Keyword: BioCity Turku

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Frontiers of Science: Prof. Julian Jones

Time

16.3.2023 at 12.00 - 13.00
Frontiers of Science March 16th at 12:00 on-site event Presidentti auditorium, BioCity Julian Jones, Imperial College London, UK Making bioglass bounce for cartilage regeneration host: Leena Hupa (leena.hupa@abo.fi) Coffee and sandwich served at 11:45 Six students and early-career postdocs are...

Frontiers of Science: Prof. Simon Yona

Time

16.2.2023 at 12.00 - 13.00
Frontiers of Science February 16th at 12:00 on-site event Presidentti auditorium, BioCity Dr. Simon Yona, Hebrew University, Israel Human mononuclear phagocyte kinetics in health and disease host: Alexander Mildner (almild@utu.fi) Coffee and sandwich served at 11:45 Six students and early-career...

Frontiers of Science: Prof. Josef Köhrle

Time

2.2.2023 at 12.00 - 13.00
Frontiers of Science February 2nd at 12:00 on-site event Presidentti auditorium, BioCity Prof. Josef Köhrle, Institute of Experimental Endocrinology, Germany Endocrine disruption of thyroid development and function Host: Jorma Toppari (jortop@utu.fi) Coffee and sandwich served at 11:45 Six students...

Frontiers of Science: Prof. Dipanjan Chowdhury

Time

13.4.2023 at 12.00 - 13.00
Frontiers of Science April 13th at 12:00 on-site event Presidentti auditorium, BioCity Prof. Dipanjan Chowdhury, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Harvard Medical School, USA Expanding the scope of DNA repair factors- novel roles and applications host: Jukka Westermarck (jukwes@utu.fi) Coffee and...

Frontiers of Science: Prof. Rene Bernards

Time

9.2.2023 at 12.00 - 13.00
Frontiers of Science February 9th at 12:00 on-site event Presidentti auditorium, BioCity Prof. Rene Bernards, Netherlands Cancer Institute, Netherlands Unconventional approaches to cancer therapy Host: Klaus Elenius (klaele@utu.fi) Coffee and sandwich served at 11:45 Research group of Prof. Bernards...

Research Project on the Development of Human Immune System in Early Life Obtains Multimillion Funding

01.12.2022

The first few months and years of life are crucial to the development of the human immune system. This is an important phase as the immune system can define which diseases individuals might develop later in life. INITIALISE, a joint research project of ten universities, will study which environmental factors and mechanisms modify the human immune system in early life and whether targeted interventions could have a positive impact. The project obtained nearly seven million in funding from Horizon Europe.