22 search results for “viruses” in the Student website
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    LUMC researchers use viruses to fight prostate cancer
        
    Modified viruses can both kill cancer cells and activate the immune system. This is what an LUMC team discovered while researching a new prostate cancer therapy. 
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    Flooded polder helps fight mosquito-borne diseases
        
    One and a half hectares of polder, a large volume of water, and a group of curious researchers from various universities and scientific backgrounds led by ecologist Maarten Schrama. These are the ingredients needed to answer the question: how do water retention areas affect nature, animals, and our… 
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    Flu stops when you block the enzyme that cleaves off virus particles
        
    A flu virus could cause a pandemic. And then we would be poorly armed because flu viruses are starting to become resistant to flu medications like Tamiflu. Chemist Merijn Vriends successfully worked on an improved version of such medications. He will be awarded his doctorate on September 12th. 
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    Support the Rapidemic team and help them develop a mobile testing kit
        
    A team of students from Leiden won the iGEM international biology contest in 2020 with their Rapidemic mobile testing kit. The kit makes it easy to detect viruses. The team has now been nominated for the Most Innovative Student in the Netherlands prize. Cast your vote and help them develop their inv… 
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    Leiden students develop highly contagious card game
        
    Infecting each other with viruses and bacteria while protecting yourself with medicines and vaccinations. Sounds like a fun evening, right? Master students Life Science & Technology Rafael Jezior and Dennis de Beeld certainly think so. Together, they developed ImmunoWars: an exciting card game based… 
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    Daan Weggemans: 'Digital security is not just for specialists'
        
    Within a single generation, the digital world has changed completely: from a technical niche for ‘nerds’ to a reality that affects everyone. Cyberattacks, data breaches and system failures can disrupt essential social processes. How can we ensure that our society remains digitally resilient? 
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    Bart Custers in Trouw on ChatGPT and cybercrime
        
    The EU proposal for a regulatory framework on artificial intelligence will not prevent the dangers of cybercrime or the spreading of fake news using ChatGPT. Cyber criminals can use the new technology to write harmful software, phishing mails and fake news. 
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    With this algorithm, new medicines can be found more quickly
        
    Did he dare take a gamble with his PhD research? Jeroen Methorst didn’t have to think long about it. It could fail or turn out very well. The latter is the case. Methorst developed a computer system that helps researchers find the protein they need. ‘Our whole group is now using this program.’ Methorst… 
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    Stiffness and viscosity of cells differ in cancer and other diseases
        
    During illness, the stiffness or viscosity of cells can change. Tom Evers demonstrated this by measuring such properties of human immune cells for the first time. ‘The stiffness of certain cells could be a way to make a diagnosis,’ Evers said. He defended his thesis on March 26th. 
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    UMCs join forces to increase pandemic preparedness
        
    Four university medical centres, including the LUMC, are joining forces to increase pandemic preparedness in the Netherlands. 
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    How Europe will be better prepared for the next pandemic
        
    The European PANVIPREP research project started at the Leiden University Medical Center on 11 March. The participants are virologists, biochemists and pharmacists from 14 European countries. Their mission is to develop antiviral drugs to protect Europe during pandemics. At least two such antivirals… 
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    Four Vici grants for Leiden University researchers
        
    Four researchers from Leiden University have been awarded prestigious Vici grants the Dutch Research Council (NWO) has announced. The honoured applications are from researchers at the Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences, Leiden Observatory, the LUMC and the Faculty of Archaeology. 
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    Bacteria without cell wall gobble up DNA from environment
        
    A bacterium hiding from the immune system and picking up bits of DNA from its environment. The result: gaining new traits, such as better protection against antibiotics. Fortunately, we have not found such a damning scenario yet. However, PhD student Renée Kapteijn did find the first clues, which… 
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    ERC-subsidie om uit te zoeken hoe kinderen luchtweginfecties te lijf gaan
        
    De crèche en het klaslokaal zijn misschien wel de meest gunstige plekken voor ziekteverwekkers. Toch is er relatief weinig bekend over hoe kinderen reageren op virussen en bacteriën en hoe het komt dat sommige kinderen veel beter beschermd zijn dan anderen. Simon Jochems, onderzoeker aan het Leids Universitair… 
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    Maia Casna investigates respiratory disease in the past with an NWO PhD in the Humanities grant
        
    Every year, an NWO PhD in the Humanities grant is awarded to a prospective PhD candidate at the Faculty of Archaeology. This year, the grant went to Maia Casna, enabling her to study respiratory disease in the past. ‘My hypothesis is that the rapid formation of cities in the medieval Netherlands, must… 
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    Healthcare and the Dutch East India Company: Two centuries of arrogance and challenges
        
    The Dutch East India Company (VOC) took healthcare seriously, albeit mainly for business reasons. Former GP Ton Zwaard’s PhD research reveals that although healthcare in Asia was well organised, the VOC faced persistent problems for two centuries. 
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    Veni grants for 22 researchers from Leiden University
        
    An impressive 22 research projects by Leiden researchers have been awarded Veni funding from the Dutch Research Council (NWO). 
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    Healthy soil for a healthy gut
        
    How does the soil we grow our vegetables in, affects the health of our gut? And does a healthy soil gives crops a better quality and taste? These are some of the questions Soil ecologist Emilia Hannula and a big consortium will work on. With an NWO-KIC grant of 1.8 million, CML, IBL, FGGA, the LUMC,… 
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    How NeCEN helped develop the Johnson & Johnson Covid-19 vaccine
        
    The Phase 3 clinical trial results of the promising Covid-19 vaccine of Johnson & Johnson are expected this month. The Dutch electron microscopy facility NeCEN helped develop the company’s vaccine, and they have now published their scientific findings in Nature Communications. 
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    Medical milestone at LUMC: first Dutch patient receives CAR T-cell therapy for autoimmune disease
        
    The LUMC has become the first institution in the Netherlands to treat a patient with an autoimmune disease using CAR T-cell therapy. 
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    From Microbes to the Cosmos: A Journey Through Science
    
    Lecture, Pint of Science 
