Propelling Rare Disease Research for More Than 50 Years
February 22, 2023
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Got Calcium?
February 1, 2023
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Advancing American Indian and Alaska Native Health Through Research, Training, and Engagement
November 2, 2022
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Hunting Disease-Causing Genetic Variants
June 29, 2022
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Archived: Accelerating the Development of Tests for Endometriosis and Cancer
April 7, 2021
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Archived: PECASE Honoree Sohini Ramachandran Studies the Genetic Foundations of Traits in Diverse Populations
February 26, 2020
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Archived: Crowdsourcing Science: Using Competition to Drive Creativity
February 5, 2020
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Archived: Block an Enzyme, Save a Life
November 26, 2019
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Calcium keeps your bones strong, allows your muscles to move, and is important for many other bodily functions. The element is found in foods, medicines, and the world around us. Credit: Compound Interest 
Dr. Idhaliz Flores-Caldera.
Sohini Ramachandran, Brown University.
Credit: iStock.
Vern Schramm, professor of biochemistry at Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York. Credit: Albert Einstein College of Medicine.
A network of capillaries supplies brain cells with nutrients. Tight seals in their walls keep blood toxins—and many beneficial drugs—out of the brain. Credit: Dan Ferber, PLOS Biol 2007 Jun; (5)6:E169.