New hopes for the nervous system: multiple sclerosis
01 January 2009Cambridge neurologists have shown that an antibody used to treat leukaemia also limits and repairs the damage in multiple sclerosis.
Research
Cambridge neurologists have shown that an antibody used to treat leukaemia also limits and repairs the damage in multiple sclerosis.
A team of scientists from the University of Cambridge and the University of Cukurova in Turkey has taken a major step to understanding how the...
The first Asian and African human genomes have been deciphered using a technique originally invented by Professors Shankar Balasubramanian and David Klenerman at the University...
Scientists have found the first genetic link to a common childhood brain tumour - reveals research published in the journal Cancer Research.
A University of Cambridge graduate is one of three winners of the 2008 Nobel Prize for Chemistry.
As part of a unique collaborative agreement, the Japanese government has located a new research satellite at The Nanoscience Centre, University of Cambridge.
Professor Nigel Slater, from the Department of Chemical Engineering and Biotechnology, describes how the influx of ideas and principles from non-biological disciplines is shaping a...
A novel method for preventing HIV transmission from mother to child has been devised with the help of a Cambridge University engineer.
Research at the Gordon Laboratory is opening up an important new area for the surface engineering of materials.
Because of their unique structure, biological tissues exhibit physical and mechanical properties that are unlike anything in the world of engineering.