The Delaware Biotechnology Institute, with which the University of Delaware is a partner, hosted a Celebration of Science ceremony on Tuesday, April 24, with Gov. John Carney delivering awards, including for the Delaware BioGENEius Challenge...
Read MoreIt's not clear if this is a scientific term, but U.S. Rep. Lisa Blunt Rochester, D-Del., said she was "blown away" by her tour Tuesday of the Delaware Biotechnology Institute, a power station of tools...
Read MoreThe Environmental Protection Agency has registered BASF’s new Velondis brand biofungicide seed treatment formulations, which contain a patented University of Delaware beneficial microbe to help plants fight fungal disease. With potential applications in...
Read MoreKelvin Lee, 48, is driving a $250 million plan that links 150 partners to create the National Institute for Innovation in Manufacturing Biopharmaceuticals at the University of Delaware.
Read MoreThe University of Delaware College of Engineering has honored three faculty members with named professorships. To be selected, faculty members must have a sustained...
Read MoreThe University of Delaware’s K. Eric Wommack, deputy dean in the College of Agriculture and Natural Resources, will lead a research team from four...
Read MoreEven in sediment cores extracted more than a mile beneath the ocean floor, you’ll find them. Tiny organisms only a cell in size chug along ever so slowly. Jennifer Biddle, a marine microbiologist at the University of Delaware, often wondered why these...
Read MoreWhen downy mildew epidemics strike, they are a plague to lima bean growers in Delaware, which produces over 60 percent of the nation’s crop for canning and freezing. Downy mildew is caused by the fungus like microorganism Phytophthora phaseoli, which has...
Read MoreInjured plants warn neighbors of danger, UD study finds When Harsh Bais, a botanist at the University of Delaware, emailed Connor Sweeney to tell the high school student he would be willing to mentor him on a research project, Sweeney, a...
Read MoreThe University of Delaware’s Cathy Wu has been named a 2016 Highly Cited Researcher by Thomson Reuters. The designation, which she also received in 2014 and 2015, places her among the top one percent of researchers most cited for their subject field and...
Read MoreUniversity of Delaware student Jonathon Cottone knows the tell-tale signs that rice plants are getting sick: the yellowing leaves, the faint football-shaped lesions. Cottone, a junior from Wilmington, Delaware, is working with Harsh Bais, associate...
Read MoreTissue engineering has opened the door not only for the replacement of biological tissues in the body but also the creation of life-like platforms for disease modeling and drug development. However, a major limitation of the current approach is the ability...
Read MoreBio-fuels and bio-based chemicals have gained tremendous traction over the past decade as a means to produce alternatives to fossil fuels and to replace bulk chemical production methods that rely on petrochemicals. “Methanol, which can be produced...
Read MoreAlthough early detection and better treatments have resulted in more women with breast cancer surviving past the five-year mark, 20 percent of disease-free patients will experience a recurrence anywhere from five to 25 years later at a metastatic site —...
Read MoreYou don't have to be a beer lover to understand the chemistry behind new research emerging from two labs at the University of Delaware and their collaborators at White Dog Labs in New Castle, Delaware. But if you are, you might want to raise a toast to their...
Read MoreThe Delaware Biotechnology Institute has launched a new Entrepreneurial Proof of Concept (EPoC) grant program to help address the three biggest needs that life science entrepreneurs face: access to capital, equipment and expertise. The EPoC grant program...
Read MoreFor decades, materials scientists have taken lessons from the mother of all material designers — nature. Living organisms use self-assembly processes to form large structures from smaller molecules, such as the formation of a cell membrane from fats or...
Read MoreBig data has become a big deal. Advanced computing technology has enabled the collection of huge amounts of data on topics ranging from weather and traffic patterns to human health and disease, but translating all of that data into usable knowledge is a...
Read MoreEleftherios (Terry) Papoutsakis, Unidel Eugene du Pont Chair of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering at the University of Delaware, has won the E.V. Murphree Award in Industrial and Engineering Chemistry from the American Chemical Society. The award is...
Read MoreArticle by Diane Kukich | Photo by Evan Krape | June 03, 2016 Our vocal cords, two multilayered folds of tissue located above the trachea, produce voice when air passes between them and sets them into vibration. Various environmental,...
Read MoreDelaware Bio will recognize some of the state’s brightest bioscience stars during its 2016 Annual Awards Gala, and nearly all of them have ties to the University of Delaware. The 2016 awards celebrate the outstanding work of the honorees to foster the...
Read MoreUniversity of Delaware researchers have identified two novel molecular players necessary to regulate plasmodesmata – communication channels in plants that bridge individual cells with their neighboring cells for distribution and exchange of nutrients,...
