Loading…
30,500 grants found
Showing 21 – 40 of 30,500 grants for "Infrastructure"
The University of Dundee is a leading centre for research in the study of living organisms and developing knowledge and innovations in the treatment of disease, to address health p...
The goal of this equipment bid is to build upon recent advances in molecular pathology made within our local and international collaborative environment to develop a greater unders...
Ion channels are tiny ion-permeable pores that contribute to the electrical currents found in nearly every human cell and are required for their healthy function. Their properties...
Mechanical forces are at play in a variety of processes relevant to human physiology and disease. For example, every time that we stretch our arm, a number of muscle proteins need...
When a young child undergoes brain surgery, other invasive brain treatment like radiotherapy; or experiences brain damage for example following a stroke, the brain can adapt. This...
Our organisms are powered by biochemical reactions from molecular machines often made up of individual proteins or protein complexes. Proteins are responsible for tens of thousands...
Non-invasive brain stimulation equipment is a fundamental tool in neuroscience that allows activity in specific brain regions to be temporally altered. This is important for both b...
Over the past few years spatially resolved, high-dimensional molecular analysis of tissue architecture has revolutionised our insight into how cellular heterogeneity regulates deve...
The endoscopy platform is a critical piece of equipment for researchers studying the immune responses of our lungs, our guts, respiratory infections or new vaccines against infecti...
The DNA damage response is a complex combination of processes that detect DNA lesions, regulate chromosome shape and structure within the vicinity of DNA lesions, and facilitate th...
The hallmark of life, is that it is both complex and animate. A typical human cell has around 10,000 different kinds of proteins, often interacting with each other at specific loca...
Imperial College London is a world class institution renowned for developing and applying tracers for special imaging scans called positron emission tomography (PET). This is a typ...
Electron microscopes use an electron beam to make images of samples - such as biological cells and tissues - at a very high level of detail. In a scanning electron microscope (SEM)...
LSTM was among the first institutions in the world to recognise the importance of studying and understanding the phenomenon of drug resistance. Pioneers such as Professor Warringto...
A high-performance computing system will support the work of the MRC-University of Glasgow Centre for Virus Research in the area of pandemic and outbreak preparedness with focus on...
Diseases and injuries in the brain, spinal cord or associated nervous system cells have some of the most severe implications for patients. Coupled with this, there is a significant...
Generating 3D maps of tissue and organ structure is crucial to understanding disease. By examining the structure of diseased tissue and comparing it to healthy tissue we can begin...
Bioimaging is a key experimental technique that enables scientists to precisely observe the molecular mechanisms underpinning normal cell function, as well as cellular dysfunction...
Functional Near-Infrared Spectroscopy (fNIRS) is a brain imaging technique that measures changes in the amount of oxygen in the blood supply to the brain. fNIRS works by shining we...
Our genetics can predict our risk of disease and how we might respond drugs we are prescribed. Indeed, the application of genomics in to clinical practice within the NHS is happeni...