Neil Sands joined the LMB just over a year ago as the new Stores Manager, overseeing the inspection, receipting, handling, storage and distribution of all deliveries into the LMB.
Neil Sands appointed Stores Manager
Sven Truckenbrodt talks to Times Higher Education about his move to the LMB supported by the Global Talent Fund
In a Times Higher Education feature about the global researcher talent race, Sven Truckenbrodt, who joined the LMB’s Neurobiology Division in October 2025, shares his motivations for moving to the LMB from California and how Global Talent Funding has been a huge accelerator, enabling quick access to the highly specialised microscopes he needs to conduct […]
Distinct AMPA receptor sub-types reside within glial and neuronal cells of the cerebellum
Multidisciplinary study from Ingo Greger’s group in the LMB’s Neurobiology Division reveals the structures and subunit assembly of GluA4 AMPA receptors in the mammalian cerebellum that support cell-type specific functions.
Making research matter: UK’s leading research organisations unite
The LMB is proud to be a founding member of the UK National Research Organisations (NRO) Group, a new alliance of 35 organisations dedicated to advancing science for the benefit of people, communities, the economy and national priorities. The NRO Group is a trusted partner for government, academia and industry, providing a unified and authoritative […]
LMB research details first step towards writing human genomes from scratch
Roger Highfield, Science Director at the Science Museum, explains the wider significance of new research from the LMB’s PNAC Division which describes a pipeline to manipulate human chromosomes without genetic damage. The work, led by Julian Sale and Jason Chin as part of a wider Synthetic Human Genome (SynHG) project backed by the Wellcome Trsut, […]
Transplant of human chromosomes marks first step in genome synthesis project
Researchers in the LMB’s PNAC Division detail a new pipeline to implant human chromosomes into mouse cells and back again without genomic damage, marking an important step towards the overall goal of synthesising human genomes.