725 search results for “staten cell biology” in the Student website
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Sarmistha BhuniaFaculty of Science
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Yevhenii RadchenkoFaculty of Science
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Vincent LitFaculty of Science
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Bastienne VriesendorpFaculty of Science
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Suzanne LommenFaculty of Science
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Cerissa van WalstijnFaculty of Science
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Jorn de JongFaculty of Science
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Xiaoyao ChenFaculty of Science
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Indigo BekaertFaculty of Science
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Julia Villalva FernandezFaculty of Science
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Tom KeijerFaculty of Science
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Thijs VoskuilenFaculty of Science
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Qi ChenFaculty of Science
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Patrick VoskampFaculty of Science
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Camillo IacomettiFaculty of Science
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Oscar Escalona RayoFaculty of Science
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Sofia StiegertFaculty of Science
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Weizhe ZhangFaculty of Science
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Barbara GravendeelFaculty of Science
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Kitt Emilie OsterlidFaculty of Science
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Ying ChenFaculty of Science
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Tom NederstigtFaculty of Science
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Xinming XuFaculty of Science
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María Negre RodríguezFaculty of Science
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Mertcan ÖzelFaculty of Science
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Romain AvellanFaculty of Science
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Carolina Mishell Ibarra BarrenoFaculty of Science
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Lucía López GandulFaculty of Science
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Florian Küllmer -
Cristina Berges BasáñezFaculty of Science
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Adam Sidi MabroukFaculty of Science
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Kateryna BilaFaculty of Science
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Meiling GaoFaculty of Science
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Kasper van der CruijsenFaculty of Science
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Charlotte LapréFaculty of Science
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Gijs RuijgrokFaculty of Science
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Guangya JiangFaculty of Science
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Fatemeh KhodadustvaskasiFaculty of Science
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New Master’s programme in Transfusion Medicine and Cellular and Tissue Therapies
LUMC and Leiden University will start the new two-year online master's program in Transfusion Medicine and Cellular and Tissue Therapies from October 2023.
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Modified caffeine molecules help medical research move forward
Before researchers can develop targeted drugs, they need to know exactly how a disease works. Biochemist Bert Beerkens created molecules that allow them to find out. He used caffeine as the basis for new molecules that enable research into certain receptor proteins on cells.
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Human noise makes cod inactive. When it gets quiet again, they take off
She narrowly defied bureaucracy and spent days angling for cod. In the North Sea, marine biologist Inge van der Knaap discovered that noise significantly disturbs fish behaviour. ‘There is now a lot of attention for underwater noise.’
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How touchscreens and eye trackers can tell us something about the dating life of orangutans
Aesthetic attraction plays a big role in orangutans’ mate choice, behavioural biologist and PhD candidate Tom Roth has observed. But to discover just how big that role is, more research is needed into the emotions of the great apes.
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Malformations in heart, eyes and nervous system: Nano-plastics disrupt growth
Nano-plastics cause malformations. Meiru Wang, researcher at the Institute of Biology Leiden, looked at the extreme effects polystyrene nano-particles could have, using chicken embryos as a model. Her results were quite alarming. Especially as nano-particles are everywhere. In the air, floating through…
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Unlocking the secrets of DNA repair: Sarah’s curiosity might lead to new cancer treatments
How do cells repair their damaged DNA—and what happens when that process is hindered and cancer arises? Sarah Moser has taken a closer look during her PhD, uncovering surprising insights that could help improve future cancer treatments.
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A mathematical three-step rocket helps biologists study tumour blood vessels
Koen Keijzer combined three mathematical models into one unified system capable of making meaningful predictions about how cells form blood vessels. This helps biologists studying the chaotic, leaky blood vessels found in and around tumours.
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Finally solved: how the body's own marijuana spreads through the brain
Since its discovery thirty years ago, it remained a mystery: how does the body’s own marijuana move between nerve cells in the brain? Mario van der Stelt and his research group have now uncovered the answer. This insight could aid the development of new treatments for pain and neurological disorders…
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ERC grant for Sebastian Pomplun to precisely influence gene expression
In order to stop a whole range of diseases or disorders at their source, you would have to be able to switch certain genes on or off. Sebastian Pomplun wants to develop substances that can do this very precisely. For example, he wants to disrupt cancer processes and make cells produce an important missing…
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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…
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Patrick DassenFaculty of Humanities
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Sander van KasterenFaculty of Science