Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Employer
-
Field
-
Overview The Laboratory for Cellular Metabolism and Metabolic Regulation (Fendt Lab) is a young and dynamic team of researchers performing cutting edge cancer metabolism research with special focus
-
The Laboratory for Cellular Metabolism and Metabolic Regulation (Fendt Lab) is a young and dynamic team of researchers performing cutting edge cancer metabolism research with special focus on cancer
-
postdoctoral researcher - molecular mechanisms T-cell leukemia - Diagnostische Wetenschappen (28449)
of cancer. Our laboratory is fully equipped for molecular, cellular in vitro and in vivo work and we have access to all state of the art departmental and institutional core facilities including high end
-
of proliferating cells, without additional layers of internal organization (e.g., membrane-enclosed organelles) or cell cycle regulation (e.g., cyclins and cyclin-dependent kinases) seen in eukaryotic cells
-
project focusing on a long-standing and fascinating question : « what makes our brain cells human ? » (see our recent work : Hecker et al. Science 2025; Libé-Philippot et al. Cell 2023; Vanderhaeghen and
-
developmental biology, cell biology and evolutionary biology. We like to implement novel omics technologies such as single cell approaches and chemical biology to help us answering our biological questions
-
through a biophysical lens. This project aims to understand how biophysical properties of the tumor microenvironment influence immune cell behavior, with the ultimate goal of identifying new therapeutic
-
including fragmentomics, methylomics, etc). In addition, results will be compared and integrated with bulk and single-cell/spatial data obtained on matching tumor cells. About TOBI-lab The overarching goal
-
question: « what makes our brain human ? » (Vanderhaeghen and Polleux, Nat. Rev. Neurosci. 2023). We combine cutting-edge approaches such as pluripotent stem cell models of human corticogenesis, human-mouse
-
question: « what makes our brain human ? » (Vanderhaeghen and Polleux, Nat. Rev. Neurosci. 2023). We combine cutting-edge approaches such as pluripotent stem cell models of human corticogenesis, human-mouse