Search results

Filter

Filetype

Your search for "*" yielded 528240 hits

About us

The Wallenberg Neuroscience Center (WNC) was established in 1996 as a joint venture between Lund University and Skåne University Hospital. The WNC building was partly funded by a major grant from the Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation as the first of four new units belonging to the Lund University Biomedical Center (BMC).   Today, the WNC represents a closely interacting research community share

https://www.wnc.lu.se/about-us - 2025-04-29

The Falck-Hillarp Method

A revolution in the study of monoamine systems in the CNS Long before the modern era of selective and sensitive antibodies that have allowed virtually any protein of choice to be visualized immunohistochemically, the monoamine histofluorescence method developed by Bengt Falck and Nils-Åke Hillarp in the early 1960s [1-3] (Falck and Torp 1962 , Falck et al 1962, see below for pdfs), provided for th

https://www.wnc.lu.se/about-us/falck-hillarp-method - 2025-04-29

Cell Therapy for Parkinson's Disease

Scientists in Lund have pioneered the use of fetal dopamine neurons for transplantation in Parkinson´s Disease. This approach was developed from 1979-1983 in a series of animal experimental studies (publications 1 below), followed by more directed pre clinical work (publications 2 below) that provided the experimental and methodological basis for the first open-label clinical trials that were init

https://www.wnc.lu.se/cell-therapy-parkinsons-disease - 2025-04-29

Visit us

    We are located in the Biomedical Center (BMC) in Lund in the south of Sweden.  Our visiting address is Sölvegatan 17. How to get to Lund From Copenhagen airport:  Copenhagen airport Kastrup (CPH) is Denmark's international airport, and is much closer to Lund than any other international airports. Here you have direct flights from & to Asia, America and most of the European countries. The acces

https://www.wnc.lu.se/about-us/visit-us - 2025-04-29

Collaborators

  National Annika Karlsson - Department of Laboratory Medicine, Karolinska Institutet Fredrik Månsson  - Department of Translational Medicine, Lund University Gülsen Özkaya Sahin -  Region Skåne, Department of Laboratory Medicine, Section of Clinical Microbiology; Department of Translational Medicine, Lund University Hans Norrgren - Division of Infection Medicine, Lund University Joakim Esbjörnsso

https://www.virology.lu.se/hiv-host-interactions/collaborators - 2025-04-29

Contact

Joakim Esbjörnsson, PhD Associate Professor in Virology Senior Lecturer in Medical Microbiology Head of Systems Virology Group Department of Translational Medicine Faculty of Medicine Lund University Postal address: Lund University BMC, B13 221 84 Lund Sweden Phone: +46 46 22 20119, Office email: joakim [dot] esbjornsson [at] med [dot] lu [dot] se (joakim[dot]esbjornsson[at]med[dot]lu[dot]se)   Ho

https://www.virology.lu.se/systems-virology/contact - 2025-04-29

The Systems Virology team

     Joakim Esbjörnsson  Associate Professor  Ph.D. Virology   Read about Joakim in the Research Portal  Joakim's publications" The overarching aim of my research is to understand the key mechanisms of HIV transmission and the rate of disease pathogenesis. I am particularly interested in the virus-host interactions that take place when HIV establishes infection, and how HIV-2 can be used as a mode

https://www.virology.lu.se/systems-virology/systems-virology-team - 2025-04-29

Clinical Virology

The focus of the clinical virology team is to develop and further improve diagnostic tools for detection and quantification of viral infections, including next-generation sequencing approaches in the field of “pandemic preparedness”. Our current work in the field involves many collaborators, the establishment of biobanks and the use of clinical and environmental specimens in our investigations. Du

https://www.virology.lu.se/clinical-virology - 2025-04-29

Virology

Vision We want to create a regionally, nationally and internationally well-known center for translational virus research at the highest level where experimental and clinical research meet in synergy. New Virus Centre  Ola Forslund, Marianne Jansson, Joakim Esbjörnsson and Patrik Medstrand. Photos taken by: Ingemar Hultqvist, Björn Martinsson, Elin Anderlind and Tove Smeds.   Pandemics and alertnes

https://www.virology.lu.se/virology - 2025-04-29

Molecular Virology

Human papillomavirus (HPV) infections cause 500.000 cases of cervical cancer each year in the world (400 cases in Sweden), and 250.000 deaths (120 cases in Sweden). HPV16 is the most common cancer-associated HPV type. The majority of all HPV16 infections is cleared by the host but a fraction persists that may cause cancer. The full life cycle of HPV16 requires cell proliferation at the early stage

https://www.virology.lu.se/molecular-virology - 2025-04-29

Joakim Esbjörnsson, Ph.D.

Principal Investigator, Associate Professor in Virology “What would be easy turned out to be difficult. That is one way of summarising over 30 years of efforts to find a vaccine or a cure for HIV, the virus that causes the disease AIDS. It is this scientific challenge that triggers the researcher Joakim Esbjörnsson.” From “Forskarnas Nyheter”(2017) Joakim Esbjörnsson is an Associate senior lecture

https://www.virology.lu.se/systems-virology/joakim-esbjornsson-phd - 2025-04-29

Pandemics and alertness

The Covid-19 pandemic has clearly demonstrated how fast viruses can become a significant threat to global health. Through national and international collaboration, we can improve our readiness for future virus outbreaks.Pandemics and alertness | Lund UniversityLinkedIn_Pandemics_and alertness

https://www.virology.lu.se/pandemics-and-alertness - 2025-04-29