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Cell Migration Data Accessible Via New Database
August 10, 2008 • National Institute of General Medical Sciences

A team funded by the NIGMS has developed a user-friendly, interactive database, granting unprecedented access to information on genes involved in cell migration. 

RNA Interference and Epigenetic Inheritance
April 22, 2008 • Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

An NIGMS-funded study probes how interfering RNA molecules allow DNA expression patterns to be inherited.

Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine: Press Release
October 2, 2006 • The Nobel Assembly at Karolinska Institutet

The Nobel Prize in physiology or medicine was awarded to NIGMS grantees Andrew Z. Fire and Craig C. Mello for their discovery of "RNA interference – gene silencing by double-stranded RNA."

Andrew Fire wins 2006 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
October 2, 2006 • Stanford School of Medicine

The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for 2006 has been awarded to longtime NIGMS grantees Andrew Fire and Craig Mello for their discoveries related to RNA interference.

NIGMS Grantees Garner Nobel for Gene Silencing Discovery
October 2, 2006 • National Institute of General Medical Sciences

Andrew Z. Fire and Craig C. Mello won the physiology or medicine prize for their discovery of RNA interference, a mechanism of gene silencing.

American Andrew Z. Fire Shares Nobel Prize for Discovering RNAi
October 2, 2006 • The Carnegie Institution

NIGMS grantees Andrew Fire and Craig Mello have been awarded the 2006 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for their discovery of RNA interference.

UMass Medical School Professor Wins Nobel Prize
October 2, 2006 • University of Massachusetts Medical School

Craig Mello and his colleague Andrew Fire, both long-time NIGMS grantees, have been awarded the 2006 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.

Scientists Use RNAi to Silence Genes in Specific Tissues
January 18, 2006 • University of Texas

NIGMS-supported researchers have jumped a significant hurdle in the use of RNA interference (RNAi), a commonly used molecular tool. They have developed a simple way to use RNAi to silence a selected gene in a specific tissue in mice.

Scientists Get First Look at Age-Old Enzyme
January 12, 2006 • Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

NIGMS-supported scientists have gotten their first detailed look at the molecular structure of an enzyme that nature has been using for eons to help silence unwanted genetic messages.

RNA – All Set to Become a Superstar
September 21, 2005 • Ernst Schering Foundation

NIGMS grantee Thomas Tuschl was awarded the Ernst Schering Prize for his work on RNA interference.

Stem Cells and Regeneration: Opening Up a New Can of Worms
May 2, 2005 • University of Utah

Planarian worms are famous in the scientific world for their extraordinary ability to regenerate body parts after injury, a process that depends on adult stem cells called neoblasts. A new NIGMS-supported study provides insight into how individual genes control regeneration.

Scientists Identify Genetic Pathways Essential to RNA Interference
March 24, 2005 • Massachusetts General Hospital

An NIGMS-funded research team has identified 80 new genes essential to the process of RNA interference, a powerful new research tool for inactivating genes in plants or animals.

Gene Silencing Illuminates Innate Immunity
March 7, 2005 • National Institute of General Medical Sciences

An NIGMS-supported study has used RNA interference to identify fruit fly genes involved in the innate immune response, our body's first line of defense against invading microbes.

New Milestone for Gene Silencing
February 11, 2003 • Carnegie Institution

NIGMS-supported scientists have recently patented RNA interference (RNAi), a technique for silencing the activity of targeted genes. The method has been widely licensed in the U.S., Japan and Europe to address a broad range of research questions.

NIGMS-Funded RNA Research Named Breakthrough of the Year
December 20, 2002 • National Institute of General Medical Sciences

Science magazine had declared advances in understanding molecules called "small RNAs" as the top scientific achievement of 2002. A number of the advances were supported by NIGMS.

New Insight into Fragile X Syndrome: Scientists Identify Possible Link to RNAi
September 30, 2002 • Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Two independent research groups—one supported by NIGMS—have discovered that the fruit fly version of the human fragile X mental retardation protein associates with components of the RNAi pathway, suggesting that an RNAi-related process may underlie the syndrome. 

New Tool Speeds Study of Mammalian Protein Function
April 15, 2002 • Harvard Medical School

In a recent study NIGMS-supported researchers report a new technique that can "silence" or knock-down the production of specific proteins in mammalian cells.

Scientists Devise New 'Gene Silencing' Strategy: Genome, Biomedical Research Expected to Flourish
April 14, 2002 • Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Researchers supported by NIGMS have successfully co-opted a natural cellular mechanism to shut down the activity of specific genes in mammalian cells cheaply and efficiently.

New Technique Speeds Gene Research in Mammalian Cells
January 29, 2002 • Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

NIGMS-supported scientists report a new technique for carrying out genetic analysis directly in mammalian cells. The technique has the potential to greatly simplify gene manipulation and gene discovery for many biomedical applications.

Tiny Worm Reveals Workings of Suspected Tumor Protein
March 27, 1998 • Harvard University

NIGMS-supported developmental biologists have used RNAi to reveal a biological function for a mysterious protein that may play a role in the growth of tumors.

 
This page last updated October 20, 2007