New study shows that important gene controls the ability of the thymus to produce disease-fighting T-cells after an organism's birth
New research, just published by researchers from the University of Georgia, provides the first evidence that a key gene may be crucial to maintaining the production of the thymus and its disease-fighting T-cells after an animal’s birth.
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African Week
Next week, the African Student Union presents festivities, activities and educational programs that seek to enlighten the UGA campus about Africa from cultural, historical, and political points of view. African Week runs through Saturday, November 15. For more information, contact jfabdallah@gmail.com.
MASTER CALENDAR
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Computing power
A new grant from the National Science Foundation will more than quadruple the computing power available to UGA biologists. The $796,822 grant from the NSF, matched by more than $300,000 from the University of Georgia Research Foundation, was awarded to the UGA Institute of Bioinformatics to provide a powerful new Linux computer cluster, along with substantially more storage space, to be housed at the Research Computing Center. The IOB’s 17 participating laboratories represent a group of 60-plus scientists with a common mission. Members, who have submitted joint research and training grants, organized new courses and co-taught existing courses, include some 74 graduate students and 52 postdoctoral research scholars. They will constitute the first group of users. For more information, contact Ying Xu, 706/542-9779.
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AMAZING STUDENTS
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