President Marco Simoni talks about how technology and collaboration can improve our lives and how Human Technopole works in this direction.
03 May 2020
President Marco Simoni talks about how technology and collaboration can improve our lives and how Human Technopole works in this direction.
In the May issue of Formiche (pages 42-43), President Marco Simoni talks about the opportunities given by new technologies to improve our societies and how they should be used for the well-being of people.
An optimal and truly effective use of new technologies passes through mutual trust and collaboration, aspects that are even more fundamental in a crisis like the one we are living in.
One of the founding principles of Human Technopole is collaboration: when it is fully operational, HT will provide access to state-of-the-art infrastructure and training opportunities for future generations of researchers. Collaboration is happening even now that the world is dealing with the Covid19 pandemic: our scientists are in fact engaged in collaborative projects with other research institutes to make their contribution in the fight against Covid19.
Click here to read HT projects in the fight against Covid19
The Human Technopole, ELIXIR Italia, the national node of the European life sciences research infrastructure coordinated by the National Research Council (CNR), and the Centro Cardiologico Monzino, as the Italian coordinating centre, have been selected as the Italian partners of Genome of Europe (GoE), the largest EU-funded genomic project, whose ultimate goal is to make […]
On Friday 13 December, at Palazzo Mezzanotte in Milan, the Human Technopole Foundation’s ‘Integrated Report 2023’ received the Oscar di Bilancio in the social enterprises and non-profit organisations category. The award was presented to President Gianmario Verona, Elena Trovesi, Head of Administration, as well as the project leaders Giovanni Selmi, Head of Finance, and Alessandro […]
An international team of scientists from Human Technopole and the University of Milan has developed and validated an innovative approach to studying human brain development across multiple individuals simultaneously using single organoids—laboratory models that replicate key cellular processes of human neurodevelopment. The research paves the way for in vitro population studies. Additionally, the scientists have developed a novel computational method to more accurately quantify the genetic identity of individual cells profiled from multiple individuals concurrently. The findings have been published in Nature Methods.
Human Technopole researchers have identified adducin-γ (ADD3) as a crucial regulator of glioblastoma cancer stem cell morphology and intercellular bridges between tumour cells. These connections facilitate communication and allow tumour cells to share resources, evade chemotherapy, and survive in challenging conditions. The study has been funded by AIRC and the findings are published in Life Science Alliance.
An international collaborative study led by Human Technopole, Candiolo Cancer Institute IRCCS in Turin, the University of Turin, and the Wellcome Sanger Institute in Cambridge (UK) has identified new factors associated with therapeutic response in colorectal cancer. The research has led to the development of a machine-learning model capable of accurately predicting the effects of cetuximab, a drug in clinical use, on different colorectal tumour subtypes. Funded by the AIRC Foundation, the study paves the way to identifying molecular features that could serve as biomarkers for predicting treatment response in patients with this type of cancer.
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