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Inaugural Projects for Progress recipients announced


Inaugural Projects for Progress recipients announced
Awardees include three Penn teams that will help address health care, education, and environmental justice, respectively, in Philadelphia.
The University announced Friday its inaugural Projects for Progress prize recipients, which include three teams of Penn students, faculty, and staff. The teams, awarded up to $100,000 each to support their initiatives, all enhance and promote equity and inclusion in Philadelphia by addressing health care, education, and environmental justice, respectively.
Established by President Amy Gutmannlast summer, and managed by the new Office of Social Equity & Community, Projects for Progress are meant to build on Penn’s longstanding commitment to social justice and civic engagement in Philadelphia. ....

Applied Science , United States , Cobbs Creek , Regina Bynum , Erica Depalma , Caroline Watts , Junduo Liu , Ian Mccurry , Nicole Maloy , Cooper Yerby , Anna Balfanz , Amy Gutmannlast , Deepti Tantry , Michael Hagan , Zachary Herrmann , Evelyn Gotlieb , Marsha Richardson , Human Development Qualitative Methods , A Collaborative Initiative To , Health Societies , Perelman School Of Medicine , Office Of School Community Engagement , Senior Research Coordinator , School Of Social Policy Practice , Cobbs Creek Community Environmental Center , Community Family Care Clinic ,

Researchers identify long-sought enzyme that prevents cancer


Researchers identify long-sought enzyme that prevents cancer
Researchers have found a long-sought enzyme that prevents cancer by enabling the breakdown of proteins that drive cell growth, and that causes cancer when disabled.
Publishing online in
Nature on April 14, the new study revolves around the ability of each human cell to divide in two, with this process repeating itself until a single cell (the fertilized egg) becomes a body with trillions of cells. For each division, a cell must follow certain steps, most of which are promoted by proteins called cyclins.
Led by researchers at NYU Grossman School of Medicine, the work revealed that an enzyme called AMBRA1 labels a key class of cyclins for destruction by cellular machines that break down proteins. The work finds that the enzyme s control of cyclins is essential for proper cell growth during embryonic development, and that its malfunction causes lethal cell overgrowth. Moreover, the study further suggests th ....

United States , Daniele Simoneschi , Luca Busino , Michele Pagano , Emily Henderson , Langone Health , Department Of Biochemistry , Senior Research Coordinator , Danish Cancer Society Research Center , Grossman School Of Medicine , University Of Pennsylvania , Stanford University , Howard Hughes Medical Institute , Molecular Pharmacology , Howard Hughes Medical , Study First Author , Cell Division , Embryonic Development , ஒன்றுபட்டது மாநிலங்களில் , மைக்கேல் ப்யாகநொ , எமிலி ஹென்டர்சன் , லன்கொனே ஆரோக்கியம் , துறை ஆஃப் உயிர் வேதியியல் , மூத்தவர் ஆராய்ச்சி ஒருங்கிணைப்பாளர் , டேனிஷ் புற்றுநோய் சமூகம் ஆராய்ச்சி மையம் , மொத்த மனிதர் பள்ளி ஆஃப் மருந்து ,