CONTENTS

November 2008

Identical four-year-old twins Addi and Cassi Hempel smile, laugh, and play. They also have dementia, a manifestation of a genetic disease known as Niemann-Pick type C that disrupts cholesterol trafficking inside the cell. Although rare, NPC bears a striking resemblance to something much more common. ALISON MCCOOK asks: Could Addi and Cassi help the 5 million Americans (and millions more worldwide) living with Alzheimer's disease?

RELATED:

An Uncommon Colony

Alzheimer's: Type 3 Diabetes?

Was Alois Alzheimer Right or Wrong?

WNTer wonderland

Summer, 2002: One announcement, and all of PHYLLIS WISE'S basic research at the University of Washington was called into question. The Women's Health Initiative clinical trial had shown hormone therapy was harmful. Afterwards, Wise revealed the hormone can limit inflammatory damage and promote neurogenesis, giving her a new perspective on how clinical and basic science can work together.

RELATED:

The Discovery of Estrogen Receptor

Scientists under the microscope

Bringing Cancer Science to the Bedside

Check out our list of the top US and international institutions. MEGAN SCUDELLARI talks to employees about what makes their institution such a great place to do science.

RELATED:

Best Places to Work in Academia 2008

The art of WE at UAB

Dead Sea Science

Survey Methodology

Slideshow: BPTW 2008 Academia

Type of Institutions

How respondents spend their time


RANKING TABLES:

Top 40 US Academic Institutions

Top 15 US Academic Institutions

Top 10 US Academic Institutions

Top US institutions on five most important factors

Strengths and Weaknesses of the International top 10

Top Countries List

What's important to US and international scientists

Downloadable PDFs

   

CONTRIBUTORS

MAIL

EDITORIAL

National Character and Scientific Enterprise Is there something in our cultural heritage that makes us better or worse at biotech?
RICHARD GALLAGHER

COLUMNS

Peer Review Isn't Perfect... ...But it's not a conspiracy designed to maintain the status quo.
STEVEN WILEY

OPINION

Disease Prevention in Islamic Countries Education is the key, and a network of international experts is setting up a Supercourse to meet the challenge.
By ALI ARDALAN, KAWKAB SHISHANI, ABDEL BELAL, KUNTORO, and GHADA AHMAD for the OIC NCD experts

Notebook

The Agenda; Immunize thyself; Drug wars; Reuse, or recycle?; Morph mystery; A frog's foe

FOUNDATIONS

Cholesterol and NPC1, circa 1997

PROFILES

The Science of Stress NIH's Gisela Storz has spent her career drilling down to the core of questions such as how bacteria respond to oxidants - work that has taken her in some unexpected directions.
KAREN HOPKIN

Scientist to Watch: Doris Tsao A real visionary
ALLA KATSNELSON

BIOBUSINESS: Serotonin, Repurposed Immune Control CEO Stephen Roth is banking on a controversial hypothesis and is fashioning ways to block a neurotransmitter to fight autoimmune disease.
ANDREA GAWRYLEWSKI

THE LITERATURE

Hot paper: A Potent Protein Identifying a key protein behind ALS redirects the fight against the disease
BOB GRANT

Hot paper in Microbiology: Abundant archaea

Hot Paper In Metabolism: Reserve power

Hot Paper In Plant Biology: Tree timer

LAB TOOLS

Fret-free FRET How to put FRET biosensors to work for you when tracking cell signaling; Pick a spot, any spot; Sensor Sensitivity; Doubling up; Specificity sticks; Plus a web only article on Basic supplies you'll need for FRET imaging
KELLY RAE CHI

CAREERS

Libraries 2.0 Secrets from science librarians that can save you hours of work.
ANDREA GAWRYLEWSKI