’ for career-minded adults

    ScienceLIVE helps answer ‘What the Heck is Biotech?’ for career-minded adults

    The LabCentral Ignite community workshop was held on April 24 in partnership with MassBioEd and co-hosted by UMass Chan’s ScienceLIVE.

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  • PhD candidate engineers new RNA sequences to enable mRNA-based therapeutics

    PhD candidate engineers new RNA sequences to enable mRNA-based therapeutics

    PhD candidate Seden Bedir moved from Turkey to the U.S. to study at UMass Chan Medical School. She aims to engineer RNA sequences that don’t exist in nature in order to enable mRNA-based therapeutics beyond vaccines. In her free time, she mentors students from Turkey.  

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  • Local high school students compete in Central Mass. Brain Bee at UMass Chan

    Local high school students compete in Central Mass. Brain Bee at UMass Chan

    Natick resident and Stanford Online High School student Rebecca Ahn outperformed other local high school students in the final round of the competition on March 16.

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  • UMass Chan studies selected for STAT Madness
  • UMass Chan to host 18th annual Brain Bee competition for local high school students

    UMass Chan to host 18th annual Brain Bee competition for local high school students

    Students will be competing for the Andrew Sheridan Young Neuroscientist Award and an all-expense paid trip to participate in the 2024 USA National Bee at the University of Central Florida in April. 

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  • UMass Chan scientists receive $2.3 million from Rett Syndrome Research Trust for new research

    UMass Chan scientists receive $2.3 million from Rett Syndrome Research Trust for new research

    Rett syndrome is a rare genetic neurological disorder that occurs primarily in girls, eventually robbing them of the ability to speak, walk or use their hands, among other devastating effects.

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  • Fen-Biao Gao details how frontotemporal dementia changes the brain and explores its genetic causes

    Fen-Biao Gao details how frontotemporal dementia changes the brain and explores its genetic causes

    In an updated article originally published by The Conversation in Feb. 2023, Fen-Biao Gao, PhD, talks about how frontotemporal dementia changes the brain and the research that is untangling its genetic causes.

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  • Drugs of the future will be easier and faster to make, thanks to mRNA

    Drugs of the future will be easier and faster to make, thanks to mRNA

    UMass Chan researcher Li Li, PhD, writes for The Conversation about how mRNA drug development, which led to the first COVID-19 vaccine, offers significant advantages over traditional drug development.

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  • UMass Chan delivers fitting tribute to young Worcester scholars

    UMass Chan delivers fitting tribute to young Worcester scholars

    UMass Chan presented “scientist-in-training” lab coats to Lake View Elementary School, one of the 11 North Quadrant schools in Worcester that are part of the UMass Chan North Quadrant Support Services Initiative.

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  • PhD student Valeria Sanabria wins Zelda Haidak Scholarship in Cell Biology

    PhD student Valeria Sanabria wins Zelda Haidak Scholarship in Cell Biology

    PhD student Valeria Sanabria, MD, won the Zelda Haidak Scholarship in Cell Biology, which was established to enhance training for women pursuing research careers in cell biology. Her research is focused on studying gene expression at the transcriptional level.

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  • Worcester middle school teachers receive new microscopes to enhance classroom learning

    Worcester middle school teachers receive new microscopes to enhance classroom learning

    UMass Chan Medical School hosted 23 science teachers from six Worcester middle schools to train them on the light microscopes recently donated to their classrooms by the Medical School, thanks to a grant from the Moderna Foundation.

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  • UMass Chan helps ‘Crack the Code’ at biotech career day in Worcester

    UMass Chan helps ‘Crack the Code’ at biotech career day in Worcester

    Representatives from UMass Chan presented on several topics and career paths, including RNA Therapeutics Institute, ScienceLive, community and government relations, diversity and inclusion and media and arts in sciences.

