Dartmouth-Trained Researcher Identifies a Genetic Link to Kidney Disease
Genovese.jpg Giulio Genovese, A&S Adv ’10, is the lead author of study identifying variants in the APOL1 gene. (photo courtesy of Giulio Genovese)
[more]Genovese.jpg Giulio Genovese, A&S Adv ’10, is the lead author of study identifying variants in the APOL1 gene. (photo courtesy of Giulio Genovese)
[more]As part of Dartmouth’s Integrative Graduation Education and Research Traineeship (IGERT) program, eight graduate students and four professors in the fields of biological sciences, earth sciences, and engineering are spending the summer digging into Greenland’s ice sheets and tundra to better understand recent changes to the polar environment.
[more]peterson-heimberg1.jpg Kevin Peterson and Alysha Heimberg (photo by Joseph Mehling '69)
[more]On the front lines of climate change, Greenland harbors a unique convergence of indigenous communities, research field stations, and policy debates about the future of the Arctic.
[more]disc_triterpenoids_01.jpg Michael Sporn and Karen Liby study triterpenoids—whose versatility makes them a veritable Swiss Army knife of the drug world. (photo by Jennifer Durgin)
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