Month: November 2019
Homeostasis, the process through which a tissue maintains its’ optimal functional conditions, is a tightly regulated process. This regulation is achieved through the careful control of cell turnover within the tissue, removing damaged cells through the induction of apoptosis and encouraging cell proliferation to generate new cells to replenish the tissue. Stem cells therefore play […]
The IGMM lecture theatre was packed with people on the 12th November, eager to listen to Steve Jackson’s seminar, which was entitled ‘Cellular responses to DNA damage: mechanistic insights and clinical applications’. I did my undergraduate project in Steve’s lab two years ago, so I was interested to see what they’ve been up to since […]
On the 6th of November 2019, the IGMM welcomed Professor Marc Bühler from the Friedrich Miescher Institute for Biomedical Research to present his work on the ChAHP complex. Research in the Bühler lab focuses on investigating various mechanisms that affect eukaryotic genome organization, chromatin structure, and gene expression, and how these mechanisms have evolved over […]
By Lisa Backwell | Thursday 24 October 2019 In this week’s IGMM external seminar series, Professor Victoria Sanz-Moreno from Queen Mary University of London treated us to a quick-fire snapshot of her labs extensive work on an aggressive form of skin cancer called melanoma, which has led to the recent discovery that a pathway called […]