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  • Phillip Zamore, Roger Davis elected to National Academy of Medicine

    Phillip Zamore, Roger Davis elected to National Academy of Medicine

    UMass Chan Medical School scientists Phillip D. Zamore, PhD, and Roger J. Davis, PhD, FRS, were elected to the National Academy of Medicine on Oct. 9 for their distinguished contributions to medicine and health.

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  • Science for Living: Understanding preeclampsia, its toll on Black women and a promising therapeutic on the way

    Science for Living: Understanding preeclampsia, its toll on Black women and a promising therapeutic on the way

    A new RNA therapeutic for preeclampsia is based on work by UMass Chan researchers and collaborating scientists. Researchers explain the importance of a multipronged approach to addressing factors underlying health disparities in this Science for Living article.

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  • Sharing of knowledge, ideas celebrated during Qualifying Exam Recognition Ceremony

    Sharing of knowledge, ideas celebrated during Qualifying Exam Recognition Ceremony

    The UMass Chan community gathered to celebrate 53 PhD candidates and MD/PhD students who transitioned from student to candidate for a doctoral degree during the 2022-2023 academic year.

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  • NIH funds Kirschstein Award recipient Johan Girgenrath’s fertility research

    NIH funds Kirschstein Award recipient Johan Girgenrath’s fertility research

    PhD candidate John Girgenrath has received a competitive award from the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development to conduct fertility research.

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  • UMass Chan’s Water Safe Worcester program promotes swimming safety for city’s teenagers

    UMass Chan’s Water Safe Worcester program promotes swimming safety for city’s teenagers

    Water Safe Worcester’s summer session is underway every Wednesday night through the end of August. The program is free and open to all teenagers in the Worcester area.

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  • UMass Chan BRIDGE Fund invests nearly $2M in 13 faculty projects

    UMass Chan BRIDGE Fund invests nearly $2M in 13 faculty projects

    The BRIDGE Fund supports critical research milestones for inventions and discoveries that have high potential to change the course of disease and continues to grow, increasing from approximately $1 million per year in 2019 to $3 million in 2024.

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  • Antisense therapy restores fragile X protein production in human cells

    Antisense therapy restores fragile X protein production in human cells

    An antisense therapy developed by Joel D. Richter, PhD, Sneha Shah, PhD, and Jonathan K. Watts, PhD, at UMass Chan Medical School and Elizabeth Berry-Kravis, MD, PhD, at RUSH University Medical Center, restores production of the protein FMRP in cell samples taken from patients with fragile X syndrome. 

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  • Carolyn Kraus receives competitive Ruth L. Kirschstein award

    Carolyn Kraus receives competitive Ruth L. Kirschstein award

    PhD candidate Carolyn Kraus has received an award from the National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases to develop a CRISPR/Cas9 tool for designing a safer Duchenne muscular dystrophy therapeutic.

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  • Clinical study aims to identify early molecular and biological signatures of vitiligo

    Clinical study aims to identify early molecular and biological signatures of vitiligo

    John E. Harris, MD, PhD, and Manuel Garber, PhD, will lead a $3.75 million NIH clinical study at UMass Chan Medical School to identify potential preclinical genetic, molecular and biological signatures that may predispose patients to developing vitiligo.

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  • UMass Chan, Moderna partner to provide microscopes to Worcester middle schools

    UMass Chan, Moderna partner to provide microscopes to Worcester middle schools

    Dozens of new microscopes will be delivered to six Worcester middle schools thanks to a partnership between UMass Chan Medical School and Moderna.

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  • MD/PhD student using NIH award to study onset of Huntington’s disease

    MD/PhD student using NIH award to study onset of Huntington’s disease

    MD/PhD student Jillian Belgrad has received an award from the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke to study the pathology that drives the development of Huntington’s disease symptoms.  

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  • Terence R. Flotte appears on ‘Giants of Gene Therapy’ podcast

    Terence R. Flotte appears on ‘Giants of Gene Therapy’ podcast

    In a one-on-one interview, Terence R. Flotte shares what inspired him to pursue a career in medicine and what he’s learned in his role as provost and dean of the T.H. Chan School of Medicine at UMass Chan.

