715 search results for “cell chemistry” in the Student website
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Esmay HamminkFaculty of Science
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Tijn van der VeldenFaculty of Science
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Imogen RobertsonFaculty of Science
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Tarik ZahzahFaculty of Science
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Thomas KockFaculty of Science
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Thanja LambertsFaculty of Science
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Saar KoeneFaculty of Science
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Inês JustoFaculty of Science
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Veronique van der BorgFaculty of Science
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Suzanne van ZwolFaculty of Science
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Emma CarelsFaculty of Science
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Licheng WeiFaculty of Science
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Tobias DijkhuisFaculty of Science
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Pieter de HaijFaculty of Science
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Ying-Ying LuFaculty of Science
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Lucas de KamFaculty of Science
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Jessica HoangFaculty of Science
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Rolf BootFaculty of Science
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Jan Sebastian Dominic RodriguezFaculty of Science
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Charlotte SorieulFaculty of Science
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Shengxiang YangFaculty of Science
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Francisco Antunes NarcisoFaculty of Science
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Joeri SchoenmakersFaculty of Science
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Gabriel TidestavFaculty of Science
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Dung-Yeh WuFaculty of Science
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Justina MossFaculty of Science
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Rick KortFaculty of Science
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Nathaniel PotinFaculty of Science
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Radvile JuskaiteFaculty of Science
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Nikoo GhanadanFaculty of Science
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Maxime BrohetFaculty of Science
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Jetse van OsFaculty of Science
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Anna StrijevskayaFaculty of Science
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Bibiana TürkcanFaculty of Science
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Maximilian WichertFaculty of Science
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Pim van DurenFaculty of Science
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Lipeng YaoFaculty of Science
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Marko RadojkovicFaculty of Science
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Xiaofang KangFaculty of Science
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Vladimir CalviFaculty of Science
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Lan WangFaculty of Science
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Antibiotic resistance: an economic problem universities could help to solve
Antibiotic resistance is an economic problem. Pharmaceutical companies cannot earn much from antibiotic research, so they do not invest in it. This makes it important that universities do so, says Ned Buijs.
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From droplets in the freezer to the inception of a potent new antibiotic
What started as an idea during a social gathering led to an unexpected breakthrough in research on resistant bacteria. Biologists and chemists from Leiden developed a new substance that proves to be effective against bacteria resistant to antibiotics. They published their discovery in Nature Chemist…
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Three NWO Open Competition grants for Leiden scientists
Smart drug carriers, uneven cosmic expansion, and solar energy storage in molecules. These are the topics of three newly awarded NWO-XS grants to researchers at the Faculty of Science.
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Promising new technique to treat cancer receives NWO grant
Biological chemist Nathaniel Martin and his team received an NWO grant to examine how blocking a specific enzyme in our body, NNMT, could be helpful in the treatment of some cancers. Trials with mice have been promising, and together with the Netherlands Cancer Institute, Martin wants to take the next…
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Not wrapping but folding: Bacteria also organise their DNA (but they do it a bit differently)
Some bacteria, it turns out, have proteins much like ours that organise the DNA in their cells. They just do it a bit differently. This is revealed by new research from biochemists at the Leiden Institute of Chemistry and the Max Planck Institute for Biology. The discovery helps us better understand…
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Several Leiden Science students excel and win KHMW Young Talent awards
A true shower of awards for students from the Faculty of Science during the annual KHMW Young Talent Awards ceremony. On Monday, 25 November, no less than nine first-year students received a prize for the best academic results in their first year. In addition, there were graduation prizes for master’s…
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Improving nature’s antibiotic
'What nature made isn’t necessarily an optimized medicine to use in the human body,’ says Professor of Biological Chemistry Nathaniel Martin. That’s why a group of Leiden researchers is making a chemistry-based improved version of the frequently used antibiotic vancomycin. They received an NWO NACTAR…
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Arteriosclerosis and drug discovery: two young researchers win Krijn Rietveld Award for innovative research
One discovered that arteriosclerosis resembles an autoimmune disease, while the other developed a system to aid in the search for new medications. For these achievements, Marie Depuydt and Jurren de Groot were awarded the Krijn Rietveld Memorial Innovation Award on the evening of Tuesday 4 June.
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Selda AbyarFaculty of Science