Read MoreThe Delaware Biotechnology Institute (DBI) is proud to announce that Sussex County, Delaware native Mikayla Ockels, recipient of the Practical Impact Award at the U.S. National BioGENEius Challenge in 2015, has been invited to participate at the White House...
Read MoreGov. Jack Markell joined Kelvin Lee, director of the Delaware Biotechnology Institute (DBI), to recognize Delaware students who did exceptional life science research and honor the teachers who have positively influenced their students to strive for great...
Read More9:49 a.m., March 25, 2016--The Delaware Biotechnology Institute (DBI), in partnership with the Sussex County Science Fair Committee, hosted its second annual Sussex Science Night in Georgetown, Delaware, on Tuesday, March 22. More than 150 students,...
Read MoreThe University of Delaware’s Pamela Green is part of an international consortium of researchers from 35 laboratories that have published the genome of the seagrass Zostera marina. It is believed to be the first marine angiosperm to be fully...
Read MoreAn Art in Science exhibit will be held in the Harker Interdisciplinary Science and Engineering Laboratory at the University of Delaware from April 4-16, culminating in a symposium from noon to 5 p.m. on Saturday, April 16. The event is aimed at...
Read MoreThe Delaware Biotechnology Institute (DBI) hosted a reception for the newest cohort of six trainees participating in the National Science Foundation-supported Integrative Graduate Education and Research Traineeship (IGERT) program awarded to principal...
Read MoreIn a “clash of the microbes,” University of Delaware plant scientists are uncovering more clues critical to disarming a fungus that is the number one killer of rice plants. The findings, published in December in Frontiers in Plant Science and in...
Read MoreA new study by University of Delaware researchers considers how adding silica-rich rice residue -- such as husks, straw and the ash of those materials -- to improve crop yields and decrease arsenic uptake may affect the soils in which rice plants are grown....
Read MoreThe ability to access, analyze and draw insights from massive amounts of data already drives innovation in areas ranging from medicine to manufacturing, leading to greater efficiency and a higher quality of life. To accelerate this emerging field, the...
Read MoreJust as poultry is steadily gaining in popularity on dinner plates, the chicken is growing in attractiveness as a biomedical model for studying health issues ranging from headaches and ovarian cancer to cystic fibrosis and muscular dystrophy. It turns out...
Read MoreIn his 2015 State of the Union address, President Barack Obama announced the launch of the Precision Medicine Initiative, a new research effort to revolutionize how we improve health and treat disease. “Doctors have always recognized that every patient...
Read MoreWith vibrant colors, textured effects and a scientist's savvy, Jeffrey Caplan, director of the University of Delaware Bio-Imaging Center, can take black-and-white data from a microscope, turn it into an illustrator's masterpiece and show you something both...
Read MoreRepresentatives from the University of Delaware spent a recent Saturday at the United States Botanic Garden in Washington, D.C., educating visitors about the important roles that healthy soils and soil microbes play in ensuring robust plants during a “Roots...
Read MoreResearchers from Delaware State University and the University of Delaware will be representing the First State this week at the Alzheimer’s International Conference in Washington, D.C. Their work includes DSU’s study of a lesser-known deteriorating...
Read MoreWhat if a blood sample taken by a family physician could diagnose breast cancer months – or even years – before a woman feels the first lump in her chest? Now imagine if that diagnoses also came with a treatment plan so well-tailored to a patient’s...
Read MoreThree high school students from Delaware competed in the annual National BioGENEius Challenge that was held in Philadelphia June 12-16, 2015 in conjunction with the 2015 BIO International Convention. Attending were Jaya Bali from Middletown, Francisco...
Read MoreUniversity of Delaware researchers have discovered a soil microbe that mobilizes an “iron shield” to block the uptake of toxic arsenic in rice. Arsenic occurs naturally in rocks and soils, air and water, plants and animals. It’s used in a variety of...
Read MoreThe University of Delaware Board of Trustees approved promotions of 55 faculty members at its spring meeting May 12. All are effective with the 2015-16 academic year. Seventeen faculty members were promoted to professor with tenure, one was promoted to...
Read MoreSeveral days a week, University of Delaware senior Alexa Bennett shares lab space at the Delaware Biotechnology Institute with millions of little coworkers — colonies of bacteria nestled among samples of Alaskan tundra. Alaskan tundra soils are...
Read MoreA team of University of Delaware researchers is opening wider the door for those who study the vast world of microbes. A paper published in Nature...
Read MoreA new report analyzing U.S. research strengths underscores the contributions that Delaware’s higher education institutions make in generating new ideas and discoveries critical to long-term economic growth. The report, America’s Knowledge Economy: A...