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  • Women in medicine and science honored for career achievements

    Women in medicine and science honored for career achievements

    Seven women were honored for career achievements in science and health care during the 23rd annual Women’s Faculty Awards at UMass Chan Medical School.

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  • Phillip Zamore elected to National Academy of Sciences

    Phillip Zamore elected to National Academy of Sciences

    Phillip D. Zamore, PhD, is one of 120 newly elected members of the National Academy of Sciences who were recognized for distinguished achievements in original research. Dr. Zamore is credited with identifying the biochemical machinery responsible for RNA silencing.

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  • Katherine Fitzgerald, Phillip Zamore elected to American Academy of Arts & Sciences

    Katherine Fitzgerald, Phillip Zamore elected to American Academy of Arts & Sciences

    Katherine Fitzgerald, PhD, and Phillip D. Zamore, PhD, were elected to the American Academy of Arts & Sciences, which honors excellence and leaders from every field of human endeavor to examine new ideas, address issues of importance to the nation and the world, and work together to cultivate every art and science.

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  • UMass Chan scientists deliver siRNA therapy to lung

    UMass Chan scientists deliver siRNA therapy to lung

    A multidisciplinary team of UMass Chan scientists has developed a technology for delivering siRNA molecules locally to lung tissue, providing the first evidence of a platform capable of delivering chemically modified siRNAs to the lungs nasally and achieving robust genetic silencing.

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  • Athma Pai awarded NSF CAREER grant

    Athma Pai awarded National Science Foundation CAREER grant

    Athma A. Pai, PhD, was awarded a nearly $1 million CAREER grant from the National Science Foundation to use new high-throughput genomics approaches to study the regulation of mRNA splicing.

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  • Boston Marathon a fitting tribute for families touched by ALS

    Boston Marathon a fitting tribute for families touched by ALS

    Sisters Ashley Craig and Lacey Foley joined the UMass ALS Cellucci Fund Boston Marathon team in memory of their grandmother. Brothers Dean and Zack Kennedy, PhD’19, are running on the Jake Kennedy ALS Fund team, in honor of their father.

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  • UMass Chan licensed siRNA chemistry to Aldena Therapeutics to develop therapies for dermatological diseases

    UMass Chan licensed siRNA chemistry to Aldena Therapeutics to develop therapies for dermatological diseases

    UMass Chan Medical School has licensed siRNA chemistries developed by Julia Alterman, PhD, to Aldena Therapeutics for clinical development for dermatological diseases.

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  • How frontotemporal dementia changes the brain

    How frontotemporal dementia changes the brain

    In a piece written for The Conversation, Fen-Biao Gao, PhD, talks about how frontotemporal dementia changes the brain and the research that is untangling its genetic causes.

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  • Head shot of David Keener, Phd candidate in the Morningside Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences

    PhD candidate awarded NIH Kirschstein Award for research on Rett syndrome

    PhD candidate David Keener has received a National Institutes of Health grant to fund his research project on Rett syndrome, a genetic neurodevelopmental disease generally diagnosed in girls ages 6 to 18 months.

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  • Trio of UMass Chan researchers receive awards for studies on age-related macular degeneration

    Trio of UMass Chan researchers receive awards for studies on age-related macular degeneration

    Claudio Punzo, PhD; Johanna Seddon, MD, ScM; and Shun-Yun Cheng, PhD’22, are receiving awards from the American Macular Degeneration Foundation.

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  • UMass Chan researcher Anastasia Khvorova named 2022 National Academy of Inventors Fellow

    UMass Chan researcher Anastasia Khvorova named 2022 National Academy of Inventors Fellow

    Anastasia Khvorova, PhD, is one of 169 academic inventors selected as a 2022 fellow of the National Academy of Inventors.

