200 search results for “a quiet cell with” in the Student website
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Jurjun van der Velde -
Klara Beslmüller -
Elpida Lymperi -
Jaco van Veldhoven -
Hanneke Leegwater -
Xuesong Wang -
Bart Lenselink -
Linda van den Berk -
Giulia Callegaro -
Britt Duijndam -
Levi Winkelman -
Tamara Danilyuk -
Sabine de Winter -
Michiel van Dijk -
Natasha Tahir -
Kirsten Snijders -
Arnoud Sonnenberg -
James Stevens -
Elsje Burgers -
Roshni Nair -
Gerard Mulder -
Lucy Sinke -
Vera van der Noord -
Fengjiao Zhang -
Jiahang Su -
Ine Tijdens -
Chantal Pont -
Linglu Xu -
Zoran Gavric -
Lukas Wijaya -
Augustinus Lycklama à Nijeholt -
Daphne Wong-A-FoeFaculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences
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LipsiusCleveringaplaats 1, Leiden
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Spui CampusSpui 5, The Hague
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WijnhavenTurfmarkt 99, The Hague
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Discover the world of life sciences at Dutch Bio Science Week
Curious about what goes on at the Leiden Bio Science Park? During Dutch Bio Science Week (27 June - 5 July), organisations across the park will open their doors. For nine days, Leiden will be dedicated to life sciences and health, with activities for all.
- Zen Garden Student Well-being Week
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Paul Hooykaas -
Hendrikus Tanke -
Raju Sharma -
Tessa Hagens -
Cecilia Bergonzini -
Chenlin Feng -
Marije Niemeijer -
Jos Jonkers -
Maarten Lubbers -
Jan Willem van der Laan -
LUMC participates in pioneering type 1 diabetes research
The promising early results of an international study have shown that insulin-producing cells grown from stem cells can cure the disease. The new Cure One LUMC research centre aims to accelerate this breakthrough.
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Tropical bananaquits lose song quality in the city
I think we should go this way. This way! THIS! WAY!! Making yourself heard in a city can be difficult. That is not only the case for humans, but birds seem to be hindered by urban noise as well. Researcher Hans Slabbekoorn of Leiden University already showed that great tits in Leiden communicate differently…
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Can Parkinson's be stopped by unravelling protein fibres? Anne Wentink finds out with a Vidi grant from NWO
In brain diseases such as Parkinson's and Alzheimer's, proteins clump together to form fibres. ‘Chaperone proteins’ unravel those fibres, but in the test tube biochemist Anne Wentink saw that this can also cause new problems. She is going to find out what happens inside cells to determine what a drug…