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The Rockefeller University
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The Rockefeller University is a world-renowned center for research and graduate education in the biomedical sciences, chemistry, bioinformatics and physics.
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Have you signed up for our science newsletter yet? Subscribe now to stay on top of the latest discoveries taking place right here at Rockefeller, delivered monthly to your inbox: https://bit.ly/34Ez7YI
Don't miss this fascinating feature article from @laskerfdn.bsky.social about the Lasker Laureates (including Rockefeller's Robert Roeder and David Allis) who devised methods to understand how organisms carefully control gene activity.
How many #LaskerAward -winning scientists does it take to figure out how genes express themselves? At least a dozen!

Read about the amazing work—done over decades, by many people, at many institutions—that led to our understanding of gene expression. laskerfoundation.org/how-genes-ex...
How Genes Express Themselves - Lasker Foundation
NOV 18, 2025 Read about how organisms carefully control the activity of genes, turning them on and off at specific times and in specific locations.
laskerfoundation.org
November 20, 2025 at 3:31 PM
A study out this week outlines a more efficient, less costly approach to gene-editing therapy for rare diseases. Rockefeller president Rick Lifton tells @nytimes.com that the approach could ultimately apply to a significant fraction of patients:
New Gene-Editing Strategy Could Help Development of Treatments for Rare Diseases
Instead of requiring personalized gene edits for each patient, the new approach could create a standardized method to use for many diseases.
www.nytimes.com
November 19, 2025 at 7:29 PM
A @natchembio.nature.com study from the #RoederLab identifies a molecular switch in breast cancer cells that reprograms the genetic production line towards tumor growth and stress resistance in stressful conditions, providing a potential new target for cancer therapies.
This molecular switch helps cancer cells survive harsh conditions - News
“Every time people have studied nutrient sensing, we've learned a lot about biology, and many drugs have been developed as a result.”
www.rockefeller.edu
November 17, 2025 at 4:17 PM
This #WorldDiabetesDay we're highlighting Rockefeller's own Svetlana Mojsov, whose work on GLP-1 led to a new class drugs for type 2 diabetes as well as the treatment of obesity.

Check out this interactive timeline to learn more: https://bit.ly/47YGDPQ
November 14, 2025 at 6:57 PM
Treatments for autoimmune conditions are either difficult to administer or broadly suppress patients’ immune systems—creating a huge unmet need for better therapies. Nuvig Therapeutics, cofounded and advised by Rockefeller's Jeff Ravetch, aims to meet it.
Rockefeller startup aims to change the course of treatment for severe autoimmune diseases - News
As many as 50 million Americans suffer from one or more autoimmune conditions, according to recent studies, a number that's increasing by up to 12 percent each year. Yet existing treatments are either difficult to administer or broadly suppress patients...
www.rockefeller.edu
November 13, 2025 at 7:52 PM
According to the 2025 CWTS Leiden Ranking Open edition of over 2,800 universities from 120 countries, Rockefeller has the highest percentage of most frequently cited scientific publications. Way to go, Rockefeller! 👏 👏 👏
Rockefeller tops an international ranking of research impact - News
Rockefeller has topped a survey that weighs what percentage of an institution's scientific publications are frequently cited by other researchers. According to the CWTS Leiden Ranking Open Edition of over 2,800 universities from 120 countries, Rockefell...
www.rockefeller.edu
November 12, 2025 at 7:48 PM
Researchers in the Vosshall lab have discovered the first evidence of what happens when a female mosquito chooses to mate for the one and only time in her life.

We spoke to @leslievosshall.bsky.social and @leahhouri.bsky.social about their unexpected findings. See the full Q&A:
What we got wrong about mosquito mating - News
Researchers have discovered the first evidence of what happens when a female mosquito chooses to mate for the one and only time in her life.
www.rockefeller.edu
November 10, 2025 at 7:51 PM
Reposted by The Rockefeller University
Happy to see our recent work on SLC25A45 featured on the cover of @cp-cellmetabolism.bsky.social . Huge thanks to @yuyangliu.bsky.social for the design! @KivancBirsoy @rockefeller.edu
November 6, 2025 at 6:52 PM
Current treatments for autoimmune diseases have significant shortcomings, including high cost and supply shortages. A new alternative from the #RavetchLab achieves the same effectiveness when tested in mice at a fraction of the dose. @science.org
Researchers develop a potential IVIG replacement for treating autoimmunity that's significantly more potent - News
The discovery could greatly improve patient experience and address supply shortages.
www.rockefeller.edu
November 6, 2025 at 8:01 PM
Reposted by The Rockefeller University
In today's episode, Neuroscientist Erich Jarvis explores the connections between birdsong and speech:

www.birdnote.org/podcasts/bir...

@rockefeller.edu
Vocal Learning is for the Birds | BirdNote
Neuroscientist Erich Jarvis explores the connections between birdsong and speech.
www.birdnote.org
November 5, 2025 at 5:18 PM
The #TarakhovskyLab, as part of an international team of scientists, has identified a new molecular pathway that shifts microglia into a protective state. The findings may lead to Alzheimer's therapies that can reprogram the brain’s own immune defenses.
This immune circuit may protect the brain from Alzheimer's - News
The atlas makes the most dangerous animal in the world a lot easier to study--and perhaps defeat one day.
www.rockefeller.edu
November 5, 2025 at 5:14 PM
Reposted by The Rockefeller University
It turns out female mosquitoes are in charge during sex. A study found they give a subtle signal when they accept a mate, a overturing decades of assumptions about mosquito behavior.