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  • Leader of ScienceLIVE program at UMass Chan recognized for advocacy work

    Leader of ScienceLIVE program at UMass Chan recognized for advocacy work

    Angela Messmer-Blust, PhD, was selected as the inaugural winner of the Oligonucleotide Therapeutics Society’s Science Outreach Award.

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  • Morningside Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences recognizes 41 new PhD candidates

    Morningside Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences recognizes 41 new PhD candidates

    The Morningside Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences honored the new doctoral candidates during its annual Qualifying Exam Recognition Ceremony on Wednesday, Sept. 14, at which Dean Mary Ellen Lane encouraged the honorees to continue “growing, learning and stretching out of your comfort zone.”

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  • UMass Chan partners with Worcester to outfit elementary students with backpacks and school supplies

    UMass Chan partners with Worcester to outfit elementary students with backpacks and school supplies

    Nearly 600 students in Worcester received backpacks filled with school supplies this week, thanks to the UMass Chan Medical School community.

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  • Biomedical sciences student studying fertility in Mello lab

    Biomedical sciences student studying fertility in Mello lab

    Movies piqued PhD candidate Humberto Ochoa’s interest in science. He’s conducting RNA research in the lab of Nobel Laureate Craig C. Mello, PhD, to understand the national decline in fertility.

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  • Communicating science: Andrei Korostelev using structural biology to tackle antibiotic resistance

    Communicating science: Andrei Korostelev using structural biology to tackle antibiotic resistance

    A recent survey of health care professionals showed nearly 60 percent of participants encountered patients whose infections didn’t respond to any antibiotic. Andrei Korostelev, PhD, says by studying the biology of bacterial cells, effective new antibiotics can be developed.

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  • UMass Chan research supports development of new suppressor-tRNA-based gene therapies

    UMass Chan research supports development of new suppressor-tRNA-based gene therapies

    Guangping Gao, PhD, and Dan Wang, PhD, show the first evidence that a suppressor transfer RNA therapy, delivered by a recombinant adeno-associated virus, can restore protein production up to six months after treatment in a mouse model of the rare genetic disease mucopolysaccharidosis type I.

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  • Boston Marathon runners raise thousands for UMass Chan ALS research

    Boston Marathon runners raise thousands for UMass Chan ALS research

    ALS research at UMass Chan Medical School is the big beneficiary as select Boston Marathon runners raise tens of thousands of dollars each year. This year, five competitors in the April 18 event are running as part of the UMass Chan ALS Cellucci Fund Boston Marathon team and two sons of the late Jake Kennedy will run in support of the Jake Kennedy ALS Fund.

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  • UMass Chan ALS paper selected for STAT Madness

    UMass Chan ALS paper selected for STAT Madness

    Robert H. Brown Jr., DPhil, MD, Jonathan Watts, PhD, and colleagues showed the ability to suppress mutant forms of the ALS gene known as C9ORF72 in a single-patient pilot study. The paper reporting the results is part of the 2022 STAT News STAT Madness competition.

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  • UMass alumni Dan and Diane Riccio pledge $15 million to advance ALS, neuroscience research

    UMass alumni Dan and Diane Riccio pledge $15 million to advance ALS, neuroscience research

    UMass alumni Dan and Diane M. Casey Riccio, PhD, have pledged $15 million to UMass Chan Medical School to establish the Riccio ALS Accelerator Initiative and to expand and endow the Riccio Fund for Neuroscience.

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  • Biomedical sciences student works toward a future in genetic engineering

    Biomedical sciences student works toward a future in genetic engineering

    PhD student Katya Makeyeva investigates how small RNA pathways regulate gene expression of reproductive cells in the lab of Nobel Laureate Craig Mello, PhD.

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  • UMass Chan clinical trial shows antisense oligonucleotide safely suppresses mutant ALS gene in pilot human study

    UMass Chan clinical trial shows antisense oligonucleotide safely suppresses mutant ALS gene in pilot human study

    Robert H. Brown Jr., DPhil, MD, Jonathan Watts, PhD, and colleagues have shown the ability to suppress mutant forms of an ALS gene in a single-patient pilot study.

