Research | EMBL. org - European Molecular Biology Laboratory EMBL researchers are inventing cutting-edge experimental techniques and technologies to further explore the secrets of life From genes to whole organisms, from biochemistry to computational biology, EMBL’s diverse research programme is pushing the limits of our biological knowledge
Scientific Services | EMBL. org EMBL’s scientific services encompass over 40 bioinformatics and data resources, and more than 20 experimental services in the fields of structural biology, imaging, genomics, proteomics, metabolomics, in vivo gene editing, and chemical biology
About EMBL | EMBL. org - European Molecular Biology Laboratory With 29 member states, the European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL) has more than 110 independent research groups and service teams covering the spectrum of molecular biology at six sites in Barcelona, Grenoble, Hamburg, Heidelberg, EMBL-EBI Hinxton, and Rome
Thornton Building opens: a hub for collaboration and innovation - EMBL The Thornton Building hosts Open Targets – the public-private partnership for drug target identification and prioritisation – as well as EMBL-EBI’s Industry Programme, research groups and technical service teams Credit: Jeff Dowling EMBL-EBI
Taking biological imaging to the next level - EMBL Currently, high-throughput X-ray tomography at EMBL Hamburg provides rapid, high-resolution 3D imaging of entire unstained tissue biopsies, while EMBL Rome’s spatial-omics service platform within the Light Imaging Facility enables multiplexed RNA detection, commonly known as targeted transcriptomics
EMBL Research Units - European Molecular Biology Laboratory Research groups at EMBL are organised into nine units spanning six European sites The European Molecular Biology Laboratory is made up of many independent groups of research scientists, who work on a wide range of biological topics
European Molecular Biology Laboratory protein structures and interactions, EMBL scientists employ tools including powerful X-ray sources, electron microscopes and methods relying on magnetic resonance • How do molecules interact in complexes?