Duke School of Medicine launches $3.2 million effort to 3D-print a living lung
Lung model will mimic real breathing to study how co-infections can turn routine flu into life-threatening disease .
Researchers uncover how a killer fungus quietly invades the brain
Study shows a deadly fungus gets a two-week head start on the brain’s defenders. It points to a new strategy for boosting the immune system to fight Cryptococcus.
10 groundbreaking advances that grew out of HIV research
A new Nature Medicine paper highlights how 40 years of HIV research reshaped far more than the fight against one virus. What began as an urgent global health response helped fuel breakthroughs that now power treatments for cancer, tuberculosis, hepatitis, and even COVID-19 — thanks to sustained U.S. investment and collaboration across universities, industry, and government.
Could a cancer vaccine developed long ago hold the key to long-term surival?
Duke research reveals that a decades-old breast cancer vaccine may have unlocked a powerful immune memory response, now supercharged by a new antibody.
New enzymes promise cheaper, cleaner drug production
Researchers at Duke University School of Medicine have identified two enzymes that can produce a key ingredient in antibiotics, antivirals, and cancer drugs without the use of toxic chemicals.
Robotic fish unlocks secrets of the brain-body connection
A three-step study — lab experiments with zebrafish, computer simulation, and robotic testing — reveal how closely the brain and body work together to guide movement based on what we see.
'Junk DNA' Found to Sense Its Environment, May Hold the Key to Disease Treatment
A study in Nature Cell Biology has uncovered a surprising role for what was once considered “junk DNA,” showing that it helps stem cells sense their surroundings and decide what kind of cells to become during early development.
Suzanne Barbour Honored for Sustained Leadership by the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
Suzanne Barbour, PhD, professor of cell biology has received the Sustained Leadership Award from the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology.
New Understanding of A Deadly Cancer
In a study published in Nature, Duke researchers led by Trudy Oliver, PhD, reshape understanding of how small cell lung cancer begins, opening the door to developing therapies that could prevent this aggressive disease.
Inside TB's Hidden Cities
Advanced genetic sequencing reveals the cells behind many persistent tuberculosis infections and provides a map of exactly where these cells live, pointing the way toward new treatments.