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  • Emma RNA Saves the Day coloring book helps children understand how COVID-19 vaccines work

    Emma RNA Saves the Day coloring book helps children understand how COVID-19 vaccines work

    A coloring book created by a team at UMass Chan Medical School is helping children learn about the SARS-CoV-2 virus that causes COVID-19 and the RNA vaccines that protect against it.

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  • Flotte lab to develop gene therapy models for genetic lung disease

    Flotte lab to develop gene therapy models for genetic lung disease

    Researchers from UMass Chan Medical School have received a five-year $13.6 million program project grant from the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute to develop new gene therapy models for alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency, a chronic, debilitating genetic lung disease that shortens the lifespan.

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  • UMass Cancer Center funds five UMass Chan research projects

    UMass Cancer Center funds five UMass Chan research projects

    The UMass Cancer Center Pilot Project Program has awarded seed grants to five UMass Chan Medical School research projects to enable investigators to gather pilot data for external cancer-focused funding.

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  • Remillard Family Community Service Fund awards nine grants for UMass Chan collaborations

    Remillard Family Community Service Fund awards nine grants for UMass Chan collaborations

    Funded projects led by faculty, students, staff and community partners have the potential to improve the health of Central Massachusetts residents, particularly those who are economically or educationally disadvantaged or underrepresented.

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  • Convocation 2021: Chancellor Collins outlines vision for new era at UMass Chan

    Convocation 2021: Chancellor Collins outlines vision for new era at UMass Chan

    Chancellor Michael F. Collins gave his annual Convocation address on Thursday, Sept. 9, in the Albert Sherman Center Auditorium, focusing on the “transformational moment” for the institution. Four faculty members were honored with Chancellor’s Medals, including the late Robert Finberg.

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  • Worcester elementary students greeted with supply-filled backpacks from UMass Medical School

    Worcester elementary students greeted with supply-filled backpacks from UMass Medical School

    Nearly 600 backpacks were distributed to students at Rice Square, Grafton Street and Union Square elementary schools thanks to the UMass Medical School North Quadrant Support Services partnership with the Worcester Public Schools.

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  • Two new studies from Daryl Bosco lab shed new light on ALS mechanisms

    Two new studies from Daryl Bosco lab shed new light on ALS mechanisms

    Two studies from the lab of Daryl Bosco, PhD, offer new insights into the biochemical and molecular mechanisms that cause amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.

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  • Interactive virtual ScienceLIVE program builds in Worcester schools

    Interactive virtual ScienceLIVE program builds in Worcester schools

    An interactive online science program for middle school students developed and presented by UMass Medical School researchers will deepen its partnership with Worcester Public Schools this fall.

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  • UMass Medical School receives $2.8 million grant for advanced cryo-EM microscope

    UMass Medical School receives $2.8 million grant for advanced cryo-EM microscope

    Roger Davis, PhD, FRS, and the Cryo-EM Core facility at UMass Medical School have received $2.8 million from The Massachusetts Life Sciences Center to purchase an advanced Glacios cryo-electron microscope from Thermo Fisher Scientific.

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  • Chan Zuckerberg Initiative funds atomic-level imaging research in Grigorieff lab at UMass Chan

    Chan Zuckerberg Initiative funds atomic-level imaging research in Grigorieff lab at UMMS

    Nikolaus Grigorieff, PhD, and Bronwyn Lucas, PhD, have received a $1.3 million grant from the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative to develop new computational and data collection tools for locating specific molecules with near-atomic accuracy within cells using cryo-EM imaging technology.

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  • Katherine Fitzgerald and Nikolaus Grigorieff elected to National Academy of Sciences

    Katherine Fitzgerald and Nikolaus Grigorieff elected to National Academy of Sciences

    Two UMass Medical School professors have been elected to the National Academy of Sciences in recognition of their distinguished and continuing achievements in original research.

