News

Providing digital PCR in a core facility, demonstrating pathogen applications

Deb Grove, Director of Genetic Analysis at the Genomics Core Facility, discusses digital PCR and demonstrates pathogen-related applications.

Oil and gas development homogenizing core-forest bird communities

Conventional oil and gas development in northern Pennsylvania altered bird communities, and the current massive build-out of shale-gas infrastructure may accelerate these changes, according to Penn State researchers including Margaret Brittingham.

$1.8M NIH grant will support study of nervous system's underlying communications

Mohammad Reza Abidian has received a $1.8 million grant from the National Institutes of Health's Institute for Neurological Disorders (NINDS).

Huck-ICS Cyberhealth Innovation Seed Funds: Data to Insight / Data to Innovation (D2I2)

The Huck Institutes and the Institute for CyberScience (ICS), through the cooperation of the Tobacco CURE fund, are seeking applications to fund a series of seed grants for researchers who wish to explore data sets and obtain insights or solutions to key issues in the Life Sciences.

Announcing the new imaging flow cytometer

The Microscopy & Cytometry Facility recently acquired a state-of-the-art imaging flow cytometer. The Amnis FlowSight is available for pilot projects that benefit from imaging of thousands of fluorescently-labeled cells.

Colorful patterns of evolution mark butterflies and bumblebees

Biologist Heather Hines seeks to unravel the genetics behind adaptive radiation and mimicry.

Human heart beats using nearly billion-year-old molecular mechanism

Neurobiologist Tim Jegla and his Lab find in a living, ancient sea anemone species the same gene family and ion channel that regulate the slow wave contractions of the human heart.

Evan Pugh Professorships awarded to three Huck Institutes faculty

Nina Jablonski, B. Franklin Pugh, and Andrew Read have been named Evan Pugh Professors, the highest distinction bestowed by the University on its faculty.

Penn State researchers believe ants can offer human-disease insights

Ants may be able to teach us about the transmission and spread of human disease, according to a team of researchers -- led by Huck Institutes affiliate David Hughes and also including affiliates Matthew Ferrari and Ephraim Hanks -- who recently received a grant of more than $1.8 million from the National Science Foundation.

Key factor in neonatal zinc deficiency may impact lactation and breast cancer

Huck Institutes affiliate Shannon Kelleher and Penn State graduate student Steve Hennigar advance scientists' understanding of zinc's role in breast development, lactation, and involution.