official magazine of CAS

 


EUSJA General Assembly

eusja.jpg EUSJA General Assembly
& EUSJA Study Trip

Prague, Czech Republic
March 14–17, 2013

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International cooperation

 

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Books

English books prepared for publication by Academy bulletin

 

Akademie věd České republiky / The Czech Academy of Sciences 2014 a 2015

rocenka_obalka_en.jpg
The Czech Academy of Sciences has issued a report accounting selected research results achieved by its scientific institutes in all research areas in 2014 and in early 2015.
Full version you can find here.

 

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VILLA LANNA IN PRAGUE
The new english expanded edition 

 

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SAYING IT ...ON PAPER


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The BIOCEV Centre opened

In the presence of Deputy Minister of Education, Youth and Sports, Stanislav Štech, Rector of Charles University Tomáš Zima, Vice-President of the Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, Vladimír Mareček, and other important guests, the implementation phase of the BIOCEV project – the Biotechnology and Biomedicine Centre of the Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic and Charles University in Vestec was concluded on December 18, 2015. Full operation is beginning in January 2016. BIOCEV currently implements five research programmes and consists of six sets of research infrastructure and service laboratories. By 2020, as many as 450 researchers, including 200 post-graduate students, are supposed to work at the BIOCEV Centre. The Centre’s objective is to learn details about organisms at the molecular level that can be used in applied research and in the development of new therapeutic procedures.
Together with the first Functional Genomics research programme, its head Radislav Sedláček is also working on the development of an important national infrastructure, the Czech Centre for Phenogenomics (CCP). The Centre is one of BIOCEV’s research infrastructures and also the largest institution of its kind in Europe. CCP, which is already fully functional, will also act as a transgenic laboratory producing specialized, genetically modified mice to be used in the research of gene functions by both the Czech and international scientific communities. Together with foreign co-workers, Radislav Sedláček and his team are involved in the international programme entitled the Encyclopaedia of Mammalian Gene Functions focused on the primary description of functions of all genes over the next ten years. The results of their research may positively affect the treatment of serious illnesses.