Inside the mold that breaks the rules of cell biology
Cell biologist Amy Gladfelter, PhD, has been intrigued by a fungus called Ashbya gossypii for 20 years. Made of branching strands, this mold consists of “giant” cells packed with multiple nuclei.
A tiny DNA switch may explain why human brains grew so big
A short piece of DNA that changed rapidly in humans compared with other mammals
appears to act like a volume knob for brain growth.
New strategy creates CAR-T cells inside the body
Researchers at Duke University School of Medicine, working in collaboration with scientists at University of California, San Francisco, and University of California, Berkeley, have developed a new approach that could expand the reach and accessibility of CAR-T cell therapy. The findings were published in Nature.
Hidden circuit helps the brain learn from mistakes
Duke University School of Medicine scientists have discovered a hidden brain circuit that helps explain how we learn from experience.
The DNA repair duo cancers use to build ecDNA — and gain an advantage
Duke University School of Medicine researchers led by cancer biologist Zhao Zhang, PhD, have discovered the keys to survival for a circular form of DNA that drives many aggressive cancers.
Eye disease mystery solved: How Best disease patients keep seeing clearly
Duke Eye Center discovery may explain how vision can stay surprisingly strong even when the eye’s structure is disrupted.
Miao and Derbyshire elected to the American Academy of Microbiology
Two faculty in the Duke University School of Medicine have been elected as fellows of the American Academy of Microbiology. Ed Miao, MD, PhD, Duke Health Distinguished Professor of Integrative Immunobiology, and Emily Derbyshire, PhD, Eads Family Professor of Chemistry, who has a secondary appointment in the Department of Molecular Genetics and Microbiology, are among 63 new fellows elected for 2026.
Duke researchers find a new weakness in cancer cells: an 'in-between’ phase
One of the reasons cancer cells are so dangerous is their ability to shift between distinct “cell states,” a trick that helps them spread, survive treatment, and come back even after therapy initially works.
Discovery AI Ramps Up at Duke
Duke University School of Medicine has launched Discovery AI, an ambitious research initiative that aims to accelerate the application of artificial intelligence (AI) an
A nerve-based approach to helping older adults bounce back after surgery
Electrical nerve stimulation shows promise in preventing post-surgery delirium