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- 25 September 2018Q&A with Bruce Wyse, IMB Deputy Director Operations
- Researchers have solved the structure of a complex molecular machine responsible for sorting and transporting cellular cargo.
- Venom from the giant red bull ant is helping IMB scientists understand the evolution of animal toxins in work that could lead to better treatments for pain.
- A University of Queensland research discovery reveals how the body puts the brakes on inflammation, a discovery that will help us understand how poorly controlled inflammation exacerbates diseases including cystic fibrosis, Alzheimer’s, atherosclerosis and cancer.
- Professor Glenn King and partners have discovered a peptide in the venom of funnel-web spiders that could drastically reduce brain damage following stroke.
- Inside one in ten women an invasive disease is ravaging reproductive and surrounding organs. It causes serious pain and in some cases, infertility. It’s called endometriosis and we know very little about it.
- 31 August 2018Q&A with Jodi Richards, IMB Research Partnerships Manager
- For the first time, scientists have seen in exquisite, real-time detail how immune cells survey their surroundings to detect threats to our health.
- Associate Professor Kate Schroder and her team uncovered a new line of defence deployed by the immune system against bacteria.
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