Johns Hopkins Institute for NanoBioTechnology
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  • Support the INBT
  • About
    • About the INBT
    • Contact Information
    • Frequently Asked Questions
    • Resources
  • People
    • Core Researchers
    • Associate Researchers
    • Affiliate Researchers
    • Research Faculty
    • Administrative Team
  • Research
    • Engineering for Cancer Therapies
    • Diagnostic Tools Engineered for Early Detection
    • Stem Cells and Regenerative Engineering
    • Process Engineering at the Nanoscale
  • Education
    • NanoBio Research Experience for Undergraduates Summer Program
    • Master’s Industry Co-Op Education Program
    • Nanotechnology for Cancer Research Fellowship
    • Past Programs
      • Rosetta Commons REU
      • International Research Experience for Students (IRES)
  • Translation
    • Translational Research News
    • Corporate Partnerships
    • Licensing Opportunities
    • Start-up Companies
  • Media
    • News
    • Publications
  • Events
    • The Nano-Bio Symposium
    • Calendar
  • Support the INBT
  • Three people in a lab setting; one is wearing a light blue lab coat, and the other two are wearing white lab coats.
    • Cell Programming
    • Faculty spotlights
    • Research
    • Translational Research

    Transformative Patient Care Begins in the Lab

    May 1, 2025

    Hai-Quan Mao and his collaborators at Johns Hopkins conduct NIH-funded materials science research using mRNA and other advances to address urgent medical challenges like cancer, malaria, and nerve and tissue… Read More

  • Are ‘zombie’ skin cells harmful or helpful? The answer may be in their shapes

    April 25, 2025

    Johns Hopkins researchers identified three types of zombie skin cells; only one gets worse with age Senescent skin cells, often referred to as zombie cells because they have outlived their… Read More

  • Two young women and one man in blue lab coats at a lab bench. The women are doing work at the lab bench while the man oversees their work.
    • Diagnostic Tools Engineered for Early Detection
    • Engineering for Cancer Therapies
    • Faculty spotlights
    • Research

    Johns Hopkins Researchers Decipher Complex Behaviors Behind Deadly Cancers

    By Gina Wadas / April 22, 2025

    With support from the National Institutes of Health, engineer Denis Wirtz and colleagues are using artificial intelligence and multiscale imaging to reveal how tumors grow, spread, and vary across populations… Read More

  • Molecular model of messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA) in a 3D illustration. There are two strands with colors in gold, green, orange, and red.
    • Cell Programming
    • Research
    • Translational Research

    The Disease-Fighting Promise of mRNA

    April 16, 2025

    Read More

  • Group shot of researcher Andy Ewald with his student lab team. He is standing in the center wearing business casual clothes with five students behind him and next to him. They are standing in a laboratory with lab benches on either side of them.
    • Engineering for Cancer Therapies
    • Research

    The Search for Biological Targets to Halt Breast Cancer Metastasis

    April 11, 2025

    Thanks to the NIH, Johns Hopkins researchers like Andrew Ewald have advanced our understanding of the biological mechanisms allowing a cancer cell from one part of the body to successfully… Read More

  • Photo of Jamie Spangler. She has shoulder length straight brunette hair and light color eyes. She is wearing a white lab coat over a green and black print turtle neck shirt. She is standing laboratory with equipment behind her.
    • Faculty spotlights

    Jamie Spangler Wins Two Awards for Early Career Contributions

    April 7, 2025

    Jamie Spangler, the William R. Brody Faculty Scholar and an associate professor of biomedical engineering and chemical and biomolecular engineering, was awarded a Protein Science Young Investigator Award and the American Society… Read More

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