Health And Medicine
-
Team seeks to identify immune response to influenza
Vanderbilt researchers led by Buddy Creech are searching for the key to lasting protection against influenza by examining naturally protecting cells found in bone marrow. Read MoreNov 1, 2018
-
Mary Kay Foundation grant to bolster immunotherapy research
The grant will allow Charles Caskey to lead research into using ultrasound as an image-guided therapy for drug delivery. Read MoreOct 26, 2018
-
Grant to help explore critical issues in Down syndrome
The grant will allow Kennedy Center researchers to analyze data from VUMC's Synthetic Derivative and BioVU databanks to study biomarkers associated with Down Syndrome. Read MoreOct 26, 2018
-
Probing the pathology of impaired cognition
A new link between a support protein within the brain's white matter and known Alzheimer's biomarkers discovered by Angela Jefferson and colleagues bring researchers a step toward earlier and more precise detection of neuropathology underlying cognitive impairment that may lead to new targeted therapies Read MoreOct 26, 2018
-
Grant enhances study of new chemotherapy targets
Vanderbilt chemists have been awarded $7.2 million over the next five years from the National Cancer Institute to lead an initiative to better understand how a combination chemotherapy for breast cancer targets DNA. Read MoreOct 19, 2018
-
Targeting diabetic kidney disease
Raymond Harris, Ming-Zhi Zhang and colleagues suggest pathways activated by the epidermal growth factor receptor may be promising targets for treating diabetic kidney disease. Read MoreOct 16, 2018
-
Asthma’s androgen connection
New findings by Dawn Newcomb and colleagues suggest an explanation for why women are more prone to asthma than men. Read MoreOct 16, 2018
-
Cellular stress defense
Research led by Sanjay Mishra, and colleagues suggests modular sHSP architecture contributes to the ability of heat-protective proteins to serve as chaperones for a range of unfolded proteins. Read MoreOct 16, 2018
-
Insulin accelerant
Reducing nitric oxide helps insulin move more quickly through blood vessels, find David Wasserman and colleagues. Read MoreOct 16, 2018
-
Bradley Malin elected to National Academy of Medicine
Bradley Malin, professor of biomedical informatics, biostatistics and computer science, is among 85 newly elected members of the National Academy of Medicine. Read MoreOct 16, 2018
-
Novel genetic study sheds new light on risk of heart attack
Loss of a protein that regulates mitochondrial function can greatly increase the risk of a heart attack, report Eric Gamazon, Sandra Zinkel and graduate students Christie Salisbury-Ruf and Clinton Bertram in new research. Read MoreOct 11, 2018
-
Team’s study reveals hidden lives of medical biomarkers
The hidden lives of medical biomarkers are the focus of a recent study in Nature Communications by Jonathan Mosley. Read MoreOct 11, 2018
-
Fat tissue’s “iron sink”
New research by Alyssa Hasty and colleagues shows that a certain immune cell can absorb excess iron that can compromise healthy fat tissue. Read MoreOct 4, 2018
-
Stretch, inflammation and hypertension
New research by David Harrison and colleagues sheds light on how changes in mechanical forces in the aorta enhance immune cell activation thus promoting hypertension. Read MoreOct 4, 2018
-
Cytokine-cognition connection
Erin Calipari and colleagues have shown that peripheral administration of a neuroprotective cytokine may improve dopamine signaling problems associated with certain psychiatric disorders. Read MoreOct 4, 2018
-
Gordon receives $2.3 million NIH Director’s New Innovator Award
Reyna Gordon has received a NIH Director’s New Innovator Award of $2.3 million for her project, “Biomarkers of Rhythmic Communication: Integrating Foundational and Translational Approaches.” Read MoreOct 4, 2018
-
Probing the genetics of fibroids
Digna Velez Edwards and colleagues have now conducted the first genome-wide association study to search for genetic loci associated with differences in fibroid size and number. Read MoreOct 4, 2018
-
New study looks at brain networks involved in free will
Using lesion network mapping, a recently developed technique for analyzing how the brain works, Ryan Darby studied free will perception related to movement decisions. Read MoreOct 4, 2018
-
Study reveals new targets to inhibit pulmonary fibrosis
An international team led by researchers at Vanderbilt University Medical Center sheds new light on the cause of pulmonary fibrosis and demonstrates a way to impede the disease. Read MoreOct 4, 2018
-
Mass spectrometry team earns grant to map body at the cellular level
Biochemistry professor Richard Caprioli, director of the Mass Spectrometry Research Center, and Jeff Spraggins, research assistant professor of biochemistry, and their team will build a platform to molecularly characterize cells. Read MoreSep 28, 2018