I wrote about this fascinating work by @leahhouri.bsky.social, @leslievosshall.bsky.social et al for @nature.com:
Glowing sperm helps to reveal secrets of mosquito sex
Female Aedes mosquitoes signal that copulation can proceed by subtly extending their genitalia.
www.nature.com
October 29, 2025 at 3:34 PM
Good luck to Rockefeller's Clare Cahir, Heloise Carion, Erika Layfield, Julia Losner, Dan Oh, Ethan Seltzer, Taylor Wallace, and all other runners in the NYC Marathon this Sunday! 🏃🏽 🏃🏽‍♀️ 🏃🏽‍♂️
October 31, 2025 at 5:22 PM
A global effort, led by @leslievosshall.bsky.social and @nadavshai.bsky.social, just made the most dangerous animal in the world a lot easier to study—and perhaps defeat one day.

Learn more about the first head-to-toe cellular atlas of the mosquito, published in @cellpress.bsky.social, below.
Researchers release the world’s first head-to-toe cellular atlas of the mosquito - News
The atlas makes the most dangerous animal in the world a lot easier to study—and perhaps defeat one day.
www.rockefeller.edu
October 30, 2025 at 4:25 PM
In @nature.com: Using AI and other cutting-edge techniques, the Klinge lab has captured the first near-continuous "molecular movie" of ribosome formation—revealing, frame by frame, how cells build the protein factories that make life possible.

More here: https://bit.ly/3LbHTaF
October 29, 2025 at 5:22 PM
The first detailed look at how mosquitoes mate from @leslievosshall.bsky.social's lab reverses the assumption that male mosquitoes control the process, finding that a subtle female behavior dictates whether mating will take place or not. @currentbiology.bsky.social

More here: https://bit.ly/4huwEpL
October 28, 2025 at 4:23 PM
Congratulations to Rockefeller's Steve Bonilla, who has been named an @hhmi.org Freeman Hrabowski Scholar! Bonilla's lab is pursuing insights into the fundamental rules of RNA folding, structure, and dynamic function.
Steve Bonilla is named an HHMI Freeman Hrabowski Scholar - News
Steve Bonilla, assistant professor and head of the Laboratory of Structural Biology and Biophysics, has been named an HHMI Freeman Hrabowski Scholar. Bonilla is one of 30 Hrabowski Scholars appointed in this year's class and the first Rockefeller facult...
www.rockefeller.edu
October 27, 2025 at 6:57 PM
Greg Alushin (@alushinlab.bsky.social) is decoding how the body’s building blocks sense and respond to force, with implications for everything from cancer to developmental disorders. In this Q&A, he discusses where his work on the cytoskeleton could lead us:
How cells move and change shape--and why it matters for our health - News
Inside each of your cells, there's a microscopic scaffolding that helps determine what the cell looks like, how it moves, and how it responds to its surroundings. This internal structure, called the cytoskeleton, is constantly shifting and adjusting. It...
www.rockefeller.edu
October 24, 2025 at 7:13 PM
Have you signed up for our science newsletter yet? Subscribe now to stay on top of the latest discoveries taking place right here at Rockefeller, delivered monthly to your inbox: https://bit.ly/34Ez7YI
October 23, 2025 at 5:01 PM
A new @pnas.org study from Michael Rout, working with a team led by the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, solves the long-standing mystery of how NPCs make split-second decisions about which molecules to allow to pass through their molecular gates: bit.ly/4hleGGd
October 21, 2025 at 3:02 PM
Rockefeller's Jeff Friedman has won the 2025 Albany Medical Center Prize, one of the nation’s most prestigious prizes in biomedicine. Friedman is recognized for his discovery of leptin, which established a biological basis for obesity. Congrats, Jeff!
Jeffrey M. Friedman is awarded the 2025 Albany Medical Center Prize - News
Jeffrey M. Friedman has been awarded the 2025 Albany Medical Center Prize in Medicine and Biomedical Research, one of the nation's most prestigious prizes in biomedicine. Friedman, who is Rockefeller's Marilyn M. Simpson Professor, a Howard Hughes Medic...
www.rockefeller.edu
October 17, 2025 at 1:13 PM
Don't miss this piece in @thetransmitter.bsky.social by @vcallier.bsky.social on @danielkronauer.bsky.social's latest work! His lab discovered that a protective screen of spurious transcriptional activity enables each olfactory neuron to express exactly one out of hundreds of olfactory receptors.
Ant olfactory neurons reveal new gene regulation mechanism
The mechanism enables each olfactory neuron in the ant to express exactly one out of hundreds of olfactory receptors.
www.thetransmitter.org
October 14, 2025 at 7:50 PM
Svetlana Mojsov has won the 2025 Kimberly Prize in Biochemistry from Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine! She is recognized for her discovery of GLP-1, a gut hormone central to insulin regulation and now the basis of widely used diabetes and weight-loss treatments. Congratulations!
Influential Biochemist Svetlana Mojsov Named Winner of 2026 Kimberly Prize - News Center
Distinguished biochemist Svetlana Mojsov, PhD, the Lulu Chow Wang and Robin Chemers Neustein Research Associate Professor at the Rockefeller University, New York, has been named the winner of the annual $250,000 Kimberly Prize in Biochemistry and Molecu...
news.feinberg.northwestern.edu
October 10, 2025 at 2:42 PM
Congrats to @veenapadmanaban.bsky.social of the @sohailtavazoie.bsky.social lab, who was honored at the Blavatnik Awards Ceremony this week! Veena's work established neurons as novel drivers of breast cancer metastasis and uncovered actionable therapeutic targets. Learn more below:
Veena Padmanaban, 2025 Blavatnik Regional Awards Laureate in Life Sciences
Cancer cell biologist, Veena Padmanaban from The Rockefeller University has discovered a critical cross-talk mechanism between sensory nerves and breast cancer cells, establishing neurons as novel drivers of breast cancer metastasis and uncovering actio...
www.youtube.com
October 9, 2025 at 5:32 PM