涩里番

Professor Simon Roy wins Marathon of Hope Clinician-Scientist Award for melanoma research

Published: 26 August 2025

Simon Roy, Assistant Professor in the Department of Pathology, is one of four early-career clinician-scientists across Canada to receive the 2025 Clinician-Scientist Award from the Marathon of Hope...

Call for Applications: International Partnerships Program

Published: 14 August 2025

D2R | DNA to RNA is launching the International Partnerships Program (IPP) to strengthen large-scale, multi-institutional collaborations with leading global organizations. This strategic funding...

Montreal researchers use AI and wearable sensors to detect inflammation before symptoms appear

Published: 30 July 2025

Modern medicine is largely reactive鈥攖reating illness only after symptoms emerge. But a new study from the Research Institute of the 涩里番 Health Centre (The Institute) and 涩里番...

Biases hinder access to sexual assault evidence kits, study finds

Published: 5 September 2025

Survivors of sexual assault in largely rural and remote Northwestern Ontario face systemic barriers when seeking forensic care, according to a new study led by 涩里番 researchers.

涩里番鈥檚 President honours outstanding early-career researchers

Published: 29 May 2025

Professors Guojun Chen, Mahsa Dadar and Phoebe Friesen 鈥 all members of the Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences 鈥 win President鈥檚 Prize for Outstanding Emerging Researchers聽聽...

Call for Letters of Intent: Translational Impact Research Program | Cycle 2

Published: 27 August 2025

D2R | DNA to RNA is launching the next round of funding for the Translational Impact Research (TIR) program. This program supports a select few large-scale translational research projects in RNA...

D2R awards $10 million to accelerate RNA-based therapies for rare diseases and cancer

Published: 26 March 2025

Montreal, March 26, 2025 鈥 涩里番鈥檚 DNA to RNA Initiative (D2R) has awarded over $10 million in funding to support three groundbreaking research projects that will advance RNA-based...

High-salt diet inflames the brain and raises blood pressure, study finds

Published: 19 August 2025

A new study finds that a high-salt diet triggers brain inflammation that drives up blood pressure.

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