Englander Institute for Precision Medicine
EIPM

Dear Members of the Englander Institute,

I hope everyone enjoyed the holiday season had a chance to reconnect with family and friends, and refresh yourselves for the year ahead. 

We are now accepting applications for the ...

News from the EIPM!

EIPM's Fourth Quarter 2024 External Newsletter


December 31, 2024

A clump of prostate cancer cells. The blue-green cells are growing, whereas the pink ones are dying by programmed cell death (apoptosis). Credit: Dave McCarthy and Annie Cavanagh/Wellcome Trust

Prostate cancer hijacks the normal prostate’s growth regulation program to release the brakes and grow freely, according to Weill Cornell Medicine researchers. The discovery, published Dec. 13 in Nature Communications, paves the way for new diagnostic tests to guide treatment and could also help drug developers identify novel ways to stop the disease.

A protein...