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To carry out their activities, Research Teams of the Frédéric Joliot Institute for Life Sciences have developed high-profile technological platforms in many areas : biomedical imaging, structural biology, metabolomics, High-Throughput screening, level 3 microbiological safety laboratory...
All the news of the Institute of life sciences Frédéric Joliot
In a study conducted by the Neurofunctional Imaging Group (GIN, NeuroSpin, Bordeaux), a classification technique by Support Vector Machine (SVM) , a supervised learning technique, is used to predict the different hemispheric dominance patterns for language and to highlight the existence of very rare patterns in some healthy individuals.
A Research Team from the SHFJ (IMIV) highlights, through a preclinical model of exposure to alcohol, an immediate and persistent neuro-immune response, several months after the initial exposure of alcohol. These results confirm the occurrence of brain damage that may play a key role in the neurological deficits reported in teenagers who like "binge-drinking", that is to say an excessive consumption of alcohol over a very short time.
The Neurofunctional Imaging Group (GIN - IMN) and the company Fealinx (formerly Cadesis) inaugurated in Bordeaux on October 23 the joint Ginesislab laboratory. The objective of this laboratory is to optimize the use of biomedical imaging data by developing a specific computer platform.
A Research Team of the SCBM (Frédéric Joliot Institute), in collaboration with the SIMOPRO (Frédéric Joliot Institute), Strasbourg University and the start-up Syndivia, has just discovered a new chemical reaction allowing both to bind and to cleave molecules in biological media ("click and release" reaction).
An LSOD Research Team (I2BC@Saclay), in collaboration with a Research Team from Mar del Plata University (Argentina), has been able to characterize for the first time a NO-Synthase of plants. Researchers have shown that NO-Synthase from Ostreococcus tauri (pico plankton from the Thau lagoon) produces very large amounts of NO compared to human NO-synthases. However, terrestrial plants do not have NO-synthases and the biological role of this enzyme remains unknown.
For the first time, an animal model expresses the two biological characteristics of Alzheimer's disease. Researchers from MIRCen (François Jacob Institute), SPI (LEMM), Inserm, Universities Paris-Sud and Paris-Descartes and CNRS have developed an animal model that reproduces the progression of the human disease.
Two Research Teams led by Odette Prat of the Institute of Biosciences and Biotechnologies (BIAM) and Jean Armengaud of the Frédéric Joliot Institute (LI2D, Marcoule) have joined forces thanks to an ANR funding to deepen knowledge of the importance of the nature of protein crowns on the cellular impact of nanoparticles. The results from their three recent publications reveal a new concept: "the protein interactome applied to the corona of nanoparticles".
Brain Imaging and the largest MRI magnet in the world, on the program of the Science Festival on Saturday 14th & Sunday 15th October, at the sports center of Le Moulon. A success for CEA, IRFU and NeuroSpin!
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CEA is a French government-funded technological research organisation in four main areas: low-carbon energies, defense and security, information technologies and health technologies. A prominent player in the European Research Area, it is involved in setting up collaborative projects with many partners around the world.