Search
Search results
309 results found
Participating BIDMC Mentors (continuously updated)
Below you can review information on the BIDMC researchers available to mentor students as part of the Summer 2026 BIDMC-Shapiro Scholars program, including their Harvard Catalyst page (if available) and the project they have available for Summer 2026 research. Projects will be submitted through...
Daniel Kramer
Shared Access to Adults' Patient Portals: A Secret Shopper Exercise.
Wachenheim, Deborah, Isabel Hurwitz, Vadim Dukhanin, Jennifer Wolff, and Catherine M DesRoches. 2024. “Shared Access to Adults’ Patient Portals: A Secret Shopper Exercise.”. Applied Clinical Informatics.
Recent advances in the development of RIPK2 modulators for the treatment of inflammatory diseases.
Pham, Anh-Tuan, Amanda Franceschini Ghilardi, and Lijun Sun. 2023. “Recent Advances in the Development of RIPK2 Modulators for the Treatment of Inflammatory Diseases.”. Frontiers in Pharmacology 14: 1127722.
In silico discovery and therapeutic potential of IDO1 and TDO2 inhibitors.
Jernigan, Finith E, and Lijun Sun. 2017. “In Silico Discovery and Therapeutic Potential of IDO1 and TDO2 Inhibitors.”. Future Medicinal Chemistry 9 (12): 1309-11.
Just published in Annals of Internal Medicine:
Differentiation of Prior SARS-CoV-2 Infection and Postacute Sequelae by Standard Clinical Laboratory Measurements in the RECOVER Cohort Kristine M. Erlandson, MD, MSc*; Linda N. Geng, MD, PhD*; Caitlin A. Selvaggi, MS; Tanayott Thaweethai, PhD; Peter Chen, MD; Nathan B. Erdmann, MD, PhD; Jason D...
Zhuqing (Jenny) Li
she/her
Solomon finished his internship at our lab!
Solomon completed his summer internship at our lab. Over the last three months, he has proved that he is an outstanding young scientist. We greatly appreciate Solomon's contribution to our drug discovery effort and wish him the best of luck in his future endeavors.
Rethinking the Gut’s Neurons: Newly Discovered Neurons Upend Established Theory
From Neuroscience News/BIDMC: Previously, scientists believed that the enteric nervous system (ENS) development stopped before birth. However, recent findings by Subhash Kulkarni and colleagues overturn this by showing ENS development continues after birth in mice and humans. The study reveals a...