Latest Research News

<span><span><span>Why do females switch to asexual reproduction?</span></span></span>

Researchers at Max Planck Institute for Biology Tübingen and Kobe University discovered populations of female brown algae that reproduce from unfertilised gametes and thrive without males. As published in Nature Ecology and Evolution, they used “Amazon” algae to shed light on the phenotypic and genetic consequences of the shift from sexual to asexual reproduction. more

German-Mauritian Collaboration Tackles Herbicide Resistance in Sugarcane Cultivation

Through international teamwork, scientists’ on-site weed resistance diagnosis boosts knowledge exchange and sustainable agriculture. more

Max Planck Institute Director, Susana Coelho, joins the list of outstanding scientists in EMBO’s 60<sup>th</sup> anniversary year

Max Planck Institute Director, Susana Coelho, joins the list of outstanding scientists in EMBO’s 60th anniversary year more

New tool maps microbial diversity with unprecedented details

The innovative tool SynTracker allows the analysis of structural genomic variations in microbial populations more

Toolkit makes protein design faster and more accessible

The Damietta Server broadens the accessibility to protein design research and its applications in various biotechnological and biomedical fields
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<span><span><span><span><span><span><span>Yi Han Tan receives the 2024 Human Frontier Science Program Fellowship</span></span></span></span></span></span></span><br /> 

Dr. Yi Han Tan, a Postdoctoral researcher at Max Planck Institute for Biology Tübingen, received the prestigious award for investigating the role of pattern recognition receptor variants in immune response and disease.
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<span><span><span><span>Ruth Ley receives Advanced Grant from the European Research Council</span></span></span></span>

Max Planck Institute Director receives funding for Silent Flagellin in Chronic Inflammatory and Auto-immune Disease (SilentFlame) more

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