Bioimaging
- L-R: Josh Peifer, Joanne Vozoff, Joe Dragavon When Syncroness, a Westminster-based technical product development and engineering firm, needed a highly technical solution to satisfy a client need, it turned to CU Â鶹ӰԺ and theÌýBioFrontiers
- For humans, our sense of touch is relayed to the brain via small electrical pulses. Now, CU Â鶹ӰԺ scientists have found that individual bacteria, too, can feel their external environment in a similar way.In a new study, CU Â鶹ӰԺ researchers have
- Innovator Award winner brings to light the electrical changes in cellsElectric voltage powers life: Our brains use electrical transients to process every thought and every heartbeat arises from voltage changes in heart cells.Ìý Traditional
- Searle Scholars Award winner is cracking the code on bacterial voltageElectric voltage powers life – Our brains use electrical transients to process every thought; every heartbeat arises from voltage changes in heart cells. Despite its importance,
- The University of Colorado was recently awarded a cooperative agreement worth up to $14.6 million from the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) to develop a new technological system to rapidly determine how drugs and biological or
- BioFrontiers partners with world’s oldest biotech industry: BreweriesIn the basement of the Jennie Smoly Caruthers Biotechnology Building on CU-Â鶹ӰԺ’s East Campus sits a machine that can sequence roughly 6 billion DNA segments in about a week.By
- Lights, Cells, Action!ÌýOne of the best ways to really see something is to turn on the lights. Amy Palmer, assistant professor in the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry and Biofrontiers Institute faculty member, is the kind of professor
- Biomarkers light the way to cancer diagnosis ÌýIn an 18-year study released this summer by the National Cancer Institute, widespread screening for ovarian cancer was found to be ineffective in catching the disease. In fact, the screening often