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  • New mechanism behind cancer cell growth revealed

    Researchers from Uppsala University have revealed one of the mechanisms behind the growth of cancer cells in the blood cancer multiple myeloma. The study shows that the protein EZH2 interacts with a specific RNA molecule to block genes that are important for tumour growth. The findings might contribute to the development of new treatments for multiple myeloma patients.

  • Jenny Helin, Adviser to the Vice-Chancellor on Campus Gotland, Uppsala University. Photo: Daniel Olsson

    Jenny Helin new Adviser to the Vice-Chancellor on Campus Gotland

    Vice-Chancellor Anders Hagfeldt has appointed Jenny Helin, Senior Lecturer at the Department of Business Studies, as Adviser to the Vice-Chancellor on Campus Gotland. The role of the Adviser to the Vice-Chancellor is to advise the Vice-Chancellor on matters concerning Campus Gotland and to develop the University’s activities there.

  • Queues negatively impacted voter turnout

    Turnout in the general elections in 2022 fell more sharply in electoral districts that had long queues to the polling stations than in comparable districts without queuing issues. Queuing can only explain a small part of the decrease in turnout between the years 2018 and 2022, however. 87 percent of the population voted in 2018, which fell to 84 percent in 2022.

  • Stacy VanDeveer new professor in Climate Change Leadership at Uppsala University

    Stacy VanDeveer new Zennström Professor of Climate Change Leadership

    Stacy VanDeveer, professor in Global Governance and Human Security at the University of Massachusetts Boston becomes visiting professor in Climate Change Leadership at Uppsala University. The ten-years series of visiting professorships is financed by a previous donation to Uppsala University by alumnus Niklas Zennström and Catherine Zennström through their foundation Zennström Philanthropies.

  • Professor Kristina Edström, Professor of Inorganic Chemistry at Uppsala University and Director Battery 2030+ . Photo: Mikael Wallerstedt

    €220 million to sustainable battery research

    Horizon Europe, the European Union's research initiative, announces €150 million funding for Battery 2030+, an initiative for developing advanced green battery technology. This signifies a renewed confidence in Battery 2030+ coordinated by Uppsala University, Sweden, with the goal to make Europe the world leader in the development and production of green batteries.

  • Nobel laureate Svante Pääbo has now been named Uppsala University’s Alumnus of the Year 2023.  Photo: Mikael Wallerstedt

    Svante Pääbo named Alumnus of the Year 2023

    He opened up a completely new field of research by sequencing the genome of our long-extinct relatives. For his scientific accomplishments, Svante Pääbo was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 2022. ​​He has now been named Uppsala University’s Alumnus of the Year 2023.

  • More mast cell progenitors during pollen season

    More mast cell progenitors during pollen season

    The frequency of mast cell progenitors in the blood circulation is higher in asthma patients during the birch pollen season than outside of it. This has been demonstrated in a new study by Uppsala University, published in the scholarly journal Allergy.

  • Difficult decisions led to unequal vaccination rates

    There was a significant difference in the speed with which different groups were vaccinated against COVID-19. One explanation could be that people absorb information and make decisions in different ways. A new study shows that among people with the highest cognitive ability, 80% had been vaccinated within 50 days. Among those with the lowest cognitive ability, it took 180 days to achieve the same

  • New spatial omics method created

    Researchers at Uppsala University, Stockholm University and KTH have managed to create a new spatial omics method. By combining two complex techniques that are usually used separately – mass spectrometry imaging (MSI) and spatially resolved transcriptomics (SRT) – they have taken an important step in research on biological tissues. The study is published in the Nature Biotechnology.

  • Publication of 2,000 canine genomes provides toolkit for translational research

    An international research consortium has generated and analysed 2000 canine genomes. The resulting advanced genetics toolkit can now be used to answer complex biological questions, spanning dog domestication, genetic differences in breed morphology, behaviour and disease susceptibility, as well as the evolution and structure of the genome.

  • Example of pottery roughly 6,000 years old from the Lublin-Volhynian agrarian culture, Książnice 2, Poland. Photo credit: Stanisław Wilk

    New research links early Europeans’ cultural and genetic development over several thousand years

    A new DNA study has nuanced the picture of how different groups intermingled during the European Stone Age, but also how certain groups of people were actually isolated. The study was carried out by researchers at Uppsala University working with an international team of researchers, who produced new genetic data from 56 Central and Eastern European individuals from the Stone Age.

  • New method to identify mutations in childhood brain tumors

    Researchers at Uppsala university have developed a new method to find mutations in brain tumors in children. They could also show that the mutations identified by them changes how cancer cells respond to a cancer drug. These findings could lead to better diagnostics and more individualized treatment of children with brain tumors. The study is published in the journal PNAS.

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