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  • Eva Åkesson nominated as Vice Chancellor of Uppsala University

    On October 11 the Board of Uppsala University unanimously decided to propose to the Swedish government that Eva Åkesson, professor of chemical physics, be appointed Vice Chancellor as of 1 January 2012. This decision was fully in line with the proposal submitted by the hearing assembly and the recruitment group.

  • Millions of new regulatory elements found in human genome

    An international research team led by Kerstin Lindblad-Toh at the Broad Institute, US and Uppsala University, Sweden has mapped and compared the genomes of 29 mammals. The findings, published in Nature, reveal millions of new regulatory elements in the human genome. The new knowledge is important for our understanding of how mutations in human genes give rise to diseases.

  • Link shown between environmental toxicants and atherosclerosis

    Environmental toxicants such as dioxins, PCBs, and pesticides can pose a risk for cardiovascular disease. For the first time a link has been demonstrated between atherosclerosis and levels of these kinds of toxicants in the blood. The study, carried out at Uppsala University, is being published online this week in ahead of print in the prestigious journal Environmental Health Perspectives.

  • Unknown ocean bacteria create entirely new theories

    The earth’s most successful bacteria are found in the oceans and belong to the group SAR11. Researchers from Uppsala University now provide an explanation for their success and at the same time call into question generally accepted theories about these bacteria. In their analysis they have also identified a rare and hitherto unknown relative of mitochondria, the power stations inside cells.