Keehoon Lee, Ph.D., investigates the vast and intricate ecosystem of the human body
A diverse group of fashion enthusiasts, community members, and supporters gathered October 13 at Scottsdale Fashion Square for TGen’s third annual Runway for Research, organized by the TGen Foundation.
TGen’s Collaborative Sequencing Center is continually upgrading its equipment and software to provide the most efficient, accurate and inexpensive next-generation sequencing.
Howard Young is someone a lot of people call after they’re diagnosed with pancreatic cancer.
TGen researchers are advancing the scientific understanding of the aging process.
This year, the TGen Foundation’s annual Runway for Research, a fashion show/fundraiser scheduled for October 13, is slated to combine big fun and high fashion with a serious mission—supporting women’s cancer research at TGen.
West Nile virus (WNV) arrives like clockwork annually during picnic season. As late spring and early summer bring sunshiny weather, mosquitoes awaken from their yearly slumber. WNV, the leading cause of mosquito-borne disease in the continental United States, often accompanies them. As of January 10, a total of 1,035 cases of the disease in people have been reported to the CDC.
Growing up in Olapalayam, an isolated area of southern India, a diagnosis of type-I diabetes at age 12 left Sampathkumar (Sampath) Rangasamy, Ph.D., with a deep desire to help those with rare diseases.
When TGen Assistant Professor, John Altin, Ph.D., discusses PepSeq in terms of his latest study, you hear the excitement of discovery in his voice.