ӳý

Skip to main content
Home

Top menu

  • Careers
Search
  • ӳý
      1. This is ӳý Learn about our mission, our values, our history, and partner institutions.
      2. Our impact Discover the impact of our research on human health.
      3. People Meet our members, staff scientists, fellows, leadership, and other ӳýies.
      4. Join ӳý Find out how to join the ӳý as an employee or associate member.
      5. Contact us Find our contact information, directions to our buildings, and directory.
  • Research
      1. Disease areas ӳý brings people together to advance the understanding and treatment of disease.
        1. Items Wpapp col
          • Brain Health
          • Cancer
          • Cardiovascular disease
          • Chronic disease
          • Diabetes
          • Infectious disease and microbiome
          • Kidney disease
          • Obesity
          • Rare disease
      2. Research areas Through programs spanning genetics, biology, artificial intelligence (AI), and therapeutic development, ӳý researchers are making discoveries that drive biomedical science forward.
        1. Items Wpapp col
          • AI and machine learning
          • Chemical biology and therapeutics science
          • Genome regulation, cellular circuitry, and epigenomics
          • Immunology
          • Medical and population genetics
          • Metabolism
      3. Technology platforms ӳý's technology platforms create, adapt, and scale technologies to accelerate science at the institute and beyond.
        1. Items Wpapp col
          • Data sciences
          • Drug discovery
          • Genetic perturbation
          • Genomics / ӳý Clinical Labs
          • Imaging
          • Metabolomics
          • Proteomics
          • Spatial technologies
      4. Science
        1. Patient-partnered research Patients partner with our scientists to accelerate the pace of discovery and find better treatments.
        2. Partnering and licensing We work closely with pharmaceutical, biotech, and technology partners to accelerate the translation of our discoveries.
        3. Publications A catalog of scientific papers published by our members and staff scientists.
        4. Resources, services, and tools Key scientific datasets and computational tools developed by our scientists and their collaborators.
        5. Collaborations and consortia We join with institutions and scientists the world over to address foundational challenges in science and health.
  • Centers
      1. Carlos Slim Center for Health Research The Slim Center aims to bring the benefits of genomics-driven medicine to Latin America, gleaning new insights into diseases with relevance to the region.
      2. Gerstner Center for Cancer Diagnostics The Gerstner Center is developing next-generation diagnostic technology for cancer detection and tracking disease progression.
      3. Klarman Cell Observatory The Klarman Cell Observatory is systematically defining mammalian cellular circuits, how they work together to create tissues and organs, and are perturbed to cause disease.
      4. Merkin Institute for Transformative Technologies in Healthcare The Merkin Institute is supporting early-stage ideas aimed at advancing powerful technological approaches for improving how we understand and treat disease.
      5. Novo Nordisk Foundation Center for Genomic Mechanisms of Disease This center is developing new paradigms and technologies to scale the discovery of biological mechanisms of common, complex diseases, by facilitating close collaborations between the ӳý and the Danish research community.
      6. Eric and Wendy Schmidt Center The EWSC is catalyzing a new field of interdisciplinary research at the intersection of data science and life science, aimed at improving human health.
      7. Stanley Center for Psychiatric Research The Stanley Center aims to reduce the burden of serious mental illness by contributing new insights into pathogenesis, identifying biomarkers, and paving the way toward new treatments.
  • Education and outreach
      1. Art and science connection Explore the connection between art and science and how we bring together artists and ӳý scientists through our artist-in-residence program, gallery exhibitions, and ongoing public conversations.
      2. ӳý Discovery Center Visit our free public educational space that showcases how researchers at the ӳý and their colleagues around the world seek to understand and treat human disease.
      3. Learning resources Access free classroom materials and more for STEM educators, parents, students, tutors, and others.
      4. Public programs Discover remarkable stories of scientific progress, and explore the intersections of science, medicine, and society.
      5. Student opportunities Learn about ӳý's mentored research offerings for high school students, college students, and recent college graduates.
      6. Visit ӳý Come see what ӳý is all about.
  • News
      1. News and insights Learn about breakthroughs from ӳý scientists.
        1. Column
      2. Press room Contact our media relations team.
        1. Column
      3. Sign up for our newsletter Receive regular updates on ӳý news, research and community.
  • Careers
  • Search
The resurgence of phenotypic screening in drug discovery and development.
Wagner BK. The resurgence of phenotypic screening in drug discovery and development. Expert Opin Drug Discov. 2016;11(2):121-5. doi:10.1517/17460441.2016.1122589
Read more
HDAC inhibitor-mediated beta-cell protection against cytokine-induced toxicity is STAT1 Tyr701 phosphorylation independent.
Dahllöf MS, Christensen DP, Harving M, Wagner BK, Mandrup-Poulsen T, Lundh M. HDAC inhibitor-mediated beta-cell protection against cytokine-induced toxicity is STAT1 Tyr701 phosphorylation independent. J Interferon Cytokine Res. 2015;35(1):63-70. doi:10.1089/jir.2014.0022
Read more
Inhibition of HDAC3 as a strategy for developing novel diabetes therapeutics.
Meier BC, Wagner BK. Inhibition of HDAC3 as a strategy for developing novel diabetes therapeutics. Epigenomics. 2014;6(2):209-14. doi:10.2217/epi.14.11
Read more
Targeting the pancreatic β-cell to treat diabetes.
Vetere A, Choudhary A, Burns SM, Wagner BK. Targeting the pancreatic β-cell to treat diabetes. Nat Rev Drug Discov. 2014;13(4):278-89. doi:10.1038/nrd4231
Read more
Small-molecule inhibition of inflammatory β-cell death.
Lundh M, Scully SS, Mandrup-Poulsen T, Wagner BK. Small-molecule inhibition of inflammatory β-cell death. Diabetes Obes Metab. 2013;15 Suppl 3:176-84. doi:10.1111/dom.12158
Read more
Target identification and mechanism of action in chemical biology and drug discovery.
Schenone M, Dančík V, Wagner BK, Clemons PA. Target identification and mechanism of action in chemical biology and drug discovery. Nat Chem Biol. 2013;9(4):232-40. doi:10.1038/nchembio.1199
Read more
A small-molecule screening strategy to identify suppressors of statin myopathy.
Wagner BK, Gilbert TJ, Hanai J ichi, et al. A small-molecule screening strategy to identify suppressors of statin myopathy. ACS Chem Biol. 2011;6(9):900-4. doi:10.1021/cb200206w
Read more
Screening: Low-fat worms on drugs.
Wagner BK. Screening: Low-fat worms on drugs. Nat Chem Biol. 2011;7(4):194-5. doi:10.1038/nchembio.540
Read more
Assay of the multiple energy-producing pathways of mammalian cells.
Bochner BR, Siri M, Huang RH, et al. Assay of the multiple energy-producing pathways of mammalian cells. PLoS One. 2011;6(3):e18147. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0018147
Read more
Large-scale chemical dissection of mitochondrial function.
Wagner BK, Kitami T, Gilbert TJ, et al. Large-scale chemical dissection of mitochondrial function. Nat Biotechnol. 2008;26(3):343-51. doi:10.1038/nbt1387
Read more