Read MoreGov. Jack Markell joined Kelvin Lee, director of the Delaware Biotechnology Institute (DBI), to recognize the finalists, an honorable mention awardee and three winners of the Delaware BioGENEius Challenge on Tuesday, April 14. The Delaware BioGENEius...
Read MoreEric Wommack has been named to the position of associate dean for research and graduate programs and deputy dean for the College of Agriculture and Natural Resources (CANR). Wommack assumed his new responsibilities on Wednesday, April 1. Wommack, a...
Read More4:41 p.m., April 2, 2015--The Delaware Biotechnology Institute (DBI), in partnership with the Sussex County Science Fair Committee, hosted a Family Science Night on Monday, March 30, at Beacon Middle School in Lewes, Delaware. The event, part of...
Read MoreUsing farm-fresh ice cream, a raw oyster bar and portable cellphone chargers as bait, scores of University of Delaware researchers and staff converged on the Hart Senate Office Building in Washington, D.C., on Wednesday, March 25, to share their work with...
Read MoreMale reproductive organ development in maize involves a complex array of ribonucleic acid molecules (RNAs) with potentially diverse activities in gene regulation, demonstrated by new research from the University of Delaware and Stanford University. In...
Read MoreWith apologies to the late NASA legend Neil Armstrong, whose boots were the first to step onto the surface of the moon, you might describe Chandran Sabanayagam's research at the Delaware Biotechnology Institute as one small freefall for a worm, one giant leap...
Read MoreSeven University of Delaware faculty members with expertise in each of the six areas of study that won this year's Nobel Prizes discussed the significance of the winners’ work at an Oct. 30 public event, held appropriately in the Interdisciplinary Science...
Read MoreThe University of Delaware has been awarded more than $200,000 by the National Science Foundation to collaborate with the National Academy of Engineering (NAE) on an international research ethics project. Led by Tom Powers, director of the Center for...
Read MoreResearchers at the University of Delaware have discovered that an ancient gene -- ribonucleotide reductase (RNR), which occurs in all cellular life -- provides important biological insights into the characteristics of unknown viruses in the sea. The...
Read MoreUniversity of Delaware researchers Shawn Polson and Eric Wommack have received a three-year, $867,661 National Science Foundation (NSF) Advances in Biological Informatics (ABI) grant to continue and expand the work being conducted on their Viral Informatics...
Read MorePlatelets are an expensive biomedical commodity. These microscopic cells that come to the rescue when our blood vessels need to be repaired cannot be frozen and are stable for only three to five days at room temperature. Although platelets are life-saving...
Read MoreResearchers at the University of Delaware and other institutions across the country have been awarded a four-year, $6.5 million National Science Foundation grant to analyze developmental events in maize anthers and tassels, the male reproductive organs that...
Read MoreAnyone can be a scientist, science can be lots of fun and — to the surprise and delight of most of the children who participated in the 2014 University of Delaware Marvelous Microbes Camp — science can be easy. Those were the key messages that Emily...
Read MoreThree University of Delaware professors -- Pamela Green, Blake Meyers and Cathy Wu -- are among the world’s top scientists, according to the recently launched Thomson Reuters Highly Cited Researchers list. According to Thomson Reuters, Highly Cited...
Read MoreA fungus that kills an estimated 30 percent of the world’s rice crop may finally have met its match, thanks to a research discovery made by scientists at the University of Delaware and the University of California at Davis. The research team, led by...
Read MoreThe Bioinformatics Student Association(BiSA), a registered student organization at the University of Delaware, has been selected to receive assistance from the
Read MoreLeaders in research on microRNAs, University of Delaware professors Blake C. Meyers and Pamela J. Green have an ongoing and longstanding collaboration that recently resulted in the publication of a landmark paper. Published in the April 23 edition of the...
Read MoreScientific thought leaders in Delaware are considering a wide range of questions, from how to prevent soy milk from spoiling, to the use of silk nanoparticles in drug delivery, to possible detrimental health effects caused by exposure to plastic. These...
Read MoreStudying a distant relative of viruses known as transposons, the University of Delaware’s Blake Meyers is working with researchers from Cold Spring Harbor (N.Y.) Laboratory to see how small RNAs in plants are activated and how they work to control...
Read MoreTerry Papoutsakis, Eugene du Pont Chair of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering at the University of Delaware, only needed to scan the room at Delaware Bio’s 2014 annual awards gala to see just how deeply the roots of the bioscience community stretch in...
