News
How walking slower can make you respond faster
Researchers from the FOM institute AMOLF and the Riken institute in Japan have developed a new algorithm that makes it possible to simulate signal transmission in living cells at the molecular level. A recent application,...
read more »Diffusion makes gene expression patterns less diffuse
Embryonic development is driven by orderly, spatial patterns of gene regulatory proteins that assign each cell in the embryo its particular fate. Recent experiments have shown that these patterns are highly precise, even though...
read more »AMOLF postdoc Mirjam Leunissen receives Minerva prize from FOM
The FOM foundation has decided to award the Minerva prize 2010 to dr. Mirjam Leunissen for her publication about controlled self-organisation of small particles by means of special DNA structures. The FOm/v advisory board...
read more »Mechanical feedback triggers switching of a molecular motor
AMOLF researchers have developed a mathematical model that can explain the preference of a bacterial motor to switch its rotation direction after a fixed period of 0.2 to 0.3 seconds. As it turns out, switching of the motor that...
read more »DNA behaves like a necklace with visible and invisible beads
The distribution of genes across the DNA can be described well by means of theories of one-dimensional gases. This is shown by the work of researchers of the FOM-Institute for Atomic and Molecular Physics (AMOLF) in Amsterdam and...
read more »AMOLF group leader Pieter Rein ten Wolde becomes professor
AMOLF group leader Pieter Rein ten Wolde has been appointed professor of the Faculty of Exact Sciences of the Vrije Universiteit (VU) as of 1st of June.
read more »AMOLF researchers awarded Vici grants
AMOLF group leaders Marileen Dogterom, Mischa Bonn and Pieter Rein ten Wolde have each been awarded a Vici grant for the research proposals they submitted to the Netherlands Organisation of Scientific Research (NWO). Each grant...
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