Colorful illustration of spherical lipid nanoparticles.

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Digital illustration of coiled molecules assembled into larger constructs.

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Eva Nogales (Credit: Christopher Michel) Harshi Munkundan (Credit: Los Alamos National Laboratory)
  • Bioscientists to Receive DOE Funding for Biomanufacturing and Microbiome Research

    Bioscientists to Receive DOE Funding for Biomanufacturing and Microbiome Research

    Biosciences researchers are among the recipients of four new DOE awards. Two awards will focus on reducing carbon emissions while producing bioenergy. The other two are aimed at understanding the role of microbiomes in the biogeochemical cycling of elements like carbon.

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  • Biomanufacturing Increases Available Supply of Anti-cancer Drug

    Biomanufacturing Increases Available Supply of Anti-cancer Drug

    The supply of a plant-derived anti-cancer drug can finally meet global demand after a team of scientists from Denmark and the U.S. engineered yeast to produce the precursor molecules, which could previously only be obtained in trace concentrations in the native plant. A study describing the breakthrough was recently published in Nature. The international team included four researchers from the Biological Systems and Engineering Division: Leanne Jade G. Chan, Edward Baidoo, Christopher J. Petzold, and Jay D. Keasling.

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  • Thirdhand Smoke Harms the Body More Than We Ever Realized

    Thirdhand Smoke Harms the Body More Than We Ever Realized

    A new study found that concentrations of toxic chemicals lingering indoors where cigarettes have been smoked can exceed risk guidelines from the State of California. This means that non-smokers can be exposed to health risks by living in contaminated spaces.

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  • Advancing Cancer Research with Artificial Intelligence   

    Advancing Cancer Research with Artificial Intelligence   

    BSE Researchers published two studies that use AI to advance their science to better understand the risks and outcomes of cancer in human health. 

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  • Simulations at NERSC Reveal Origins of Brain Electrical Signals

    Simulations at NERSC Reveal Origins of Brain Electrical Signals

    The origin of the electrical signals recorded at the brain’s surface by electrocorticography (ECoG) has long remained a mystery. Kris Bouchard, a staff scientist in the Biological Systems and Engineering (BSE) Division, led a seven-year research effort to understand precisely which neurons are generating the recorded signals.

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