NOTICIAS DE SALK

Instituto Salk de Estudios Biológicos - NOTICIAS DE SALK

Noticias del Instituto Salk


Salk Institute announces faculty promotions

LA JOLLA, CA—Faculty members Reuben Shaw and Lei Wang, have been promoted to the position of Associate Professor at the Salk Institute after a rigorous evaluation process by Salk senior faculty, Non-Resident Fellows, and scientific peers. The career milestone distinguishes these two investigators as leading authorities in their respective disciplines who have made original, innovative and notable contributions to biological research.


Prestigious endowed chairs awarded to Salk scientists

The Salk Institute is pleased to announce that faculty members Geoffrey M. Wahl and Martyn Goulding were celebrated as the recipients of endowed chairs in recognition of their significant scientific accomplishments at a special reception on March 29. Joseph Ecker, professor in Salk’s Plant Molecular and Cellular Biology Laboratory, who was named holder of the International Council Chair in Genetics in September 2011, was also honored at the ceremony.


Salk scientists open new window into how cancers override cellular growth controls

LA JOLLA, CA—Rapidly dividing cancer cells are skilled at patching up damage that would stop normal cells in their tracks, including wear and tear of telomeres, the protective caps at the end of each chromosome.


Sending out an SOS: How telomeres incriminate cells that can’t divide

LA JOLLA, CA—The well-being of living cells requires specialized squads of proteins that maintain order. Degraders chew up worn-out proteins, recyclers wrap up damaged organelles, and-most importantly-DNA repair crews restitch anything that resembles a broken chromosome. If repair is impossible, the crew foreman calls in executioners to annihilate a cell. As unsavory as this last bunch sounds, failure to summon them is one aspect of what makes a cancer cell a cancer cell.


Discovery of brain’s natural resistance to drugs may offer clues to treating addiction

LA JOLLA, CA—A single injection of cocaine or methamphetamine in mice caused their brains to put the brakes on neurons that generate sensations of pleasure, and these cellular changes lasted for at least a week, according to research by scientists at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies.


Renato Dulbecco, Nobel Laureate and pioneering cancer researcher, dies at 97

LA JOLLA, CA—Renato Dulbecco, M.D., Nobel Prize winner and a global leader in cancer research passed away February 19 at his home in La Jolla. Born on February 22, 1914, he was just shy of his 98th birthday.


Salk researchers find new drug target for lung cancer

LA JOLLA,CA—Drugs targeting an enzyme involved in inflammation might offer a new avenue for treating certain lung cancers, according to a new study by scientists at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies.


Complex wiring of the nervous system may rely on just a handful of genes and proteins

LA JOLLA, CA—Researchers at the Salk Institute have discovered a startling feature of early brain development that helps to explain how complex neuron wiring patterns are programmed using just a handful of critical genes. The findings, published in Célula, may help scientists develop new therapies for neurological disorders, such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), and provide insight into certain cancers.


Salk scientists use an old theory to discover new targets in the fight against breast cancer

LA JOLLA, CA—Reviving a theory first proposed in the late 1800s that the development of organs in the normal embryo and the development of cancers are related, scientists at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies have studied organ development in mice to unravel how breast cancers, and perhaps other cancers, develop in people. Their findings provide new ways to predict and personalize the diagnosis and treatment of cancer.


El descubrimiento de proteínas de vida extremadamente larga podría ofrecer información sobre el envejecimiento celular y las enfermedades neurodegenerativas.

LA JOLLA, CA—Uno de los grandes misterios de la biología es por qué las células envejecen. Ahora, científicos del Instituto Salk de Estudios Biológicos informan que han descubierto una debilidad en un componente de las células cerebrales que podría explicar cómo ocurre el proceso de envejecimiento en el cerebro.


Salk researcher named Damon Runyon Fellow

LA JOLLA, CA—Lora B. Sweeney, a postdoctoral researcher at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies has been named a Damon Runyon Fellow.


Salk professor Joanne Chory awarded 2012 Genetics Society of America Medal

LA JOLLA, CA—The Genetics Society of America(GSA) has honored Joanne Chory, Salk Institute professor and director of the Plant Molecular and Cellular Biology Laboratory and Howard H. and Maryam R. Newman Chair in Plant Biology, as the recipient of the prestigious 2012 Genetics Society of America Medal.


Salk scientist Ronald M. Evans wins 2012 Wolf Prize in Medicine

LA JOLLA, CA—Salk Institute scientist Ronald Evans has been selected as the recipient of the prestigious 2012 Wolf Prize in Medicine, Israel’s highest award for achievements benefiting mankind. According to the Wolf Prize jury, Evans was selected for his discovery of the gene super-family encoding nuclear receptors and elucidating the mechanism of action of this class of receptors.


Scientists identify gene crucial to normal development of lungs and brain

LA JOLLA, CA—Scientists at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies have identified a gene that tells cells to develop multiple cilia, tiny hair-like structures that move fluids through the lungs and brain. The finding may help scientists generate new therapies that use stem cells to replace damaged tissues in the lung and other organs.


Wylie Vale, Salk scientist, pioneer and leader, dies at 70

LA JOLLA, CA—Dr. Wylie Vale, a Salk Institute professor and world-renowned expert on brain hormones, died January 3 while on vacation in Hana, Hawaii. He was 70 years old.


Salk scientists map the frontiers of vision

LA JOLLA, CA—There’s a 3-D world in our brains. It’s a landscape that mimics the outside world, where the objects we see exist as collections of neural circuits and electrical impulses.


El descubrimiento del Instituto Salk podría dar lugar a tratamientos más seguros para el asma, las alergias y la artritis

LA JOLLA, CA—Científicos descubrieron un eslabón perdido entre el reloj biológico del cuerpo y el sistema de metabolismo del azúcar, un hallazgo que podría ayudar a evitar los graves efectos secundarios de los medicamentos utilizados para tratar el asma, las alergias y la artritis.


Un fármaco candidato contra el Alzheimer podría ser el primero en prevenir el avance de la enfermedad

LA JOLLA, CA—Un nuevo candidato a fármaco podría ser el primero capaz de detener el devastador deterioro mental de la enfermedad de Alzheimer, según los hallazgos de un estudio publicado en PLoS ONE.


Investigadores de Salk desarrollan una forma segura de reparar los genes de la anemia falciforme

LA JOLLA, CA—Investigadores del Instituto Salk de Estudios Biológicos han desarrollado una forma de utilizar las propias células de los pacientes para curar potencialmente la anemia falciforme y muchos otros trastornos causados por mutaciones en un gen que ayuda a producir hemoglobina en la sangre.


Modificar un gen hace que los músculos el doble de fuertes

LA JOLLA, CA—Un equipo internacional de científicos ha creado ratones y gusanos superfuertes y de alta resistencia suprimiendo un inhibidor natural del crecimiento muscular, lo que sugiere que los tratamientos para la degeneración muscular relacionada con la edad o la genética están al alcance.