Recent News

521 News Items found
A colorful pigeon standing in an urban setting.
With the resurgence of interest in cancer metabolism, researchers are coming to realize that there is more to a cell’s biochemistry than once thought.
Paige Arnold, a graduate student in the Gerstner Sloan Kettering Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences (GSK)
Paige Arnold, a graduate student in the Gerstner Sloan Kettering Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences (GSK), is one of 13 PhD candidates selected from around the world to receive a Harold M. Weintraub Graduate Student Award for the quality, originality, and significance of their doctoral research.
colorful picture of cancer cells
Data from 25,000 patients is helping scientists answer this and many other important questions.
SKI scientists David Scheinberg and Derek Tan
These souped-up versions may help overcome some limitations of existing CAR T cells.
A scientist holding a tube in a lab
Take a look back at some of the biggest science stories from this past year.
Kalina Belcheva, Teddy Yewdell, Jayanta Chaudhuri, and Ryan Smolkin standing together in a lab
In the Lab
Research from Sloan Kettering Institute immunologists suggests that the body may mount an immune response to respiratory viruses that lasts longer than previously thought. The discovery could impact the timing of COVID-19 vaccinations.
SKI immunologist Andrea Schietinger
As an autoimmune disease, Type 1 diabetes raises important questions about immune cell activity that have broad implications for immunotherapy.
Two scientists wearing masks and looking at a computer screen
Get an inside look into the life of a student from the Gerstner Sloan Kettering (GSK) Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences.
Maria Jasin
In the Lab
Investigators have employed mutant mice to study how the accumulation of genetic errors is managed during egg and sperm formation.
Yonina Murciano-Goroff, Jenny Xue, Bob Li, Piro Lito, and Yulei Zhao.
Finding
A paper from MSK researchers reports that resistance to sotorasib, a new targeted drug for lung cancer, can be caused by many different molecular changes.