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  • UMass Chan establishes gene therapy collaborative research agreement with Pfizer

    UMMS establishes gene therapy collaborative research agreement with Pfizer

    UMass Medical School has entered into a three-year, collaborative research agreement with Pfizer to evaluate determinants that influence the manufacturing quality and yield of viral vectors used in gene therapy. The research at UMMS is being performed under the direction of Guangping Gao, PhD, and Dan Wang, PhD.

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  • Erik Sontheimer co-leading efforts to develop gene editing toolkit by NIH Somatic Cell Genome Editing Consortium

    Erik Sontheimer co-leading efforts to develop gene editing toolkit by NIH Somatic Cell Genome Editing Consortium

    Six UMass Medical School scientists are among the members of the National Institutes of Health’s Somatic Cell Genome Editing Consortium to publish a paper in Nature outlining the program’s goals.

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  • Two UMass Medical School research teams chosen to compete in STAT News competition

    Two UMass Medical School research teams chosen to compete in STAT News competition

    Two research teams from UMass Medical School have been selected by STAT News to compete among 64 contestants in the 2021 STAT Madness competition. Voting begins March 1.

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  • Atalanta Therapeutics founded by UMass Medical School and three faculty members

    Atalanta Therapeutics founded by UMass Medical School and three faculty members

    Atalanta Therapeutics, a biotech founded by UMass Medical School and three faculty research scientists to pioneer treatment options for neurodegenerative diseases, has launched with financing by venture capital fund F-Prime Capital and strategic collaborations with Biogen and Genentech.

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  • Inside the new mRNA vaccines for COVID-19

    Inside the new mRNA vaccines for COVID-19

    The new vaccines by Pfizer/BioNTech and Moderna use messenger RNA to stimulate the immune system to protect against COVID-19. These vaccines are the first of their kind and researchers at UMass Medical School are among the leading RNA biologists in the world.

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  • UMass Medical School postdoctoral fellow Anna Loveland named STAT Wunderkind

    UMass Medical School postdoctoral fellow Anna Loveland named STAT Wunderkind

    UMass Medical School postdoctoral fellow Anna Loveland, PhD, has been named a STAT Wunderkind by the health and science media company STAT. STAT Wunderkinds honors the brightest young minds in life science for their work in academia, industry, and in the clinic.

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  • ScienceLIVE brings virtual labs to area middle school students

    ScienceLIVE brings virtual labs to area middle school students

    UMass Medical School’s RNA Therapeutics Institute and Sanderson Center for Optical Experimentation have partnered with Technocopia Inc., a nonprofit community makerspace in downtown Worcester, to develop ScienceLIVE, a virtual outreach program to deliver science to middle school students during the pandemic.

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  • UMass Medical School community mourns loss of Jake Kennedy

    UMass Medical School community mourns loss of Jake Kennedy

    On behalf of the UMass Medical School community, we extend our sincere condolences to Jake Kennedy’s family and to all who knew and loved him. Jake Kennedy died Tuesday, Oct. 13, at age 65, in his Salem, N.H., home of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.

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  • UMass Medical School appoints five faculty members to endowed chairs

    UMass Medical School appoints five faculty members to endowed chairs

    Douglas T. Golenbock, MD; Gregory A. Volturo, MD; Anastasia Khvorova, PhD; Erik J. Sontheimer, PhD; and Jennifer A. Reidy, MD, have been named to endowed faculty posts at UMass Medical School.

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  • Katherine Fitzgerald and Anastasia Khvorova named Harrington Scholars

    Katherine Fitzgerald and Anastasia Khvorova named Harrington Scholars

    The Harrington Discovery Institute at University Hospitals in Cleveland, Ohio, in collaboration with Morgan Stanley GIFT Cures, has chosen two UMass Medical School faculty members to receive Harrington Scholar Awards for Coronavirus.