Pagination

  • Previous page ‹Ĺ
  • Page 1
  • Page 2
  • Page 3
  • …
  • Page 96
  • Page 97
  • Page 98
  • Page 99
  • Current page 100
  • Page 101
  • Page 102
  • Page 103
  • Page 104
  • …
  • Next page ›ĺ

Address

Merkin Building
415 Main St.
Cambridge, MA 02142

Follow Us

Home

Sign up for our newsletter

Did you know?

ӳý's gene-editing technologies—CRISPR-Cas9, base editing, and prime editing—are being tested in more than 25 clinical trials to treat or cure leukemias, rare genetic diseases, high cholesterol, and other conditions.

NIH-funded discoveries from the ӳý are powering nearly 20 clinical trials from companies testing new treatments for diseases like cancer and heart disease.

ӳý developed a technology — partly supported by NIH funding —  that can detect trace amounts of cancer DNA from blood tests and help cancer patients find out their risk of disease recurrence earlier.

Using NIH funding, the ӳý’s Rare Genomes Project has worked with more than 1,300 families from all 50 U.S. states to diagnose rare genetic diseases.

ӳý Clinical Labs has directly partnered with tens of thousands of cancer patients to analyze their DNA and accelerate research.

During the COVID-19 pandemic, ӳý launched a large-scale diagnostic testing lab that processed over 37 million tests and saved state and federal programs nearly $2 billion.

The ӳý's Cancer Dependency Map helps cancer researchers and drug developers discover therapeutic targets for new cancer treatments.

gnomAD, a large human genetic variant reference database developed by the ӳý with NIH funding, has contributed to over 13 million genetic disease diagnoses since its launch in 2014.

Datasets generated at the ӳý were used to train AlphaGenome, a cutting-edge AI model from Google DeepMind that predicts how genetic variants affect gene regulation.

the FDA granted accelerated approval for a lung cancer drug that was developed with ӳý science and is for patients who otherwise had few treatment options.

David Liu and his team used NIH funding to invent precise gene-editing technologies, including one that may vastly improve access to genetic therapies for patients with rare disease.

NIH-funded ӳý research is shedding new light on the biological roots of many diseases, including Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, and Huntington’s disease.

Scientists with ӳý’s Stanley Center for Psychiatric Research have found key genetic factors for schizophrenia and bipolar disorder.

ӳý scientists are using AI to design new antibiotics and other drugs, predict drug toxicity, and pinpoint genes, molecules, and cells that might be causing disease.

ӳý Clinical Labs has sequenced nearly 900,000 whole human genomes, producing, on average, one human genome sequence every three minutes.

ӳý Clinical Labs developed a new method for genome sequencing that costs 75 percent less than existing methods.

 ӳý Clinical Labs is the largest genome sequencing center of its kind in the world.

ӳý Clinical Labs has partnered with MyOme and Southern Research Institute in Birmingham, Alabama to provide free genetic tests to people in Alabama.

ӳý Clinical Labs has partnered with Mass General Brigham and Everygene to provide no-cost genetic testing to people throughout the US with cardiomyopathy, a disorder that can cause sudden cardiac death.

ӳý Clinical labs and Mass General Brigham used data from NIH’s All of Us program to develop a genetic test that predicts risk of eight different heart conditions. This test is now available to patients.

Thanks to NIH funding, ӳý Clinical Labs is collaborating with scientists across the U.S. to sequence DNA from tens of thousands of children with cancer and birth defects to study common biological pathways.

ӳý Clinical Labs holds the world record for fastest DNA sequencing, completing whole genome sequencing and analysis in less than four hours at their facility in Burlington, Massachusetts.

Footer menu

  • Report a concern
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy

© ӳý 2025