Read MoreThe spring meeting of the Mid-Atlantic Section of the American Society of Plant Biologists (ASPB) will be held Saturday, April 12, from 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., at the Delaware Biotechnology Institute at the University of Delaware. The meeting will feature...
Read MoreUniversity of Delaware Provost Domenico Grasso will open the spring semester Science Café series with a presentation at 5:30 p.m., Monday, March 10, at the Deer Park Tavern on Main Street in Newark. Grasso, who is also a professor of civil and...
Read MoreThe University of Delaware is leading an interdisciplinary project aimed at unraveling the biology of a durable form of disease resistance in maize. A grant from the National Science Foundation Plant Genome Research Program (NSF-PGRP) has brought together...
Read MoreScientists from the University of Delaware and the Fraunhofer USA Center for Molecular Biotechnology will begin working in February on two new collaborative research projects in the biomedical arena. The projects have been selected for funding through a...
Read MoreResearchers at the University of Delaware have developed a “smart” hydrogel that can deliver medicine on demand, in response to mechanical force. Over the past few decades, smart hydrogels have been created that respond to pH, temperature, DNA, light...
Read MoreLeadership appointments have been announced for the Delaware IDeA Network of Biomedical Research Excellence (INBRE). This statewide program is building Delaware’s biomedical research capability by developing research in the areas of cancer, cardiovascular...
Read MoreKristi Kiick, deputy dean of engineering, visited Newark Charter High School Thursday, Nov. 14, to speak with more than 100 high school freshmen about careers in engineering. Kiick, a materials scientist and biomedical engineer, shared her journey to...
Read MoreNo one seemed to mind being in the warm conference room of the Embassy Suites in Newark on Friday, Oct. 11. Outside, it was cold, windy and rainy. Downright dreary. But the atmosphere inside was quite the opposite, as researchers, physicians, scientists,...
Read MoreUlhas Naik, professor of biological sciences and director of the Delaware Cardiovascular Research Center, pores over laboratory data on his computer, even during breakfast most mornings. He is on a quest to tease out the roles that various blood...
Read MoreTerry Papoutsakis, Eugene du Pont Professor of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering at the University of Delaware, has been selected to receive the Daniel I.C. Wang Award for excellence in biochemical engineering from the American Institute of Chemical...
Read MoreThe University of Delaware has been awarded a three-year grant totaling more than $3 million from the Department of Energy’s Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA-E) to use an engineered microorganism to produce butanol, a useful transportation fuel, from...
Read MoreThe Delaware Biotechnology Institute (DBI) hosted the 2013 Research Symposium on Aug. 22 to highlight the exciting research being performed by the Delaware Bioscience Center for...
Read MoreEight Delaware high school teachers were provided a focused training in bioenergy and bioproducts through a special educational program held last month at the Delaware Biotechnology Institute (DBI). The program is a new initiative that builds upon an...
Read MoreIn 1948, University of Delaware Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering patriarch Allan P. Colburn received the first Professional Progress Award from the American Institute of Chemical Engineers (AIChE). Now, on the 75th anniversary of...
Read MoreA decade ago, marine biologist Mya Breitbart compared genetic sequences of ocean-dwelling viruses against a database by hand, painstakingly analyzing one at a time and entering her results into a spreadsheet. The field of marine genomics has come a long...
Read MoreMicrobes are living more than 500 feet beneath the seafloor in 5 million-year-old sediment, according to new findings by researchers at the University of Delaware and Woods Hole...
Read MoreThe Center for Science, Ethics and Public Policy (SEPP), with support from the National Science Foundation’s EPSCoR program, announces a grant competition to integrate...
Read MoreHarsh Bais and Janine Sherrier of the University of Delaware’s Department of Plant and Soil Sciences are studying whether a naturally occurring soil bacterium, referred to as UD1023 because it was first...
Read MoreResearchers at Temple University and the University of Delaware have published a study in the Journal of Biological Chemistry that sheds new light on the clotting effects of a drug that is being tested as a potential treatment for hemophilia. Referred to...
Read MoreLorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Nullam lacinia, nunc vitae euismod scelerisque, lorem orci eleifend risus, vel pharetra neque mi a ipsum. Pellentesque ut orci nec mi ultricies pretium. Nullam tellus ante, ultricies nec commodo ut,...
Read MoreAs part of a five-year, $50,000 grant supporting state greenhouse gas reduction projects, the Delaware Biotechnology Institute (DBI) has partnered with the Delaware Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control (DNREC) in response to the need for...
Read MoreThe Delaware Biotechnology Institute (DBI) at the University of Delaware has been equipped with a state-of-the-art Pacific Biosciences RS DNA sequencing machine to help researchers obtain genetic information, making UD one of the few universities in the...
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