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October 10, 2008 | honors and awards
Four Rockefeller researchers named finalists in Blavatnik Awards for Young Scientists

| Head of laboratory Tom W. Muir, postdocs Valerie Horsley and Andreas Keller and former postdoc Matthew Evans have been named finalists for the second annual Blavatnik Awards for Young Scientists. Established by the New York Academy of Sciences and the Blavatnik Charitable Foundation, the awards recognize the contributions of young scientists and engineers in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut. |
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September 30, 2008 | science news
A DNA-based vaccine shows promise against avian flu

| By combining a newly discovered application technique with a broad genetic target, researchers may have created a potent vaccine against the virus. If successful, the new vaccine could be rapidly produced and effective against a broad spectrum of viral strains. |
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September 29, 2008 | science news
New formula predicts how people will migrate in coming decades

| Countries use population projections to estimate local needs for things like jobs, schools, housing and health care, but coming up with those projections has been an inexact science. A newly developed, more precise formula to describe how people move between countries could lead to better use of resources and improved economic conditions. |
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September 23, 2008 | meetings and events
Paris Piano Trio opens 51st Peggy Rockefeller Concert Series

| Through the Peggy Rockefeller Concerts program, a subscription series, the university has played host to some of the world’s most renowned soloists, duets, chamber ensembles and musical groups from across the globe. |
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September 19, 2008 | science news
Variations in key genes increase Caucasians’ risk of heroin addiction

| By scanning a large swath of the human genome, Rockefeller University researchers identify tiny variations in a few genes that can influence some people’s likelihood of developing heroin dependency. The work, which raises questions about race and personalized medicine, sheds new light on the role of genetics in addictive diseases. |
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September 17, 2008 | science news
A blood marker may indicate Alzheimer’s risk

| In research that could lead to a simple test for certain forms of dementia, scientists have found that when blood levels of a specific protein decrease over time, the change could herald the onset of Alzheimer’s disease or other types of cognitive impairment. |
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September 16, 2008 | appointments and promotions
New Rockefeller faculty member studies cancer metastasis

| Sohail Tavazoie, a physician-scientist whose research focuses on the molecular basis of cancer metastasis, has been named assistant professor and will join The Rockefeller University as head of the Laboratory of Systems Cancer Biology in January 2009. |
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September 10, 2008 | science news
Abuse of painkillers can predispose adolescents to lifelong addiction

| No child aspires to a lifetime of addiction. But their brains might. Now, Rockefeller University researchers reveal that adolescent brains exposed to the painkiller Oxycontin can sustain lifelong changes in their reward system that increase the drug’s euphoric properties, and make them more vulnerable to the drug’s effects later in adulthood. |
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September 3, 2008 | honors and awards
C. Erec Stebbins awarded prestigious EUREKA grant

| C. Erec Stebbins, associate professor at The Rockefeller University, has been awarded an inaugural EUREKA grant from the National Institutes of Health for a project aimed at exploiting a bacteria-based “nanosyringe” as a means of delivering proteins into specific cells for therapeutic purposes. The award, which provides $200,000 a year for three years, was announced by the NIH September 3. |
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August 28, 2008 | science news
U.S. and China tie for Olympic glory, according to statistician

| By applying a statistical method originally developed to understand side effects associated with medical treatments, scientists have computed an objective score for each country in the Beijing games. The result: China and the United States are dead even, each ranking ahead of 85 other countries. |
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August 26, 2008 | studies and trials
Clinical study to examine role of vitamin D in kidney disease

| Vitamin D is the key to preventing rickets and osteoporosis, but a new clinical study at Rockefeller University will investigate whether it also plays a role in preventing atherosclerosis in patients with chronic kidney disease. |
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August 15, 2008 | science news
By amplifying cell death signals, scientists make precancerous cells self-destruct

| On the cellular level, death signals can actually be life saving, by killing off abnormally dividing cells before they turn cancerous. Now, Rockefeller University researchers have found a way to amplify these signals by turning a life-affirming protein into a killer. The findings not only mark a breakthrough in the field but also open the door to a new line of drugs for cancer therapeutics. |
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August 13, 2008 | science news
A snooze button for the circadian clock

| Humans, and most other organisms, have 24-hour rhythms that are regulated by a precise molecular clock that ticks inside every cell. A new study by Rockefeller University researchers shows how two molecules interact to regulate this clock’s cycle and uncovers how that switch can go haywire, identifying a potential cause of heritable sleep disorders. |
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October 2, 2008
 “Avian influenza, caused by a variant of the H5N1 virus, has afflicted hundreds of millions of birds worldwide. The virus mutates quickly: some of the mutations, upon making the jump to humans, have proved fatal. So far, bird flu has killed at least 250 people. ‘Everyone fears that the virus only needs to make a few mutations to become virulent and transmissible human to human, so this is certainly one of the biggest pandemic threats that we face,’ says David Ho, a professor at Rockefeller University and the scientific director of the Aaron Diamond AIDS Research Center, in New York.” |
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