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  • MD/PhD-student-led research finds potential new gene target for pediatric liver cancer

    MD/PhD-student-led research finds potential new gene target for pediatric liver cancer

    A new study by a team of UMass Medical School researchers, led by Jordan Smith, MD/PhD candidate, has identified a new therapeutic target in hepatoblastoma, a rare, primarily pediatric liver cancer.

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  • Anastasia Khvorova elected director of the American Society of Gene and Cell Therapy

    Anastasia Khvorova elected director of the American Society of Gene and Cell Therapy

    UMass Medical School RNA therapeutics expert Anastasia Khvorova, PhD, has been elected by the membership of the American Society of Gene and Cell Therapy to a three-year term as director-at-large/scientific & research council chair, which will begin at the 2020 ASGCT virtual annual meeting.

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  • Potential drug targets for ALS and FTD identified in two Fen-Biao Gao studies

    Potential drug targets for ALS and FTD identified in two Fen-Biao Gao studies

    A pair of collaborative studies led by Fen-Biao Gao, PhD, have identified two potential drug targets for the diseases amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and frontotemporal dementia. The studies provide a new layer of detail about how the most common genetic mutation responsible for both ALS and FTD causes neuron cell death.

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  • Cynthia Fuhrmann dedicated to helping other scientists chart their own careers

    Cynthia Fuhrmann dedicated to helping other scientists chart their own careers

    Biomedical sciences career development expert Cynthia Fuhrmann, PhD, discusses her own pioneering career in this latest Women in Science video.

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  • Fen-Biao Gao receives Javits Neuroscience Investigator Award

    Fen-Biao Gao receives Javits Neuroscience Investigator Award

    Fen-Biao Gao, PhD, was selected to receive a Javits Neuroscience Investigator Award, a conditional seven-year, $4.16 million grant from the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke.

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  • Fen-Biao Gao, inaugural Cellucci Chair, studies ALS, FTD

    Fen-Biao Gao, inaugural Cellucci Chair, studies ALS, FTD

    Fen-Biao Gao, PhD, the Governor Paul Cellucci Chair in Neuroscience Research and professor of neurology, studies the genetic mutations that cause amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and frontotemporal dementia.

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  • UMMS scientists find age-related DNA damage linked to repeat expansion in ALS and FTD

    UMMS scientists find age-related DNA damage linked to repeat expansion in ALS and FTD

    Research by Fen-Biao Gao, PhD, shows that age-related DNA damage caused by oxidative stress is a key contributor to the breakdown of motor neurons in some amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and frontotemporal dementia patients.

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  • New study shows nuclear RNA foci harmless in fruit fly model of C90RF72 ALS/FTD

    New study shows nuclear RNA foci harmless in fruit fly model of C90RF72 ALS/FTD

    Abnormal protein production, not nuclear RNA foci, is a major source of toxicity in the most common genetic form of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and frontotemporal dementia, according to a new study by Fen-Biao Gao, PhD, published in the journal Neuron.

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  • Researchers reveal how a common mutation causes neurodegenerative disease

    Researchers reveal how a common mutation causes neurodegenerative disease

    Fen-Biao Gao, PhD, and colleagues have determined how the most common gene mutation in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and frontotemporal dementia disrupts normal cell function by interfering with the movement of RNAs and proteins into and out of the nucleus.

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  • Massachusetts Life Sciences Center announces $5M award to UMMS for Cryo-Electron Microscope

    Massachusetts Life Sciences Center announces $5M award to UMMS for Cryo-Electron Microscope

    The Massachusetts Life Sciences Center announced a $5 million grant to UMass Medical School for the purchase of a high resolution cryo-electron microscope, bringing this breakthrough imaging technology to a campus poised to usher in the next generation of drug design and discovery.

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  • NIH grant integrates career planning with scientific training

    NIH grant integrates career planning with scientific training

    Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences professor Phillip Zamore and assistant dean Cynthia Fuhrmann are enthusiastic about a new NIH career training grant to create a career development curriculum for graduate students.

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