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In 2005, he joined CNIO to lead the Genomic Instability Group where he has been ever since. Initial works from the lab concentrated on exploring the role of replicative stress in cancer and ageing, for which the group combined cellbiology, mouse models and drug development projects.
Credit: Bruce Wetzel and Harry Schaefer, NCI, NIH | License Progress in biology is arguably moving faster today than at any point in the course of human history. Engineered biology has profound potential to change how we live, but the field has become broad, bloated, nebulous. Nature (2005). & Collins J.J. . &
Credit: Bruce Wetzel and Harry Schaefer, NCI, NIH | License Last edit: 13 September 2023 Progress in biology is arguably moving faster today than at any point in the course of human history. Engineered biology has profound potential to change how we live, but the field has become broad, bloated, nebulous. Nature (2005).
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