COS News

  • Research
    AI and physics
    “The basic premise is that AI can help us do better physics, and something that is less expected is that physics can also help us understand AI better,” said Northeastern professor James Halverson.

    AI and physics have more in common than you might think.

  • Research
    Mark Patterson
    Formed by superheated glacial water from the last ice age, the hydrothermal vents Professor Mark Patterson studies have been bubbling beneath the fjord for centuries.

    Professor receives Fulbright to explore one of the world’s most unique hydrothermal vents

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    Showing 38 results in Biochemistry

  • Spotlight: The National Society of Black Women in Medicine

    Spotlight: The National Society of Black Women in Medicine

    “People are meant to exist in communities” The National Society of Black Women in Medicine at NU are making that change. Toun Olorungbemi, co-Founder & charter president of the National Society of Black Women in Medicine at Northeastern I am a Nigerian-American university student at Northeastern, studying Behavioral Neuroscience in the College of Science with...
  • Co-op Spotlight: Q&A with Chris Jurcisin, BS in Biochemistry

    Co-op Spotlight: Q&A with Chris Jurcisin, BS in Biochemistry

    Chris Jurcisin is in his 3rd-year here at Northeastern and is enrolled in the biochemistry program. Learn more about Chris’ successful first co-op with a start-up pharmaceutical company here in Boston. 1. Tell us about yourself. My name is Chris Jurcisin, and I am a 3rd-year biochemistry major. I chose this major because I have always been...
  • Biochemistry students attend American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Annual Meeting

    Biochemistry students attend American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Annual Meeting

    Four Northeastern University biochemistry students– Kai Beattie, Ashley Brown, Gabrielle Hernandez, and Joie Sun– represented the university’s American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology (ASBMB) chapter at the society’s national meeting in Philadelphia.
  • Student-led collaboration explains how worms navigate a world of food and toxins

    Student-led collaboration explains how worms navigate a world of food and toxins

    A new study from a Northeastern-led collaboration, looking into the C. elegans worms’ interactions with their microbiome, found that the worms are willing to leave a bacterial food source when they’re exposed to one of their deadliest toxins and identified the driving neurological mechanism behind it.
  • Stunned students protest Russian invasion of Ukraine

    Stunned students protest Russian invasion of Ukraine

    Northeastern’s Ukraine Cultural Club, led by Deanna Zawadiwsky, a fourth-year psychology and economics major, met on Centennial Common to protest the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
  • Recipients of the College of Science Excellence in Teaching Award 2022

    Recipients of the College of Science Excellence in Teaching Award 2022

    The College of Science Excellence in Teaching Awards recognize and reward outstanding NU College of Science faculty for their significant contributions to student learning. We are pleased to announce this year’s winners.
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    Northeastern’s first Churchill Scholar will study breast cancer at Cambridge University

    Cameron Young recently earned the Churchill Scholarship for his impressive work in the field of biochemistry that will allow him to continue his studies at Cambridge university.
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    Q&A with Ellen Smith: CaNCURE Spring Cohort

    Biochemistry major Ellen Smith shares her co-op experience at CaNCURE.
  • Landmark study into the genetic disorder offers clues into links between metabolism and mental health

    Landmark study into the genetic disorder offers clues into links between metabolism and mental health

    Researchers at Northeastern and neighboring colleges say they’ve made a landmark discovery that takes a deeper look at the metabolic and biochemical origins of a debilitating genetic disease known to cause a range of symptoms and health problems. A new study, published Wednesday, focused on a severe neurodevelopmental disorder referred to as 16p11.2 Deletion Syndrome,...
  • The human genome has been mapped. Here’s the next monumental step.

    The human genome has been mapped. Here’s the next monumental step.

    Jeffrey Agar and his colleagues are working on helping humanity develop treatments for hundreds of currently untreatable diseases
  • A vegetable garden grows on the Boston campus

    A vegetable garden grows on the Boston campus

    New vegetable garden is growing at Northeastern's Boston campus, with participants from all academic backgrounds.
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    This mysterious on-off switch holds clues to new cancer treatments

    Within each of our cells, there’s an on-off switch that controls when cells divide and reproduce. The metaphorical finger that flips this switch is a protein called RAS. Under normal circumstances, RAS switches on to help our bodies repair wounds or replenish cells, to name a few of its functions. But sometimes, the switch gets...