06/22/2026
We are proud of our scientists making headway in the fight against cancer alongside UT MD Anderson Cancer Center colleagues.
Scientists Find Blood-based Biomarkers for Inflammatory Breast Cancer
Inflammatory breast cancer (IBC) is highly aggressive, but extremely difficult to tell apart from other breast cancers.
06/15/2026
The urge to clean can feel pretty deep-rooted. 🧽 🧹UT scientists have new clues as to why that may be.
By studying coral reef fishes that “clean” other fish, UT Austin researchers found patterns of gene activity in the brains, shared across different species that clean. The finding adds to what scientists understand about how separate species manage to independently evolve similar traits and behaviors.
Read the research paper at link in Texas Science bio.
Research involved the EvoDevOmics and Big Data in Biology streams from the Freshman Research Initiative. Co-authors include Rebecca Young, Hans Hofmann, and FRI alumni Abby Beman and Yiheng Su.
Fish videos courtesy of Simon Gingins
06/09/2026
Meet Chip Breier, a marine scientist developing cutting-edge robotics & other tools to explore some of the most extreme environments on Earth. 🌊🔬 Read our Q&A: https://www.texasscientist.cns.utexas.edu/articles/john-breier
For example, he built a robotic submarine called CLIO that can autonomously find places of interest and collect water, minerals and microbes.
“To push that technology just past … where we can make those observations [is] very satisfying,” says Breier, an associate scientist at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) who received his Ph.D. in marine science from The University of Texas at Austin.
06/01/2026
Happy World Reef Day! 🪸🐠
Misha Matz, a coral biologist at The University of Texas at Austin is proposing a radical plan to save Caribbean coral reefs from collapse: transplant non-native corals from halfway around the world to fill in for disappearing native corals. The idea runs counter to decades of conservation biology. But could it prevent a bigger catastrophe?
Read more: https://cns.utexas.edu/news/features/can-scientists-proposal-save-coral-reefs-our-hemisphere
05/27/2026
By mapping protein networks in an ancient ancestor of all complex life, a team led by The University of Texas at Austin has identified new genes associated with three rare disorders. It might yield hundreds more. New study out today in Cell Genomics. Read more: https://cns.utexas.edu/news/research/scientists-map-proteins-ancient-organism-and-discover-new-links-rare-diseases
05/26/2026
Congratulations to the Risky Wranglers team of Sophia Fente-Damers, Shreya Karthikeyan, Aashna Kumar and Khushi Patel!
Their team won the 2026 Spencer-RIMS Student Risk Management Challenge, a global competition that asks university teams to analyze a real-world risk management case and present recommendations to industry judges. The team advanced to the final round at RISKWORLD 2026 in Philadelphia after being selected from a field of 53 university teams representing 12 countries.
Read more at txsci.net/RiskyWranglers
05/21/2026
The collaboration between The University of Texas at Austin and Tecnológico de Monterrey has spent the last year advancing precision medicine through research and artificial intelligence projects focused on reducing the burdens of diseases for populations throughout the Americas.
Scientists affiliated with the OriGen Health Research Center (OHRC) are developing a new way to estimate the risk of metabolic and cardiovascular disease by measuring visceral fat; building a digital app to help reduce adolescent obesity; and uncovering genetic, environmental and lifestyle factors behind metabolic disorders.
OHRC is co-directed by Gaby Livas (far left), chair of UT’s Department of Human Development and Family Sciences, and Alexandro Martagón (third from left), faculty in the School of Medicine and Health Sciences at Tec de Monterrey. Also pictured from both institutions here are Víctor Manuel Treviño Alvarado, Rocío Ortiz López, John Richburg, Andreas Matouschek, Pablo Kuri, Dean David Vanden Bout, Emily Cole and Aron Muci.
Learn more: https://cns.utexas.edu/research/research-initiatives/origen-health-research-center