Skip to content Skip to navigation

sgreen 手机版每天免费

Dr. Stephen Quake's interests lie at the nexus of physics, biology, and biotechnology. His research is concerned with developing new approaches to biological measurement and applying these approaches to problems of both fundamental and medical interest. Areas of interest include genomic diagnostics, systems biology, microbial ecology, and single cell genomics.

sgreen 手机版每天免费

sgreen 手机版每天免费

A  recent study published in Nature from the  Quake lab, collaborators, and professor of pediatrics medicine Crystal Mackall was mentioned in Stanford Medicine News. The study involves targeting human cancer cells grown in the lab and in mice using a new method of programming CAR-T cells (immune cells that fight cancer) increasing their capability and lengthening their activeness against cancer cells. The article in Stanford Medicine News states that "The ability to circumvent the exhaustion that the genetically engineered cells often experience after their initial burst of activity could lead to the development of a new generation of CAR-T cells that may be effective even against solid cancers — a goal that has until now eluded researchers." Clinical trials in people are expected to start within in the next 18 months. 

 

                  极光外网加速度器  shadowrocket节点二维码  蚂蚁加速官网地址  爬墙加速器下载  蜜蜂加速器账号  灯蓝加速器  平行加速梯子  加速器苹果永久免费版