CRG Centro de Regulación Genómica
Annual Report 2015
Tercer año consecutivo trabajando con la memoria anual del CRG. Un nuevo reto que aceptamos con la ilusión de poder ofrecer a nuestro cliente, una web especial, única, diferente e innovadora.
Un Annual Report no es una web convencional, así lo entendemos nosotros. Nos permitimos pensar y plantear caminos creativos diferentes que aporten a la marca una valor diferenciador.
El proyecto incluye también la ejecución de los vídeos sobre los highlights y la versión simplificada en papel de la misma.
Spotting the molecular
fingerprint of multiple
sclerosis
Going to hospital with neurological
problems is worrying enough. But what
if it’s an early sign of a more serious
illness? (in this video: Eduard Sabidó,
head of the CRG/UPF Proteomics Unit,
Eva Borràs and Cristina Chiva, technicians
at the same Unit).
Zipping up
Imagine you’re going on holiday
and your suitcase is packed full.
So full, in fact, that it won’t close.
You could apply more force, kneeling on
the case and tugging harder on the zipper
until it shuts. But what if the things
in the suitcase actually got smaller?
(in this video: Jérôme Solon, leader of the
Biomechanics of Morphogenesis research group,
Centre for Genomic Regulation (CRG), Barcelona, Spain)
Have a heart
Building a complex machine is a tricky job, taking expert skill and teamwork. And by studying the molecular ‘workers’ in our cells, researchers are starting to understand how a complex biological machine – the heart – is built as a fetus develops in the womb.
From brain to behaviour: the science of smelling
Fruit fly larvae need to sniff out and
consume enough food to increase their body
weight by a factor of 1,000 in just six days.
But how do they do it?
Get set, go!
Understanding the molecular triggers
that enable genes to be ‘read’ is opening the
door to a potential world of new approaches
for improving life for people living with
Down Syndrome.
Tracing yeast's family tree
Families can be complicated. As more
people get interested in tracing their family
trees – particularly with the advent of
genetic ancestry testing – there can be unexpected
surprises lurking in the branches.