Recent News

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Scientists at the Sloan Kettering Institute are learning why some immune cells are stubbornly hard to revive with immunotherapy.
In the Lab
By looking at how DNA is packaged in cells, scientists are teasing apart a long-standing conundrum about the immune response to cancer.
MSK Symposium Honors Dinshaw Patel, Titan of Structural Biology
Announcement
Scientists came to MSK to celebrate the 75th birthday of a leader in the field of structural biology.
graduation boutonnieres
Seven students have successfully defended their dissertations and will receive their PhD degrees at commencement on May 18.
Cancer biologist and pediatric oncologist Alex Kentsis
In the Lab
Researchers have discovered a genetic mechanism that may trigger most childhood cancers.
Mount Rushmore viewed through face-detection software.
Taking a cue from smartphone technology, scientists are using face-recognition algorithms to improve RNA interference.
A cell in the process of dividing
In the Lab
MSK researchers are learning how cells are able to recognize and correct errors that occur during cell division.
An illustration of CRISPR-Cas9
In the Lab
A freely accessible software program provides researchers with an easy way to optimize a popular genome-editing tool.
Wearable device on woman’s arm with labels indicating beams going into nanotubes and coming back out for analysis.
In the Lab
Learn how tiny sensors made of nanotubes could serve as implantable devices that offer a noninvasive way to monitor cancer and its treatments.
Molecular biologist John Petrini of the Sloan Kettering Institute.
Feature
Scientists know that cancer can result from mistakes in DNA repair. But understanding what controls the repair process itself has been a hard nut to crack.
CAR T cells attacking cancer
In the Lab
What do you get when you combine two of the hottest areas of biotechnology? A new paper from MSK researchers explains.