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Research, News & Discoveries

  • Vanderbilt University

    A dual-purpose metabolic switch

    May. 5, 2020, 8:00 AM by Leigh MacMillan Compounds called inositol diphosphates are cellular signaling “codes” involved in multiple processes ranging from phosphate sensing to DNA metabolism.  John York, PhD, and colleagues have demonstrated that the evolutionarily conserved gene product Vip1 is capable of both synthesizing… Read More

    May. 7, 2020

  • Vanderbilt University

    Antibody finding raises hopes for Marburg, COVID-19 treatments

    Apr. 30, 2020, 10:00 AM by Bill Snyder Marburg is a distant, more lethal cousin of the RNA virus that causes COVID-19. An outbreak of Marburg hemorrhagic fever in Angola in 2004-2005 killed 90% of the approximately 250 people it infected.  Now researchers at the University of Texas Medical Branch… Read More

    May. 7, 2020

  • A nighttime shot of the ocean, with the moon peeking out from behind some clouds. It is shining strongly and illuminates the water.

    Regulating protein synthesis genes

    https://cdn-dev.vanderbilt.edu/t2-main/medschool-dev/wp-content/uploads/sites/101/2020/05/Tansey_website.mp4   By Suneethi Sivakumaran WDR5 has different moonlighting roles in the body, including in chromatin regulation and in chromatin-independent processes such as cell division. © Ian Dyball, stock.adobe.com The human body is a complicated network of interdependent cellular processes regulated by gene-encoded proteins. Proteins… Read More

    May. 6, 2020

  • Vanderbilt University

    Warren Foundation to further treatments for brain disorders

    by Ryan Underwood May. 5, 2020, 2:00 PM New gift establishes the Warren Center for Neuroscience Drug Discovery to support pharmaceutical breakthroughs Vanderbilt University received $20 million from The William K. Warren Foundation, located in Tulsa, Oklahoma, to establish the Warren… Read More

    May. 5, 2020

  • Vanderbilt University

    Transporter’s role in gut barrier

    Apr. 16, 2020, 11:00 AM by Leigh MacMillan The cotransporter NKCC1 moves sodium, potassium and chloride ions across the cell membrane of many cell types, including intestinal epithelial cells. Two patients with mutations in NKCC1 suffered from severe intestinal dysfunction and chronic infections.  To explore the cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying the… Read More

    Apr. 29, 2020

  • 3D-rendered C. difficile bacteria. They are rods with bulges at one end. They are white/transparent and purple. The background is blurry and not discernible.

    Preventing CDI deaths one stem cell at a time

    https://cdn-dev.vanderbilt.edu/t2-main/medschool-dev/wp-content/uploads/sites/101/2020/04/Lacy_Website.mp4   By Sara Eaton C. diff is responsible for 50% of gastrointestinal infections in hospitals but cause over 90% of GI tract infection-related deaths. © Kateryna_Kon, stock.adobe.com Gastrointestinal infections often cause damage to the stem cells in the colon’s epithelium, a thin layer of… Read More

    Apr. 23, 2020

  • Vanderbilt University

    New Dean’s Faculty Fellows program recognizes early-stage faculty

    By Lorena Infante Lara Manuel Ascano, Department of Biochemistry, and Marija Zanic, Department of Cell and Developmental Biology. The School of Medicine Basic Sciences has established a new Dean’s Faculty Fellows program designed to recognize the efforts of faculty in the early stages of their career. The award targets assistant… Read More

    Apr. 21, 2020

  • Vanderbilt University

    New Dean’s Faculty Fellows program recognizes early-stage faculty

    By Lorena Infante Lara Manuel Ascano, Department of Biochemistry, and Marija Zanic, Department of Cell and Developmental Biology. The School of Medicine Basic Sciences has established a new Dean’s Faculty Fellows program designed to recognize the efforts of faculty in the early stages of their career. The award targets assistant… Read More

    Apr. 21, 2020

  • Vanderbilt University

    ‘Tuning’ cell shape for division

    Apr. 16, 2020, 1:00 PM by Leigh MacMillan Mechanical properties of the cell cortex — a thin network of actin filaments under the cell membrane — regulate shape changes during cell division, cell migration and tissue development. Two forms of the molecular motor myosin-II participate in organizing and remodeling the… Read More

    Apr. 17, 2020

  • Vanderbilt University

    Research team awarded $9 million to study extracellular RNA in colorectal cancer

    Apr. 9, 2020, 10:52 AM The extracellular RNA in colorectal cancer team includes, from left, Jeffrey Franklin, PhD, Yu Shyr, PhD, Qi Liu, PhD, Alissa Weaver, MD, PhD, James Higginbotham, PhD, and James Patton, PhD. Not pictured: Robert Coffey, MD, Kasey Vickers, PhD, and John Karijolich, PhD. (photo by Erin… Read More

    Apr. 14, 2020